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ELLIS/NORTHRIDGE: EDITOR'S CHOICE Tobacco and the Media 

June 2002, Vol 92, No. 6
Jump to full article: American Journal of Public Health, 2002-06-01
Author: Jennifer Ellis, MPhil, Technical Deputy Editor and Mary E. Northridge, PhD, MPH, Editor-in-Chief

Intro:

Tobacco marketing through a wide variety of media has long been a part of the adolescent experience. This month's cover image of the cowboy is familiar to generations of former, current, and future adolescents. Like the cowboy himself, this image harks back to former times and simpler ways.

Today's tobacco advertising has its own distinct flavor. Gone are the cartoon characters that proved wildly successful in marketing tobacco to youths. In their place are more confusing and sophisticated campaigns, ostensibly designed to reduce the level of direct marketing to adolescents. They nonetheless retain the cunning ability to attract young consumers through deliberate manipulation of antismoking messages.

All antismoking campaigns are not the same, as reported in the forum on youth smoking in this month's Journal. The funds from the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) were used to establish the American Legacy Foundation . . .

According to Mark Schapiro in the May 2, 2002 issue of The Nation, "Tobacco is one of the most globalized industries on the planet. More cigarettes are traded than any other product, some trillion "sticks," as they're known in the business, passing international borders each year."(p11) Youths throughout the world are subjected to a barrage of images, many designed specifically to encourage impulse purchasing of tobacco products without attention to legally required health warnings. Indeed, Melanie Wakefield and her colleagues carefully document, also in this month's Journal, the point-of-purchase marketing practices in the United States that have filled the void since the 1998 MSA billboard advertising ban (937).

Still, there is cause for celebration. Thanks to the efforts of the American Legacy Foundation and other courageous anti-tobacco groups, the cowboy on the cover is accompanied by a partner far more apt than the sidekicks that we saw growing up: a body bag.

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