More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Laurie David

GET UPDATES FROM Laurie David
 

Thanksgiving Conversation Starter: Is It Time to Ban Soda Ads on Prime Time Television?

Posted: 11/23/11 01:58 PM ET

Did you know Coca-Cola's first television ad aired on Thanksgiving Day in 1950? It was part of a special live production featuring the ventriloquist Edger Bergen and his sidekick Charlie McCarthy? It was a humble foray into the new but powerful advertising medium for the soft drink giant. However, it didn't take long for the company to realize the power of TV, particularly on younger audiences.

I have to admit few commercials evoke warm holiday memories more than the ubiquitous Coca-Cola ads such as those polar bear commercials. Remember the one that starts with two polar bear cubs struggling to pull a Christmas tree up a snowy hill? After some help from mom (or possibly dad) -- the little ones are rewarded with an ice-cold coke for a job well done. Knowing what I know now about the effects of sugary drinks on children the image of kids chugging down a Coke [or in this case polar bear cubs] evokes the same feelings I'd get if they were taking a deep drag on cigarettes.

Oh give me a break -- it's just a soda, I can hear the comments already. A little soda once in a while is not going to harm anyone. Sadly, many kids are drinking a lot more than just a little bit of soda every day. The statistics are sobering -- Americans suck down about 30 percent more calories from sugar-sweetened drinks now than they did just 10 years ago. When it comes to children, they're gulping down up to 15 percent of their total calories for the day from these liquid candies. For teens its worse, soft drinks are the number one source of calories in a their diet. Did you know that a 12-ounce can of regular soda can contain as much as 10 and a ½ teaspoons of sugar. That's as much sugar found in two 1 ½ ounce chocolate candy bars.

Those numbers are shocking enough, however, what should give us all pause are the findings from one study that found if a child consumes just one drink filled with added sugar a day his or her chance of becoming obese increases by 60 percent! It's not surprising then that soda consumption is linked to childhood obesity, type-2 diabetes, high blood pressure and heart disease.

These facts are fairly well known by now. Groups like Yale's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity have been sounding the alarms for quite sometime. You'd think with all this information, the least soft drink companies could do is cut back on the advertising -- at least those focused on kids. Right? Wrong! According to our friends at the Rudd Center kids are getting bombarded with more and more ads every year. Take a look at their latest findings:

Soda Ad Exposure

  • From 2008 to 2010, exposure to TV advertising for regular soda doubled for children.
  • In 2010, while children saw 50% more ads on TV for sugary fruit drinks, adults saw twice as many ads for 100% juice.
  • Capri Sun, Kool-Aid and Sunny D dominated children's exposure to sugary drinks on TV, together comprising 40% of children's total exposure to sugary drinks.


We should all find the fact that food companies are spending so much money on advertising directly to kids -- nearly $2 Billion a year -- truly disturbing. It doesn't sit well with our nation's pediatricians either. In 2006, the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a policy statement which said exposure to advertising, "may contribute significantly to childhood and adolescent obesity, poor nutrition, and cigarette and alcohol use." According to the AAP, kids and teens view more than 3,000 ads a year, on television alone. They say research has shown, "that young children -- younger than 8 years -- are cognitively and psychologically defenseless against advertising."

Coke and Pepsi have gone even further, aided by spineless show producers, and their networks, by purchasing embedded ads directly into the shows content. The blurred line between the show and the ads pummel young viewers. The average age of an American Idol or X factor fan is 6-12! The beloved judges sip it as they dole out advice to the contestants. Celebrities chug it during the commercial breaks. Hardly seems right, does it.

For a while there it looked like the FTC and several other regulatory agencies, which are part of the so-called Interagency Working Group on Food Marketed to Children, were poised to take a strong stand on the issue. That was until last month when they caved-in to pressure from industry, which complained that the group's original recommended voluntary guidelines designed to limit the way unhealthy foods are sold to children between the ages of 2 and 17 was, "unworkable." Now the working group is thinking of changing the recommended age limits to kids between 2 and 11. Not only that, they're thinking of looking the other way when it comes advertising "seasonal or holiday confections" like Halloween or Easter candy, or at places such as theme parks or sporting events.

When will regulators get a backbone? They have to stop letting industry kick them around and keeping them from protecting the health of America's children? I know I'm not alone in my disgust.

Corporations are no longer allowed to advertise cigarettes on TV due to the potential impact it could have on our kids. When it comes to hard liquor, the government didn't ban it, the companies did it voluntarily. Can you imagine! It is now time to institute a similar TV advertising ban on soda. We are in the midst of a health epidemic. Some one has to start caring. Some food for thought as you sit down and give thanks for our children this holiday season.

