Studyspark Study Document

American Culture TV Consumed by Term Paper

Pages:3 (1105 words)

Sources:3

Subject:Health

Topic:Nutritional Foods

Document Type:Term Paper

Document:#90110593


Food advertising is even worse, because while a parent might be able to avoid the toy store, in the grocery store he or she is subject to food masquerading as a toy. The only possible resistance is not taking the child shopping, which forces the parent to deprive the child of a parent-bonding experience where he or she could teach the child about budgeting and nutritional food.

The AAP study also notes that advertisers are aware that children and adolescents are more susceptible to advertisements for unnecessary goods, thus they are more often the targets of product placement ads ("Children, Adolescents, and Advertising,"AAP, 2006). Then, once consumption patterns are established early on in life, they can be difficult to eradicate. "By the time we reach adulthood, unhealthy food practices can be embedded in our subconscious mind and we must work hard to overcome these ingrained behaviors. Since rooting out bad habits is so difficult, the key for our children is to foster healthy habits as they grow up" (Topel 2004).

To advertisers: "Children represent three different markets...the direct money that children spend and the money they influence....and...the future market. Advertisers recognize that brand loyalties and consumer habits formed when children are young and vulnerable will be carried through to adulthood. According to the CEO of Prism Communications, 'they aren't children so much as what I like to call 'evolving consumers'" (Beder 1998). Because of this attitude, the AAP, in summary, advocates that advertising to children should be banned ("Children, Adolescents, and Advertising,"AAP, 2006). This raises First Amendment freedom of speech issues, however, and may not be legally feasible even though it may address the causes of the spiraling children's obesity epidemic.

Another solution, instead, is to merely ban television from one's own home and to reinstate the family meal as an institution. Do not buy food masquerading as toys, like the Dora the Explorer cereal. Explore methods of engaging children's developing intellectual and critical faculties rather than turning on so-called educational programming. Teach children to cook a meal and budget for the week, not to nag parents to buy brightly colored food in boxes. Encourage children to explore the world outdoors rather than to watch a television show called Dora the Explorer.

Works Cited

Beder, Sharon. '"A Community View', Caring for Children in the Media Age."

Papers from a national conference, edited by John Squires and Tracy Newlands, New College Institute for Values Research. Sydney, 1998, pp. 101-111. "Children, Adolescents, and Advertising." 24 Sept 2007. http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/sbeder/children.html#RTFToC1

Dora the Explorer Cereal." The Breakfast Bowl. Jun 2006. 24 Sept 2007. http://breakfastbowl.blogspot.com/2006/06/dora-explorer-cereal.html

Martin, a. (2007). "Kellogg to Phase Out Some Food Ads to Children."

The New York Times. 14 Jun 2006. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/14/business/14kellogg.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Statement by the American Academy of Pediatrics." Pediatrics. Dec 2006.

118:6: 2564-2569. 24 Sept 2007. http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/118/6/2563?maxtoshow=&HITS=10&hits=10&RESULTFORMAT=&andorexactfulltext=and&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&resourcetype=HWCIT el, Amy. "Setting Lifelong Eating Habits." National Geographic

Green Guide. Sept/Oct 2004. 24 Sept 2007. http://www.thegreenguide.com/doc/104/patterns


Sample Source(s) Used

Works Cited

Beder, Sharon. '"A Community View', Caring for Children in the Media Age."

Papers from a national conference, edited by John Squires and Tracy Newlands, New College Institute for Values Research. Sydney, 1998, pp. 101-111. "Children, Adolescents, and Advertising." 24 Sept 2007. http://www.uow.edu.au/arts/sts/sbeder/children.html#RTFToC1

Dora the Explorer Cereal." The Breakfast Bowl. Jun 2006. 24 Sept 2007. http://breakfastbowl.blogspot.com/2006/06/dora-explorer-cereal.html

Martin, a. (2007). "Kellogg to Phase Out Some Food Ads to Children."

Cite this Document

Join thousands of other students and "spark your studies."

Sign Up for FREE
Related Documents

Studyspark Study Document

American Culture

Pages: 4 (1496 words) Sources: 1+ Subject: Business - Advertising Document: #85588306

American culture and the consumption (patterns) of American youth in television, film, and other entertainment venues Mommy I want that!" When discussing how American culture 'corrupts' children, the first words to come to mind are usually four letter words, or words pertaining to highly sexualized scenarios. Yet the culture of American capitalist cultural consumption is if anything more omnipresent and equally damaging to American children. It has created a legacy of

Studyspark Study Document

American Culture and Social Impact.

Pages: 6 (2061 words) Sources: 6 Subject: Film Document: #48410414

Another writer notes, "It is important to point out that the marketing/merchandising effort is not a haphazard or casual affair. Not only are licensees carefully selected, but the Disney company insists on coordinating all aspects of the design and marketing of the products" (Wasko, 2001, p. 56). Most American children grow up on a diet of Disney films, and that has continued for generations, really showing that good, high-quality

Studyspark Study Document

Scarface- Latin American Culture Scarface

Pages: 14 (4742 words) Sources: 14 Subject: Film Document: #49880813

Both films irritated their relevant critical establishments, and in this way, De Palma's remade was truest to its source. Scarface 1983 savagery and energy united with its political portrait of the illicit drug trade form a memorable and powerful evocation of 1980s narco-corruption (Prince 231). One of the most striking disparities amid the 1932 Scarface and 1983 Scarface is between Tony Camonte, who makes a fortune through selling bear, but

Studyspark Study Document

Disillusionment of Modern American Culture Through Works of American Literature...

Pages: 10 (3407 words) Sources: 10 Subject: Drama - World Document: #49956354

Disillusionment in Postmodern American Literature The latter half of the twentieth century saw a raft of dramatic changes to American culture and society, bringing with them new forms living and thinking about the world. Beginning in the 1960s and continuing onward, the country saw a deep disillusionment with the suburban trappings of contemporary America, as Cold War anxiety combined with rampant consumerism to instill a sense of moral vacuity, which was

Studyspark Study Document

Culture and Electronic Media

Pages: 3 (956 words) Sources: 2 Subject: Communication - Journalism Document: #66195185

American pop culture has been cultivated and molded by mass media. The recent iteration of mass media, electronic media, has a profound and significant influence on the daily lives, thoughts, perceptions and desires of every single person in the United States, whether people are aware of this influence, or not. The potential for media to influence people has been the subject of much debate since the earliest forms of

Studyspark Study Document

Popular Culture and Immigration Issues

Pages: 5 (1378 words) Subject: American History Document: #92959291

American StudiesThe link between popular culture and immigration has been the subject of numerous studies for years. Television and print news sources in the United States have explored popular culture and issues of immigration in different ways. The popular culture landscape has been characterized by a multidirectional public discourse regarding immigration and Americanness. As a result, popular culture has continued to play a major role in creating and defining key

Join thousands of other students and

"spark your studies".