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KEY QUOTES
“Online advertising is potentially
way more powerful than television advertising ever dreamed of
being,” (Source:
Vicky Rideout at July 2006 press conference for release of new
Kaiser Family Foundation study)
"During
the course of a year, the typical American child watches more
than 40,000 TV commercials. About 20,000 of those ads are for
junk food: soft drinks, sweets, breakfast cereals and fast food.
That means American children now see a junk food ad every five
minutes while watching TV - and see about three hours of junk
food ads every week." (Source:
News story quoting from Eric Schlosser's new book, Chew
On This)
"There's a huge industry behind the marketing of unhealthful
foods to kids, ...there's been an advent of newer media that are
interactive and blend entertainment and advertising."
Laura Lindenfeld, research assistant professor in the
Margaret Chase Smith Policy Center at the University of Maine
and the department of communication and journalism (quoted
here)
"... we know that marketing is a
factor in a lot of childhood ills such as eating disorders,
youth violence, obesity, erosion of children's creative play,
family stress and materialistic values....there is absolutely no
evidence that marketing is beneficial to kids and mounting
evidence that it's harmful."
Susan Linn, Harvard Medical School, quoted here
The most common form of advertising to children is
television commercials. The average American child views 40,000
commercials annually, and over half of these are for food. One
study documented approximately 11 food commercials per hour
during Saturday morning cartoon programming. Furthermore,
studies have shown that the nutritional content of advertised
foods is getting worse. A 1998 study found that 41% of
advertised foods (excluding fast food ads) fell into the fats,
oils and sweets category. Advertisers also use print ads,
internet sites and celebrity endorsements to sell products.
(Source: Op-ed)
"I will go out on a limb and say 20
years from now people will look back and say: 'What were they
thinking? They're in the middle of a (diabetes) epidemic and
kids are watching 20,000 hours of commercials for junk
food.'"
- DR. THOMAS R. FRIEDEN, New York City health commissioner
(from NY
Times)
"There is strong evidence that marketing of food and
beverages
to children influences their preferences, requests, purchases,
and diets."
(Key Fact, Institute of Medicine Dec. 2005 report
)
"Overweight and
obesity are directly linked to the amount of time children spend
watching television" Dr. William Dietz, CDC director of
nutrition and physical activity (read full
story)
“Corporate America...spends $12 billion [on advertising aimed
at children] because that advertising works brilliantly because
it persuades children to demand – to the point of throwing
temper tantrums, if necessary – a regular diet of candy,
cookies, sugary cereal, sodas, and all manner of junk
food".
U.S. Senator Tom Harkin,
April 5, 2005, speech to ad conference
“Child television viewers are bombarded with health claims in
television advertising,... Given the plentitude of
advertisements on television touting the health benefits of even
the most nutritionally bankrupt of foods, child viewers are
likely to become confused about which foods are in fact
healthy.”
Kristen Harrison, a professor of speech communication
(read full
story)
Site updated on:
08/29/2007
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