 
 
 

Follow Laurie David on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Laurie_David

 
 
  • Comments
  • 397
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (13 total)
05:06 PM on 01/05/2012
Once again, it's the parenting, not the outside world. If you set limits on your child's diet of both soda and television and teach them core values about nutrition no amount of outside influence will matter. As a child I was not allowed to drink soda and I was only allowed to watch PBS until around age 9 when my parents added around 3 child friendly programs. I am so grateful now that I wasn't bombarded by advertising in my formative years and that I never developed a soda habit.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
11:13 AM on 11/28/2011
Good argument. And soda products are literally in your face everywhere (unlike 20 years ago) in those little refrigerators next to checkout stands -- Best Buy, Office Depot/Office Max, Wal-Mart, Target, Auto Zone, CVS, Walgreens, Toys R Us...ad nausea. Not to mention all of the processed snack food displays. Combined, it's all about impulse purchases, and Americans are swigging down and gobbling up these chemicals with a vengeance. (Flying on commercial carriers these really brings home the point, too, in comparison to flying 30 years ago -- even in first class.)

Although the U.S is rolling around in its own fat more than ever, I'm not sure "banning" things is such a good idea. A soda and a Marlboro aren't really one of the same. (Double scotch & water, please, Manuel.)
11:46 AM on 11/27/2011
First off, I don't know what planet this writer is living on, but the one where I live has ads for liquor, both hard and soft, on TV at all hours of the day and night all the time. Second, didn't she ever hear of personal choice? If you don't want your kids to drink soda, don't buy it!
photo
SteveC 1979
Something witty and awesome.
02:23 PM on 11/29/2011
Disaronno on the rocks, please.
TomP100
Read My Lips...No New Texans!
05:23 PM on 11/26/2011
Other than maybe vegans and evangelicals, there really is nothing more annoying than nanny state advocates. I'm as liberal as they come, but nannyism is really growing tiresome.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ddeanfountain
Truth is not propaganda!
11:16 PM on 11/25/2011
I am old enough to remember when cigarettes were advertised on television and remember the day that advertising was outlawed under the premise of doing what was good for this nation's health. Today, however, I disagree with the concept that we must silence the owners of products or services of which we've determined are unhealthy. Freedom of speech is an essential part of this nation so as a nation do we ban advertising for a product that parents obviously ignore teaching their children the dangers. If this be the case then why are we banning automotive ads, beer advertising, all forms of prescription and non prescription drugs and let's not forget fast and junk food in general. These products kill just as many people as any other and certainly more than soda. I realize that much of this has more to do with the rising cost of healthcare but after a lifetime of fast food, living recklessly and ignoring the warnings, wouldn't it just be best to let these people die. Why do we insist on prolonging someone's life when they obviously didn't care enough to read and follow the warning signs!
11:53 AM on 11/27/2011
I realize that much of this has more to do with the rising cost of healthcare but after a lifetime of fast food, living recklessly and ignoring the warnings, wouldn't it just be best to let these people die. Why do we insist on prolonging someone's life when they obviously didn't care enough to read and follow the warning signs

Actually agreed with most of your post, except for that part. That's a little cold, dude!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ddeanfountain
Truth is not propaganda!
03:55 PM on 11/27/2011
It may be a little cold. I'm not denying that but at what point do we stop trying to care for those that refuse to care for themselves. As a nation and as a society, we spend a great deal of time trying to carry the weight (no pun intended) of those who often do to themselves. I relate this to our school systems whereby we are so preoccupied with those that fall behind we deny or curtail those that would and could excel. If we cannot evolve and move forward as a species, as humans, at some point we simply begin to decline and die off. No other species on earth spends the effort and concern for those that intentionally ignore the warnings and do harm to themselves as humans do. If by continually assisting those that refuse to evolve, learn from their mistakes and ignore the warnings, aren't we simply encouraging others to do the same. Not to mention we're creating more and more people who become dependent on others to save them from their ongoing bad decisions? Teach them what's best for them and help them to change but if they refuse, let them die. Ignorance breeds ignorance and a mind closed to change should simply be a warning to others willing to listen!
photo
StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
05:44 PM on 11/25/2011
"Does it make sense to task our government with protecting us from the people that control the government?"

Does it make sense to roll over and play dead?

It's OUR government and OUR airwaves. How about we force OUR government to manage OUR airwaves in the way we see fit?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Karl Wilder
01:44 PM on 11/25/2011
Are parents so weak and powerless they can't say no? Really parents have you given up all your authority? I remember soda advertising, I could sing all the jingles. Yet my mother said it was not good for us and we had it RARELY. I can actually remember the times we had a coke, A New Year's Eve in Omaha with shrimp cocktail, when settling into a new house in Edina, we had it along with popcorn and the Carol Burnett Show. You see parents used to make the decisions instead of whining about advertising.
photo
StrawHat
Eat veggies, don't vote for them
02:39 PM on 11/25/2011
It's not whining, however much the libertarians try to paint it as such.

