Jay Kordich


John Kordich was an American author who advocated juicing and juice fasting. He also marketed a line of "Juiceman" juicers and was a frequent fixture in television infomercials beginning in the 1990s.

Early life

Kordich was born near San Diego, California, and grew up in San Pedro, Los Angeles, where he was a football star at San Pedro High School. He served in the United States Navy for three years during World War II. After leaving the military, Kordich played college football for the University of Southern California in 1948 as a reserve running back. He was drafted in the 1949 [NFL Draft#Round twenty-two|22nd round] of the 1949 NFL draft by the Green Bay Packers, but claimed that before signing a pro contact, he was diagnosed with inoperable bladder cancer. Kordich stated that, inspired by the Gerson diet, he was cured of cancer by consuming 13 glasses of apple and carrot juice each day.

Career

Kordich authored The [New York Times] best seller The Juiceman's Power of Juicing, first published in 1992. He was involved in advertising a series of juicers, including the Juiceman Juicer. He lectured on the subject and appeared in television infomercials for the Juiceman Juicer. The product was sold through infomercials at the peak of the juicing craze in the summer of 1992.
The juicer was marketed by Rick Cesari's Trillium HealthProducts, which had more than $100 million in sales attributed in part to the direct marketing of the Juiceman Juicer. In 1992, Consumer Reports tested Kordich's Juiceman II extractor and concluded that other competitive models were easier to clean, cheaper, and worked better. In 2011, Kordich developed the Jay Kordich PowerGrind Pro juicer.

Health claims

Kordich had no medical training or qualifications. He made health claims regarding juicing that have been disputed by medical experts. Stephen Barrett of Quackwatch noted that Kordich made far-fetched, nonsensical, and unproven health claims about juicing, including the belief that uncooked foods flush the body of toxins, and that juicing can treat many illnesses such as anemia, anxiety, arthritis, gallstones, impotence, and heart disease. Barrett also highlighted Kordich's fundamental misunderstanding of how plant enzymes affect the human body, and his unsubstantiated demonization of cooked food.

Personal life and death

Kordich promoted a raw vegan diet.
Kordich died on May 27, 2017, at the age of 93, after experiencing respiratory difficulties. His wife Linda said he suffered from no underlying illnesses.

Selected publications

  • The Juice Advantage
  • ''The Juiceman's Power of Juicing''