In this special “On the Road” edition of Confessions of a Food Safety A-Hole, Darin and Gennette head north on California’s 101 toward Salinas for the Western Food Safety Conference: recording live from the car, and even the Renaissance Fair along the way. What starts as a road trip becomes a deeper conversation about food safety leadership, storytelling, state-by-state policy inconsistencies, and the people behind the systems that protect our food supply. Darin reflects on what it really means to lead in food safety beyond compliance checklists and regulations, while Gennette explores the human side of conferences, farming culture, and the sensory experience of being surrounded by the land that feeds us.
Along the way, they discuss:
- Why food safety standards can vary dramatically depending on your zip code
- The challenge of leadership during recalls and public scrutiny
- What composting, storytelling, and produce farming unexpectedly have in common
- Why conferences need more authentic storytelling—and fewer PowerPoint slides
- The surprisingly robust food safety operations at a Renaissance Fair
Plus: artichokes, loaded baked potatoes, recall controversies, and a live “Ren Fair Report.”
This episode is part travelogue, part industry debrief, and part meditation on why food safety is never just about policy; it’s about people.
What is Confessions of a Food Safety A**Hole?
Confessions of a Food Safety A**Hole is a raw, honest, and surprisingly light listen about a serious subject: the failures that still threaten the safety of the food we eat. Hosted by Dr. Darin Detwiler—a man who turned personal tragedy into decades of public advocacy—and his wife Gennette Zimmer; this podcast pulls no punches. Together, they unpack the moments when speaking up wasn’t popular, but absolutely necessary. From the lens of experiencing every day food safety failures, Darin shares what it’s really like to challenge the system from the inside out.
Equal parts storytelling, reflection, and real talk, Confessions is for anyone who’s ever wondered why preventable tragedies still happen—and what it takes to stop them.
Because silence might be easier, but it’s never safer.