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World
No Tobacco
Day Targets Film, Fashion
The World Health Organization
is urging Hollywood to do more to keep tobacco off the silver
screen. It's made smoking in the movies the focus of Saturday's
World No Tobacco Day.
"The WHO is calling on the entertainment
industry, in particular the world of films and fashion, to stop
promoting a product that kills every second regular user," the
global health organization said.
World No Tobacco Day is celebrated
every year on May 31 as a way to draw attention to the dangers
of tobacco use. Global activities this year include fashion shows,
art exhibits, seminars, and petitions urging an end to tobacco
use in film and fashion.
Images Influence Kids
Young people are especially vulnerable
to the glamorous images of smoking portrayed in many movies, advocates
said.
Several studies conducted by researchers at Dartmouth Medical
School have found that kids who watch a lot of movies that show
smoking are more
likely to start smoking themselves, and have more positive
attitudes about smoking.
And smoking in movies - especially the PG-13 movies targeted
at impressionable adolescents - is on the rise.
A recent report by the Massachusetts Public Interest Research
Group found that tobacco use in film has increased by 50% since
1998, the year tobacco companies reached a major legal settlement
with 46 US states. That agreement prohibited tobacco firms from
advertising to minors, and from paying film companies to use their
products in movies.
"The biggest problem with (smoking in movies)," said Tom Glynn,
director of cancer science and trends for the American Cancer
Society, "is that it begins to appear as a normal behavior, when
in fact it's a behavior that only 1 in 5 adults participate in.
But the impression one would get is that it's something most adults
do, and that's a problem."
Tobacco Deserves an R-Rating
The WHO and other advocates are calling on the film industry
to take four concrete steps against tobacco.
They want movie producers to run a statement in each movie's
end credits certifying that no one in the production received
any money from tobacco companies or their agents. The idea is
based on the current animal welfare statements many movies contain,
assuring viewers that no animals were harmed during production.
Advocates also want strong anti-tobacco ads to run before any
movie that contains images of tobacco. And in movies that do show
tobacco use, they want the brand to be indistinguishable.
But perhaps most controversially, the WHO is urging film executives
to give any movie that shows tobacco use an R-rating.
"It substantially reduces the probability a kid will see the
movie," Glantz said.
Smoking is currently not one of the criteria the Motion Picture
Association of America uses to determine the rating each film
should get. But Glantz says the organization should take tobacco
just as seriously as it takes profanity. Coarse language can be
enough to get a film rated R. Violence, nudity or drug abuse in
a movie can also earn it an R.
But Glantz is quick to note that he's not advocating censorship
of movies.
"I'm not saying they can't put anything bad in, but if they
do, it should be properly labeled," he said.
Cigarettes Not Fashionable
The WHO is also looking to the fashion industry to change practices
it says help promote tobacco. In particular, the organization
is calling for an end to tobacco-sponsored fashion shows and awards,
and an end to pictures of smoking models.
These types of events help advertise a product that kills some
5 million people worldwide, the WHO says.
"The world of film and fashion cannot be accused of causing
cancer," the organization said. "But they do not have to promote
a product that does."
Reference
Source 102
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