Study:
Advertisements
for high-fat
foods permeate
TV targeting
toddlers
Carla Johnson,
Associated
Press
September 30,
2006
CHICAGO
(AP) - When
Susan Connor's
3-year-old son
started
humming the
McDonald's
jingle, a
research
project was
born.
Connor knew
where he'd
heard the fast
food giant's
catchy tune -
on the Disney
Channel during
"The Wiggles,"
a show for
preschoolers.
"He had
absorbed that
from watching
TV," said
Connor, whose
study on food
ads aimed at
toddlers
appears in the
October issue
of Pediatrics.
"It would
be a
marketer's
dream to know
they were that
successful."
Messages
for high-fat,
high-sugar
foods permeate
programming
for
preschoolers
on
Nickelodeon,
the study
found. On the
Disney
Channel's
shows for the
youngest
children and
even on Public
Broadcasting
Service shows
such as
"Sesame
Street,"
companies woo
tots' loyalty
by linking
logos,
licensed
characters and
slogans with
fun and
happiness.
Disney and
PBS promote
themselves as
ad-free, but
fast food
companies
dominated
sponsor
messages
during
programming
for toddlers,
Connor found,
making up 82
percent of
sponsor
messages on
PBS preschool
programming
and 36 percent
of messages on
Disney's
toddler block
of shows.
The clown
character
Ronald
McDonald
appears with
shows for
toddlers on
Disney and
PBS. And the
cartoon mouse
Chuck E.
Cheese pops up
alongside
preschool
programming on
PBS.
Connor,
research
manager of
Cleveland's
Rainbow Babies
& Children's
Hospital, said
adults who
haven't seen
children's
programs
lately will be
surprised by
the findings.
Advocates
said the study
adds to
mounting
evidence that
food marketers
are trying to
hook the
youngest
children as
lifelong
customers.
Promotions
go both ways
with TV
characters
from
children's
shows used on
the packaging
of sugary
cereals,
fruit-flavored
snacks and
other foods.
Last week,
the Federal
Communications
Commission
announced
plans to study
links between
the ads,
viewing habits
and the rise
of childhood
obesity. For
now, marketing
of food to
children is
unregulated.
Previous
studies have
found that
kids as young
as 3 who see
TV ads are
more likely to
request and
eat advertised
foods high in
fat, sodium
and sugar.
American
children from
infancy to age
6 watch an
average of one
hour of TV
daily, and 8-
to-18-year-olds
watch an
average of
three hours
daily. They
see roughly
40,000 TV ads
a year.
"It's very
concerning
when childhood
obesity is a
major public
health problem
that preschool
programs are
still being
sponsored by
fast food
restaurants
and food
that's not
healthy for
children,"
said Susan
Linn of
Harvard
Medical School
and a
co-founder of
the Campaign
for a
Commercial-Free
Childhood. She
was not
involved in
the study.
Diane
Levin, of
Wheelock
College who is
also a
co-founder of
the Campaign
for a
Commercial-Free
Childhood,
criticized
Disney and PBS
for breaching
viewers'
trust. She
supports
limits on
marketing of
junk food to
children too
young to make
critical
judgments
about
advertising.
"PBS has a
special
responsibility,"
said Levin,
who was not
involved in
the study.
With federal
funding
threatened,
Levin said,
PBS has
searched for
new revenue,
including from
sponsors who
want to reach
children.
PBS
spokeswoman
Lea Sloan said
sponsors'
messages don't
interrupt
programs and
don't go
longer than
two minutes,
17 seconds per
hour. PBS
doesn't allow
price
information,
product
comparisons,
depictions of
children's
products or
superlative
claims, Sloan
said.
"The
content of
these messages
is either in
support of
public
television or
around
learning,
education and
social
development,"
Sloan said in
an e-mail.
"Licensed
characters or
mascots often
reinforce a
positive
educational
message and
their
appearance is
limited to
five seconds."
Nickelodeon
spokesman Dan
Martinsen said
the channel
has reduced
food ads
during its
"Nick Jr."
block of
programs for
preschoolers
by 20 percent
in the last
two years.
Disney
Channel
spokeswoman
Patti McTeague
said sponsor
messages are
accepted "only
when they are
connected to a
pro-social
message."
Chuck E.
Cheese
spokeswoman
Brenda
Holloway said
the pizza
restaurant
chain's play
areas promote
physical
activity, as
do its ads.
"Realistically,
our research
shows most
children come
to Chuck E.
Cheese's to
play and have
fun," Holloway
wrote in an
e-mail. "We
think that our
PBS
sponsorship
announcements
do promote
physical
activity and
social
interaction
through play
and learning,
which we
believe are
appropriate
messages for
preschool-age
children."
McDonald's
did not
respond to
requests for
comment in
time for
publication.