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August 15,
2005
Contact: Dr. Susan Linn (617) 278-4282
slinn@jbcc.harvard.edu
Dr. Diane Levin (617) 879-2176
dlevin@wheelock.edu
Dr. Allen Kanner (510)
558-7210
adkanner@earthlink.net
For
Immediate Release
Cartoon
Network’s “Tickle U” Is No Laughing Matter
CCFC
Urges Families to Stay Away From New Preschool Programming
Calling it a
cynical ploy to get young children to watch more television, the
Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood is urging parents to
keep children away from Tickle U, the Cartoon Network’s new
block of preschool programming. The Cartoon Network claims the
programming, which will premiere on August 22, will help develop
a child’s sense of humor. Despite a lack of scientific evidence
to support that claim, the educational benefits of Tickle U are
being touted through new and unprecedented marketing techniques
including partnerships with hospitals and mom-based viral
marketing.
“Children
don’t need TV to develop a sense of humor. It comes from play
and their natural interactions with the world around them,” said
Wheelock College Professor, Dr. Diane Levin, author of Remote
Control Childhood. “This is a classic case of marketers
trying to create a need where none exists and to dupe parents
into thinking that watching more TV is good for their children.”
There is no
evidence that television aids in humor development – and plenty
of evidence that television can be harmful to young children.
Television viewing is a factor in childhood obesity. Research
also suggests that preschoolers who are heavy television viewers
score lower on academic and intelligence tests later in life and
are more likely to become bullies.
“There is
growing concern about how much time children spend watching TV.
We should not be fooled by network executives’ claims about the
benefits of this commercial venture,” said CCFC’s co-founder,
Dr. Susan Linn, author of Consuming Kids. “Tickle U is
just the latest attempt to get young children in front of
screens - which is exactly where marketers want them.”
Several of
the Tickle U programs plan to license their characters to toys,
games, apparel, and food products. This marketing, of course,
is in addition to the on-air commercials that will run
throughout Tickle U.
That
hospitals around the country are partnering with Tickle U to
hold humor workshops to introduce parents and young children to
the show’s characters is particularly troubling. Psychologist
Allen Kanner, co-editor of Psychology and Consumer Culture,
commented, “Given the negative impact of advertising and media
on children, health professionals should be working with parents
to limit the amount of television kids watch. Hospitals should
be promoting public health, not the Cartoon Network’s fall
lineup.”
The Campaign
for a Commercial-Free Childhood is a national coalition of
health care professionals, educators, advocacy groups and
concerned parents who counter the harmful effects of marketing
to children through action, advocacy, education, research, and
collaboration among organizations and individuals who care about
children. CCFC supports the rights of children to grow up – and
the rights of parents to raise them – without being undermined
by rampant consumerism. For more information, please visit:
www.commercialfreechildhood.org
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