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Sellouts
Susan Linn
American Prospect
Oct 23, 2000
It's the relentless
marketing to kids that's indecent.
The FTC's recent
report on Hollywood's violation of its own voluntary
rating codes had politicians of both parties expressing
indignation about how the entertainment industry targets
children with violent and indecent material. Both Gore and
Bush promised to increase pressure on industry executives;
Gore even threatened regulation if the industry failed to
"clean up its act?" But few critics have focused on the
deeper problem-that media executives routinely exploit
children for profit by marketing kids' products the
industry officially rates as unsuitable for them.
Children are big
business. And that means my daughter is a popular kid
these days. Taco Bell wants her, and so do McDonald's and
Burger King. Abercrombie & Fitch has a whole store devoted
to her. Pert Plus has a shampoo she'll love. Ethan Allen
is creating bedroom sets she can't live without. ALPO even
wants to sell her dog food. Even while I, like all
American parents, am held responsible for the safety and
behavior of my preteen, corporations spend over $12
billion each year to bombard her incessantly with messages
that undermine my efforts.
With a single-minded
competitiveness reminiscent of the California Gold Rush,
corporations are racing to stake their claim on the
consumer group formerly known as children. Brandishing
near-Orwellian advertising jargon-"cradle-tograve brand
loyalty" and "owning" children-retailers aim to carve a
profitable "share of mind" from the "youth market."
Their motivation is,
naturally, money. American children ages four to 12 spent
over $28 billion of their own money in 1999, and they
influenced a whopping $500 billion of their parents'
purchases. According to a survey by the Department of
Labor, teenagers spend over $1 billion a week. Trade
journals and newsletters are awash in statistics about the
buying power of children: "Children aged 12 and below
earned $31 billion in wages and income, including gifts,
allowances and jobs," announced Progressive Grocer.
"Spending by children is expected to reach $35 billion by
2001," Mass Market Retailer trumpeted, "and the children's
market will more than double in economic power over the
next ten years.'
The lure of their
dollars, their easy access to electronic media, and a lack
of regulation make advertising a ubiquitous presence in
children's lives. Comparing the marketing of yesteryear to
the marketing of today is like comparing BB guns to smart
bombs. Honed with the help of child psychologists and
aided by technology, advertising reaches far beyond mere
commercials to penetrate almost every media nook and
cranny. Not just billboards, but clothing prominently
emblazoned with corporate logos. Not just endorsements by
famous actors, but pervasive product placement within
films and television programs. Not just simple ad
campaigns for cereal, but sophisticated, carefully managed
cross-marketing campaigns that link TV shows and movies
with product licensing in multiple commercial niches-toys,
clothing, accessories, and even fast-food giveaways based
on media characters.
Take the Pokemon
empire, which has generated more than $1 billion since its
1998 launch in America. Pokemon is not just a trading-card
game, but also a popular TV cartoon, a series of Nintendo
games, a movie-movies, actually; the first installment is
titled Pokemon: The First Movie-a line of stuffed animals,
a Radio City Music Hall extravaganza, a line of Halloween
costumes, and even a set of cake decorations (perfect for
your child's birthday party, at which he or she will no
doubt receive many of the aforementioned Pokemon toys and
games as presents).
What makes such
ubiquity all the more disturbing is that
children-especially young children-are even more
vulnerable to advertising than adults. Advertisers today
know that preschoolers have trouble differentiating
between commercials and regular programming (and now that
Simon & Schuster and other reputable publishing houses
market books to babies like The Cheerios Play Book or Sun
Maid Raisins Play Book, they're going to have even more
trouble). Slightly older kids still think in concrete
terms, tending to believe what they see, and have trouble
grasping the concept of future consequences. Preteens and
teens might be cynical about advertising, but studies
suggest that knowing advertising is false does not seem to
affect tendencies to buy.
The advertising
industry itself has funded dozens of studies on children
designed to enhance marketing effectiveness. According to
Selling to Kids-an industry newsletter, unfortunately, not
a watchdog group-Saatchi & Saatchi hired clinical
psychologists and cultural anthropologists to record more
than 500 hours of interviews and observations of children
between the ages of six and 20. Increasingly, such
research is taking place in schools: According to USA
TODAY, grade schools in Connecticut accepted $5,000 from a
company in exchange for permission to interview 10- to
12year-old students in classrooms after school. The
Gepetto Group conducts focus groups and consults with
psychologists to help businesses better understand how to
market to teens by exploiting their vulnerabilities.
"Teens are ... an oppositional subculture, interested in
shutting out the adult world," the firm's chief strategic
officer explained in a Selling to Kids interview. "[T]here
are enormous opportunities for the marketer who is able to
understand both the reality and fantasy of teen life."