It's a sophisticated and clear-eyed understanding of the fact that advertisers are actively employing all the research on BRAIN-WASHING to indoctrinate a new generation of consumers of their pernicious poisons.
12:05 AM on 11/27/2011
Who, in your opinion, holds the final decision? The TV, the advertisers, or the parent that buys the soda for the child?

Are you saying that everyone is so weakminded that they see a commerical (many etc..) and must do as the commerical says? What about people drinking soda in movies?

Seriously, people have brains and parents NEED to be the ones to make decisions.
05:13 PM on 01/05/2012
"Really parents have you given up all your authority?"

Yes, yes they have. nearly an entire generation has decided that for parents (or anyone for that matter) to have authority over their children is bad, bad, bad.

I was just thinking as I walked around a shopping center the other day that the one thing I never hear from parents now is an imperative sentence. When I was growing up (and for god knows how long before that) you could hear parents saying, "Come here! Put that down. Stop kicking the lady's seat. Give me my keys." Now it's more like, "McKayla would you like to give mommy back her car keys? Please?" And the mother is standing there explaining at great length to a three year old why she needs her car keys back.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:35 PM on 11/25/2011
Why stop at soda ads. Please lets institute a ban on info-mercials, and most particularly put an end to ads for prescription medication. The marketers are using every pschological trick in the book they can to dupe you into parting with your money by selling you things you can usually do without.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
see-ellen2001
12:00 PM on 11/25/2011
Then let's ban anything like kiddie cereals, cookies, cakes, restaurants bcs they serve pop. Where does it end.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
luvs2eat
What fresh hell is this?
11:25 AM on 11/25/2011
Oh geez Louise... don't buy soda and turn off the TV... problem solved. We're responsible for what our kids eat and drink and what they watch on TV. Advertisers can show what they like. I make the grocery decisions.
07:48 AM on 11/25/2011
I admit to scanning this article quickly. At some point, parents and adults must take responsibility for their own choices for themselves and their children. I am so tired of this attitude that the government must do EVERYTHING. The gross display of consumerism is OUR FAULT. If we can't take responsibility for our own choices and require the government to take these things away from us in order for us to be able to make easier choices, then the cause has not been dealt with at all; only the problem. And this is the continuation of the entitlement generation. People, take responsibility for yourself. Teach your children to make a choice. Make them do a freakin' chore. Teach them responsibility. Stop making the government legislate everything. What's next? Legislation for a nanny to come and spoon feed your 17-year old child apple sauce every morning?
07:26 AM on 11/25/2011
What's next?
Ban ads for hamburgers, meat, chips, ice cream, biscuits and other bakery, M&Ms, chocolate, beer, ....
Welcome on the road to the dietnazi regime.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bryan broome
All your money won't another minute buy.
07:22 AM on 11/25/2011
The only thing anyone needs to know about a healthy diet can be summed up in a few words.
"All things in moderation.Nothing to excess."
That's all that has ever needed to be written on the subject.
photo
HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Jamie Schler
Writer at Life's a Feast & Huff Post blogger.
02:54 AM on 11/25/2011
Did you forget to mention that the biggest problem we face today is not that kids are watching so many tv commercials brainwashing them to drink soda and junk food but that they spend hours upon hours of every single day of their life plopped down in front of the television (just watching a lot of crap, pardon my French) instead of outside in the fresh air, getting exercise or reading books? And how many of these kids are allowed to watch anything that they want on tv, instead of watching educational or at least well-made content? Come on... as a parent, I was able to make decisions for my kids that helped them learn to make their own decisions. They are now 23 and 21, rarely eat junk food, rarely drink soda, enjoy watching (and understand) documentaries, history and science shows, news programs and good films. No, I am not bragging....as parents we made conscious decisions of what to buy and feed our kids and what they could watch on tv (often with us rather than tv as babysitter). And as a side point, there is so much bad junk on tv from commercials to reality shows to cartoons to sitcoms that it should all be canned! Ha... or we should just learn to turn it off.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bryan broome
All your money won't another minute buy.
07:37 AM on 11/25/2011
Nice post. I would add that while the author's focus is on soda... what about all the sex and violence the children see and experience every day from all forms of media? This is why it IS up to the parents to teach their children values, healthy habits etc.
photo
OneBurbon
The correct spelling of bourbon was taken so donâ€
02:09 AM on 11/25/2011
Conversation Starter: Is it time to start a ban on banning things? Do more regulations only make us a weaker people?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bryan broome
All your money won't another minute buy.
07:18 AM on 11/25/2011
Remove all stop lights immediately.