SpongeBob, Kellogg Get The Big Squeeze
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SpongeBob SquarePants, meet Joe Camel. That was the subtext of a legal memo sent to Nickelodeon and Kellogg last week by lawyers for activists who want to restrict the advertising of junk food to children. The memo, from the Center for Science in the Public Interest, accuses the companies of using the undersea pineapple to sell sugary snacks the same way R.J. Reynolds was accused of using its shades-wearing dromedary to move cigarettes. Citing Rice Krispies, Pop-Tarts, Cheez-Its, E.L. Fudge cookies and Eggo waffles, among others, as products that have licensed SpongeBob, the Washington-based CSPI’s memo states, “All of those products are of poor nutritional quality.” At one level, the threatened suit can be written off as yet another set of fad-driven plaintiffs’ lawyers looking for deep pockets to bail out “victims” who made themselves fat. But the broader picture reveals just how successful anti-obesity advocates have been in restricting the activities of major food marketers, and how they consider themselves well on the way to turning Kellogg, McDonald’s and Kraft et al into the next Big Tobacco: • The FCC last year restricted the amount of ad inventory on children’s shows, and channel owners agreed to provide at least three hours a week of educational programming starting Jan. 1. • More than a dozen states have enacted junk food vending machine bans for their school districts, including Maine (Brandweek, Dec. 6, 2004), whose ban began this academic year. • In August, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine successfully persuaded Kraft in a Virginia suit to drop its claims that dairy products help consumers lose weight. • The Grocery Manufacturers of America in July agreed to support pre-broadcast review of its members ads by the Children’s Advertising Review Unit and to ban paid product placement. • The suit filed against McDonald’s by New Yorkers who claim Big Macs made them obese is alive and well, reinstated on appeal last year. And McDonald’s has famously removed “Supersize” items from its menus. The developments all indicate that the food business is, inch by inch, losing ground to its critics, and losing places and delivery vehicles for its messages. “I think their long-term objective is to stop advertising of any type,” said William MacLeod, partner at Collier Shannon Scott, Washington, D.C., and a former bureau director at the Federal Trade Commission. The hostility to cartoon-promoted food is based on the increasing chorus of parents who see a correlation between junk food advertising and obesity in children. Lisa Swythe of Brooklyn, N.Y., for instance, has a four-year-old who nags her in the supermarket for products the girl has never previously shown interest in simply because they feature animated beings. Until 2002, Swythe was better known as the director of commercial clearances for MTV Networks. Now she is a member of the Campaign for a Commercial Free Childhood. “These characters are only appearing on low-value products. If SpongeBob was on spinach she would probably want spinach. If we had these characters appearing in the same numbers on the vegetable aisle, it would make kids more willing to try stuff like that,” she said. SpongeBob does, in fact, appear on Boskovich spinach. But that is only a drop in the ocean, Swythe said. “When 98 commercials are for junk food and only four messages are for healthy eating, it’s pretty hard to get the message for healthy eating.” That opinion received considerable impetus from the December publication of Food Marketing to Children and Youth: Threat or Opportunity? by the National Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Medicine. |