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"Raising children is an incredibly hard and risky business in which no cumulative wisdom is gained: each generation repeats the mistakes the previous one made."—Bill Cosby
OBESITY COMPLIMENTS
OF MCDONALDS
The October issue of the British medical journal, The Lancet, offered
the following editorial:
"Last week a couple of strange bedfellows met under the same roof in New
York City. Kidscreen’s fifth annual conference on Advertising and Promoting
to Kids took place on one floor of the Yale Club, while on another floor a summit
entitled Stop Commercial Exploitation of Children (SCEC) called attention to
the effects of marketing and advertising on children’s health. Kidscreen
promised to teach attendees how to “own fun”, create “lifelong
consumers”, reach ethnic and minority communities, and reportedly to obtain
“share of mind” and to “own kids”. SCEC speakers said the
end result of these marketing efforts--at a cost to corporations of more than
US$12 billion a year--is a generation destined for psychosocial and physical
problems.
"The soaring increase in obesity and type 2 diabetes among children is
a public-health crisis, plausibly linked to the “toxic environment”
created in large part by the food industry. Supersize or extra-value portions
mean that a single meal can provide more calories than most children require
for an entire day. Advertising campaigns link food, soft drinks, and sports
beverages to entertainment (movies, videos, video games, and celebrities) and
toys. You can now buy Spiderman cereal and limited-edition toaster pastries.
Children can make their own McDonald’s Happy Meal, using Play-Doh and plastic
moulds for each component; a coupon for the real thing is included with the
set. The toymaker Mattel sells a Barbie doll who works at the McDonald’s
Playset drive-through. There, most ironically, that slimline icon can take your
order for 'all your fast-food favourites'. Toys and books that either actually
are food or are packaged with it now abound. Children can play chequers (draughts)
with fruit-flavoured gummi candies (sweets), and learn to count in various calorie-filled
and sugar-filled ways, through books that use sweets and cereals to teach math.
"These and other products are marketed to children through television,
radio, and print media, at trade shows, in coupons, and through product placement
in films and books. Soft-drink companies have pouring-rights contracts in schools;
fast-food chains sell burgers, tacos, and the rest of their fare in school and
hospital cafeterias; and the in-school television network Channel One serves
up 2 minutes’ advertising in its daily 12-minute newscast. Marketing to
children is a recent phenomenon; in the past 10 years, however, it has exploded
in volume and variety. Companies increasingly do market research online, through
panels and chat rooms, where growing pools of computer-literate children provide
unfiltered responses more useful than any survey. These children are eagerly
sought online as research subjects.
"But children are not the only ones being exploited. Uninformed parents
sign up their children on marketing sites that masquerade as educational ventures.
And nutritionists are aggressively recruited by the food industry to lend legitimacy
to their methods and products. These relationships, which can be extremely confusing
to consumers, often go undisclosed on the resulting websites and in factsheets
and published papers.
"What can be done about this truly toxic state of affairs? Some solutions
are obvious: nutrition professionals need to divorce themselves from the food
industry, or at least declare with whom they are working. Parents need to wake
up and smell the chip fat: fast-food chains are not educational institutions,
no matter how many math and reading flash-cards they hand out. More radical
solutions should be considered: taxing soft drinks and fast foods; subsidising
nutritious foods, like fruits and vegetables; labeling the content of fast
food; and prohibiting marketing and advertising to children. An advertising
ban similar to that on tobacco advertising has been recommended to the European
Union. In the USA, litigation inspired by the success of the tobacco lawsuits
is underway; parallels between the tactics of the tobacco and food industries
are striking.
"At the SCEC summit, Michael Brody, who chairs the American Academy of
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry’s television and media committee, said,
'Just like paedophiles, marketers have become child experts'. Strong words,
perhaps. But it is time to return parents, teachers, and public-health professionals
to their rightful roles as the real experts on children."
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