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Saturday, August 07, 2010
First America and then the rest of us
Where they go we tend to follow in Europe and then later on in Asia
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The following was taken from an American advertising magazine
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"If you ever wondered why so many young Americans are spotty, overweight, and just generally a pain in the butt...
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Listen up...
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We are to blame.
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And no, I'm not talking about us as parents, well, maybe to a certain extent
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I'm talking about the "Us" in the ad biz.
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Did you know that here in the US, food companies spent $1.6 billion to market products to children and teens in 2006 and ever more since then
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Of which $870 million was targeted to children under 12, and about $1 billion was aimed at teens, according to a report released yesterday by the Federal Trade Commission.
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Here's the best bit...
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The food advertisers' favorite medium was TV, where, it would seem that few of the prime time shows met the food advertisers' criteria for targeting to children.
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And, this is really funny...
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Coca-Cola has decided it should only think of itself as "advertising to children" when over 50 percent of a show's audience is under 12
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In response, the Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative, a coalition of 14 food companies — including Coca-Cola and Kellogg — promised they would either stop targeting children in advertising, or promote only "better-for-you products."
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Meaning products they claim are invested with some kind of nutritional value.
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Just as companies were permitted to define what "advertising to children" meant, each was permitted to define for itself what "better-for-you" represented.
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Nonetheless, the pledge seemed to appease the FTC.
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Director Lydia Parnes of the FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection concluded that joining the coalition would serve as "a useful first step" for other food marketers.
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Oh, please give me a break...
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Isn't this the old "Putting the fox in charge of the henhouse routine?"
Come to think of it we are not too far behind the US
The number of fat, unfit, children waddling around the UK seems to be growing exponentially
And yes parents are too blame
As are schools that serve rubbish for school meals
Or place vending machines on the school premises
Or councils that allow fast food shops near schools
And the government for allowing advertising to children - period
And lets add the consumer TV watch dog that never or seldom challenges the more outrageous claims made by advertisers
And all the pseudo scientific bodies that pontificate endless about the causes
Give us a break most fat children are fat because they eat rubbish and don't exercise
Yes there might be other factors in some cases but for the vast majority they could well eat less and get some exercise
Good that we are having a recession we might even begin to get rid of some of these endless quangos and committees that are so often the excuse for doing nothing about a growing problem
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