"To be hungry must be awful"
About this Quote
“To be hungry must be awful” lands with the blunt force of a children’s-book sentence, and that’s exactly why it cuts. Dick Van Patten wasn’t known as a polemicist; he was America’s dependable dad, the guy whose warmth felt baked into the living room. So when he reduces a massive social problem to five plain words, the simplicity isn’t ignorance, it’s strategy. He’s refusing the ornate language that lets comfortable people keep suffering at arm’s length.
The line works because it’s almost comically obvious. Of course hunger is awful. Saying it out loud exposes a darker truth: in a country with enough food, “awful” persists anyway. The subtext is accusation-by-innocence. It’s the moral equivalent of a child asking why no one helped. There’s no policy blueprint here, no statistics, no performative outrage. Just an unadorned empathic leap, the kind culture often treats as optional.
Van Patten’s persona matters. Coming from an actor associated with wholesome domestic stability, the quote implicitly contrasts abundance and deprivation. It’s a sentence that sounds like it was spoken by someone who has never had to be hungry, and that’s the point: he’s trying to imagine it, to let discomfort breach the gated community of “not my problem.”
In an era when celebrity activism is often branding, this reads like the opposite: not a campaign slogan, but a small, embarrassed recognition that should have been unnecessary to articulate. That awkwardness is the indictment.
The line works because it’s almost comically obvious. Of course hunger is awful. Saying it out loud exposes a darker truth: in a country with enough food, “awful” persists anyway. The subtext is accusation-by-innocence. It’s the moral equivalent of a child asking why no one helped. There’s no policy blueprint here, no statistics, no performative outrage. Just an unadorned empathic leap, the kind culture often treats as optional.
Van Patten’s persona matters. Coming from an actor associated with wholesome domestic stability, the quote implicitly contrasts abundance and deprivation. It’s a sentence that sounds like it was spoken by someone who has never had to be hungry, and that’s the point: he’s trying to imagine it, to let discomfort breach the gated community of “not my problem.”
In an era when celebrity activism is often branding, this reads like the opposite: not a campaign slogan, but a small, embarrassed recognition that should have been unnecessary to articulate. That awkwardness is the indictment.
Quote Details
| Topic | Food |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite | Cite this Quote |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Patten, Dick Van. (n.d.). To be hungry must be awful. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-hungry-must-be-awful-141261/
Chicago Style
Patten, Dick Van. "To be hungry must be awful." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-hungry-must-be-awful-141261/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To be hungry must be awful." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-hungry-must-be-awful-141261/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.
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