Parents and Advocates Will Sue Viacom Kellogg
Posted: Sat Jan 21, 2006 11:42 am
98% (53/54) of Kellogg’s advertisements on Saturday morning television show foods of poor nutritional quality.
84% (67/80) of Kellogg’s food products with on-package marketing directed to children are of poor nutritional quality.
100% (3/3) of Kellogg’s advertisements in children’s magazines show foods of poor nutritional quality.
100% (21/21) of Kellogg’s websites for children feature foods of poor nutritional quality.
Kellogg also markets its products to children using toys, games, books, and clothes. 82% (75/92) of the child-oriented branded items Kellogg had for sale on the company website promote foods of poor nutritional quality.
Kellogg Disparages a Healthy Food
In a Kellogg advertising campaign for Apple Jacks cereal, the commercial features a conflict between Bad Apple, who is described as grouchy and mischievous, and Sweet Cinna Mon, who supposedly gives Apple Jacks their sweet taste. It is bad enough that Kellogg sells a cereal that has more sugar (and more salt) than it has apples.
However, it is unconscionable to disparage apples when kids need to be encouraged to eat more apples and other fruits and vegetables. On an average day, only 45% of American children eat any fruit.
Kellogg markets some reasonably healthy foods to children, such as Frosted Mini-Wheats and Raisin Bran cereals, but the number of healthier products is dwarfed by shelves full of Kellogg’s products of poor nutritional quality, which are marketed to kids. Kellogg also has websites with content that supposedly promotes child health. Kellogg’s Nutrition Camp is full of nutrition education textâ€but it is boring compared to the sites promoting Kellogg’s lownutrition products, such as the Apple Jacks Cinna Island site or the Froot Loops site. Even Tony the Tiger’s Earn Your Stripes site, focusing on physical activity, is an advertisement for Frosted Flakes cereal, which is high in sugars. The site also links to Kellogg’s Fun K Town, which promotes foods of poor nutritional quality.
For more information see Center for Science in the Public Interest
We don't allow firms to pollute our kids minds with pornography so why should we allow them to pollute their bodies with food pornography?
Parents and Advocates Will Sue Viacom & Kellogg: Lawsuit Aimed at Stopping Junk-Food Marketing to Children by Kellogg and Viacom’s Nickelodeon
January 18, 2006
84% (67/80) of Kellogg’s food products with on-package marketing directed to children are of poor nutritional quality.
100% (3/3) of Kellogg’s advertisements in children’s magazines show foods of poor nutritional quality.
100% (21/21) of Kellogg’s websites for children feature foods of poor nutritional quality.
Kellogg also markets its products to children using toys, games, books, and clothes. 82% (75/92) of the child-oriented branded items Kellogg had for sale on the company website promote foods of poor nutritional quality.
Kellogg Disparages a Healthy Food
In a Kellogg advertising campaign for Apple Jacks cereal, the commercial features a conflict between Bad Apple, who is described as grouchy and mischievous, and Sweet Cinna Mon, who supposedly gives Apple Jacks their sweet taste. It is bad enough that Kellogg sells a cereal that has more sugar (and more salt) than it has apples.
However, it is unconscionable to disparage apples when kids need to be encouraged to eat more apples and other fruits and vegetables. On an average day, only 45% of American children eat any fruit.
Kellogg markets some reasonably healthy foods to children, such as Frosted Mini-Wheats and Raisin Bran cereals, but the number of healthier products is dwarfed by shelves full of Kellogg’s products of poor nutritional quality, which are marketed to kids. Kellogg also has websites with content that supposedly promotes child health. Kellogg’s Nutrition Camp is full of nutrition education textâ€but it is boring compared to the sites promoting Kellogg’s lownutrition products, such as the Apple Jacks Cinna Island site or the Froot Loops site. Even Tony the Tiger’s Earn Your Stripes site, focusing on physical activity, is an advertisement for Frosted Flakes cereal, which is high in sugars. The site also links to Kellogg’s Fun K Town, which promotes foods of poor nutritional quality.
For more information see Center for Science in the Public Interest
We don't allow firms to pollute our kids minds with pornography so why should we allow them to pollute their bodies with food pornography?
Parents and Advocates Will Sue Viacom & Kellogg: Lawsuit Aimed at Stopping Junk-Food Marketing to Children by Kellogg and Viacom’s Nickelodeon
January 18, 2006