Supporting all this
is a burgeoning industry of free-lance marketing
experts-often psychologists-who teach corporations how to
market successfully to children. Books like Street Trends
advise companies in the fine art of co-opting alternative
youth culture, while What Kids Buy and Why, by
psychologist Dan Acuff, patiently explains the
developmental theories of Erik Erikson and Jean Piaget
(who must be turning over in their graves) to help
marketers understand different stages of child development
in order to target children more effectively.
One of the most
egregious misuses of psychological research is a recent
study on nagging-not to help parents prevent nagging, but
to help retailers exploit it to boost sales. Conducted by
Western International Media, in conjunction with Century
City and Lieberman Research Worldwide, The Fine Art of
Whining: Why Nagging is a Kid's Best Friend identifies
which kinds of parents are most likely to give in to
nagging-not surprisingly, divorced parents or those with
teenagers or younger children top the list-and enumerates
the purchases attributed to nagging: four out of 10 trips
to "placed entertainment establishments like the Discovery
Zone and Chuck E. Cheese"; one out of every three trips to
a fastfood restaurant; and three out of every 10 home
video sales.
It gets worse. Over
the past 10 years, coinciding with the intensification of
corporate marketing to children, childhood obesity has
become a major public health problem. Forty percent of
fifth-grade girls report dieting. More eighth-graders
smoke now than in 1990, and more of them consume alcohol
as well. Is there a connection? A 1998 study in the
International Journal of Obesity and Related Metabolic
Disorders suggests that obese kids are more susceptible to
the message implicit in food commercials-that food will
enhance their life. Researchers in Italy and Scandinavia
show that girls with eating disorders are more susceptible
to messages about body image and are more psychologically
dependent on television than girls with normal eating
patterns. A joint study of adolescent girls at Brigham and
Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School found that
their discontent about body image was directly correlated
to how often they read fashion magazines.
While advertising
for cigarettes has been restricted on television, tobacco
companies still advertise heavily in magazines. In 1998
the Journal for the American Medical Association reported
that the cigarette brands teenagers are most likely to
smoke are the brands most heavily advertised in magazines
with high youth readership. And in 1997, a study in the
American Journal of Health Behavior showed that smoking
and drinking in teenagers can be correlated to their
viewing of sporting events such as car racing, football,
and basketball, events often sponsored by alcohol and
tobacco companies.
The industry spin on
advertising to children is that it's up to parents to
control its influence. But given the reach and
sophistication of modern marketing, it is increasingly
difficult for parents to mitigate its effects.
One thing they can
do is to set some limits on children's overall access to
media. According to a study released last year by the
Kaiser Family Foundation, kids spend almost 40 hours a
week consuming media outside of school-most of which is
filled with advertising.
Parents can keep the
TV off during meals (65 percent of children say that
theirs is on), resist the temptation to give children
their own televisions (32 percent of kids between ages two
and seven and 65 percent of kids age eight or older have
one in their room), and set strict rules about television
viewing (61 percent of kids say their parents don't).
But it's unfair to
put parents in the position of playing David to the
corporate Goliaths. Parents do need to limit media
consumption, but someone must set limits on corporate
exploitation of children as well. The United States
regulates advertising to children less than most other
industrialized democracies. It's time for us to catch up.
The new
administration should begin by convening a White House
conference on marketing and its effects on children. At
the very least, such a conference will serve as a
springboard for national dialogue. At best it will lay the
groundwork for creating appropriate policy.
The National
Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation
should fund research on the psychosocial and health
consequences of intensive marketing to children. Without
government funding, most of the research on how children
are affected by marketing is done to benefit the
marketplace.
And speaking of the
marketplace, we need to consider the ethics of companies
mining children for information when they may be too young
to understand either how this information will be used or
that advertising may be harmful. We should apply
safeguards to market research, such as informed consent-a
standard procedure for informing potential subjects in any
academic or medical study about the potential risks of
participating and the use of collected data.
Legislation, at the
state and national levels, should be enacted to ensure
that schools are advertising-free zones. Congress should
pass the bill before them, sponsored by Connecticut
Senator Christopher Dodd and California Representative
George Miller, that would require parental permission
before schools can sell access to students for market
research.
In the long run, our
children's immersion in the commercial culture has
implications that go far beyond what they buy or don't
buy. The very traits that today's advertising
encourages-brand loyalty, impulse buying, and cynicism-are
antithetical to the qualities necessary in a healthy
democratic citizenry. Is it a coincidence that 18- to
24-year-olds, the first children to grow up in the era of
ubiquitous and ultrasophisticated advertising, also
demonstrate appalling voter apathy? Proponents claim that
advertising is a mainstay of American life, but marketing
to children may actually be eroding its foundations.
SUSAN LINN, Ed.D.,
is the associate director of the Media Center at the Judge
Baker Children's Center and an instructor in psychiatry at
Harvard Medical School.
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