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Chef Jaime Oliver is known for crusading against unhealthy food in school cafeterias. The celebrity chef has now brought his campaign online to let users decide for themselves in a “hot or not” style website called “School Lunch Wall.”

Users are encouraged to visit their local schools and snap photos of what’s for lunch. After the images are posted to the site, others get to vote on how tasty or healthy a meal appears.

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School Lunch Wall is an enormously simple concept — take a picture, let the public vote — but it’s also a clever way to expose what kind of food kids are actually being fed. At the moment, most of the food on the site doesn’t look bad. But the vote results are also an interesting look at what people consider to be healthy or tasty food.

Users can tag the photos with their name, location and what’s in the meal. So far, only a few photos have information about the school where they were taken.

Check out the site and let us know where you stand: Is this a smart way to start thinking about cafeteria food or just another image carousel of good-looking meals? Let us know in the comments.

This story originally published on Mashable here.

School Lunch Wall Is Like a "Hot or Not" for Food
(Mashable)

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