Hard to find sanctuary from $17 billion in marketing to kids
By Teresa Malcolm
National Catholic Reporter
November 16, 2007
Parents who find their values in conflict with American
consumerism face a juggernaut of marketing aimed at kids
of increasingly younger ages, using a myriad of venues,
more pervasive than simply television ads during
children’s programming. There are product placements in
movies and tie-in toys sold at fast-food restaurants.
Brands are featured in books and games and toys.
Corporations donate to schools in exchange for direct
advertising displays and products -- usually junk foods
-- sold on school grounds. Channel One donates video
equipment if schools agree to show its programming,
including ads, to students every day. A private radio
network pipes ads into school buses. And one company
organizes slumber parties at which girls market products
to their peers.
“Children are bombarded with marketing messages designed
not just to get them to buy products, but to turn to
brands for happiness and self-worth,” said Susan Linn,
author of Consuming Kids: The Hostile Takeover of
Childhood. “Given that the amount of money corporations
spend on targeting children has escalated from $100
million annually in 1983 to about $17 billion today,
it’s hard for one family in isolation to counter the
messages alone.”
Linn, who teaches psychiatry at Harvard Medical School,
is cofounder of the Campaign for a Commercial-Free
Childhood, which pushes for societal change to limit
commercial messages aimed at children. Among the group’s
recent actions, she said, was to work with clergy to
counter Disney’s efforts to market “The Chronicles of
Narnia” film in churches. “While the message of the
movie was positive, it was rife with brand promotions
[approximately $150 million in corporate tie-ins,
according to the campaign’s Web site] which really are
antithetical to spiritual values,” Linn said in an
e-mail to NCR.
Linn, who is Jewish and a member of Temple Beth Zion in
Brookline, Mass., said that faith communities can play
an essential role -- by helping parents and children
impart alternatives to commercial values and also “by
ensuring that churches, mosques and synagogues are
sanctuaries from commercial culture.”
Adult family members can “provide satisfying, joyful
life experiences that are away from commercial culture,”
said Linn, who has a grown daughter and stepson and two
grandchildren ages 22 months and 5 years. “Baking,
cooking, playing games, building, hiking, artwork, and
all sorts of creative projects help children find
satisfaction and meaning away from electronic screens,
which really are primary sources of the false, and
constant, message that ‘things’ will make us happy.”
Jesuit Fr. John Kavanaugh, author of Following Christ in
a Consumer Society, agrees. “You couldn’t do a better
thing for your child than to have them cut down on media
time and add to time together. The experience of being
with a person is so radically different from being with
an object.”
And now kids’ personal relationships are often mediated
through objects such as computers, which can be “a
fantasy world,” in which you “present yourself as a
commodity,” he told NCR.
“Parents, I think, acquiesce too easily,” said Kavanaugh,
an ethics professor at St. Louis University. “That’s
easy for me to say as a celibate, I guess, but I know
parents who do not acquiesce. They help their child
internalize the ability to say no, the ability to have
an understanding of who they are that’s not dependent on
the expectations of other people. You’re going to have a
stronger child. Part of helping children to form their
own identity is to help them understand the nature of
limits, the nature of being able to resist.”
Kavanaugh, who gives talks on media and consumerism at
parishes, noted that youth rebellion against parental
strictures is normal, but at a time when media and its
commercial messages are “colonizing our lives,” he
added, “this is a struggle for freedom and I think kids
respond to that.”
