Tobacco and Hollywood
By RALPH NADER
 Among the greatest unsung public health advances of recent times is progress made against the global cigarette industry.
In the United States, cigarette smoking is finally on the decline. The courts have ruled the tobacco industry to be "racketeers." Smokefree spaces, including not just workplaces but restaurants and bars, are proliferating, reducing the harms of second-hand smoke and encouraging millions to quit. States are raising cigarette taxes, reducing smoking and raising funds for important public health programs.
Internationally, progress is speeding even faster. A global treaty, the
Framework
Convention on Tobacco Control, is encouraging countries to adopt
far-reaching anti-smoking measures, including bans on all cigarette
advertisements. Countries are emulating and surpassing the smokefree
initiatives in the United States -- even Irish pubs are now smokefree!
But
despite all the public health gains, Big Tobacco is still on the move,
addicting millions more smokers. And the industry has some unfortunate
allies.
One important cultural ally of Big Tobacco is Hollywood.
Smoking in youth-rated movies in on the rise, and it has demonstrable
effects on smoking rates.
According to researchers at the University of California San Francisco
Center
for Tobacco Control Research and Education, smoking appears even more
in Hollywood movies released with G/PG/PG-13 than in R-rated films.
Altogether, 75 percent of all U.S. releases have smoking scenes.
One cartoon film now on DVD, The Ant Bully, includes 41 tobacco scenes.
Researchers
have found that viewing smoking in movies makes it far more likely that
children will take up the habit -- controlling for all other relevant
factors (such as whether parents and peers smoke).
Think about
it--the movies are glamorous, and they portray smoking as glamorous,
whether or not it is a good guy or bad guy lighting a cigarette.
The
public health advances against Big Tobacco are due in significant part
to effective efforts to vilify the industry. When children especially
appreciate how the companies are manipulating them, they resist.
Hollywood's glorification of smoking works directly against this.
U.S. films bring in 30 percent of movie box office sales globally, and
Hollywood's
contribution to smoking is significant overseas, where the tobacco
epidemic is worst. Ten million people are expected to die every year
from smoking-related disease by 2025, 70 percent of them in developing
countries. Hollywood movies have gigantic appeal overseas, often with
even greater cultural influence than in the United States.
They appeal exactly to the demographic most likely to take up smoking -
urbanized, middle-class youth who aspire to Western lifestyles.
This is an easy problem to cure. Leading U.S. health groups and the
United Nation's World Health Organization have urged Hollywood to adopt
R-ratings
for movies with tobacco scenes (with exceptions where the presentation
of tobacco clearly and unambiguously reflects the dangers and
consequences of tobacco use or is necessary to represent the smoking of
a real historical figure), to air anti-tobacco spots before films with
tobacco imagery, to certify that movies with tobacco received no
tobacco industry pay-offs, and to stop identifying tobacco brands in
movies. None of these measures involves any "censorship."
The industry has resisted.
This
week, leading up to the 79th Annual Academy Awards, public health
groups and agencies from New York and Los Angeles, from Liverpool and
Sydney have mobilized to demand that Hollywood end its complicity with Big Tobacco.
In Washington, DC, representatives of the Smokefree Movies Action
Network,
dressed in biohazard suits, called on the Motion Picture Association of
America to remove "toxic" tobacco content from youth rated films. They
presented the MPAA with a "golden coffin."
The trade association's representatives declined to accept the award.
The
celebration of film at the Oscars reminds us of Hollywood's reach.
That's exactly why it is so important to get smoking out of kid-rated
films.
For more information about tobacco in Hollywood, the evidence of harm, and the widely endorsed policy solutions, visit
www.smokefreemovies.ucsf.edu.
Ralph Nader is the author of The Seventeen Traditions
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