Hollywood is not known for its displays of modesty, and the world certainly does not look to film stars for lessons in financial restraint. But the opulent, gold-garnished menu concocted for guests at the Golden Globes awards ceremony in Beverly Hills today (NZT) has already prompted some observers to choke.
Gold-flecked Globes desserts make poverty activists choke
Subscribe to listen
It is unlikely that the more ethically versed stars who attended a brunch held on Saturday by Green Carpet Challenge, the environmental group supported by Colin Firth and his wife Livia, will approve of such untrammelled excess.
Food poverty campaigner Berg said that, while he did not mind wealthy people eating well and enjoys good food himself, in the context of nearly 50 million Americans living in households that are "food insecure", in that they "either directly face hunger or are somehow rationing food needs", he sees an uncomfortable contrast.
"I don't want to bring the rich down, I want to bring everyone else up.
"However, this is an irony that the people who need it least often get free food wherever they go, but we still make it extraordinarily difficult for people to obtain government food benefits."
The rich menu may well also draw the fire of the Globes' contentious British host, Ricky Gervais, who returns to the compere's role at the annual event after shocking guests last year with the ferocity of his jibes.
Robert Downey jnr, Johnny Depp and Tim Allen all felt the sting of an insult in 2011. Gervais has promised a similar diet of bile to go along with the awards supper this year. "They can expect the same as last year with different - I nearly said targets - different subjects and different jokes," he has told the BBC.
Bets place the recently separated couple Russell Brand and Katy Perry at the top of his list of potential "targets".
What do you think of the dessert?
- OBSERVER