New Philip Morris movie ads
p2pnet.net News:- Talk about blowing smoke, how’s this for disingenuous, blatant, two-faced bullshit?
Smoking is an addiction that’s as bad as heroine or cocaine or alcohol enslavement.
Now Marlboro maker Philip Morris USA claims it wants Hollywood to cut smoking out of its movies because “cinematic portrayals of tobacco use can entice children to smoke,” says PM, quoted by The Associated Press.
PM and the other Big Tobacco fims have spent a fortune trying find subtle ways to get kids – their consumers of the future – to smoke.
Claiming they don’t want that is exactly like the Big Four Organized Music gang trying to say they give a damn about their customers.
The Marlboro Men now plan to, “run advertisements in Daily Variety, The Hollywood Reporter and other trade publications imploring moviemakers: ‘Please Don’t Give Our Cigarette Brands a Part in Your Movie’,” says the story.
But Stanton Glantz, head of the Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education at the University of California at San Francisco, says it’s a PR stunt.
And, “Hollywood has ignored the very serious problem that smoking in the movies contributes to youth tobacco use,” AP has Matt Myers, president of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, saying.
Strangely, Philip Morris isn’t using Hollywood’s favourite Cease & Desist method to back up its ads.
It’s not asserting that by using product in its film without permission, Hollywood is violating PM copyrights.
Two male models who played the manly Marlboro Man died of lung cancer.
Don’t bother to stay tuned.
Also See:
The Associated Press – Philip Morris: Don’t film our brands, November 15, 2006
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November 18th, 2006 at 7:19 am
Virtually every instance of a cigarette or brand appearing in a movie is a paid product placement ad. Except, of course, any negative connotation, which virtually guarantees a lawsuit from big tobacco.
see: How the tobacco industry built its relationship with Hollywood
http://tc.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/11/suppl_1/i81
“Both the entertainment and tobacco industries recognised the high value of promotion of tobacco through entertainment media. The 1980s saw undertakings by four tobacco companies, Philip Morris, RJ Reynolds (RJR), American Tobacco Company, and Brown and Williamson to place their products in movies. RJR and Philip Morris also worked to place products on television at the beginning of the decade. Each company hired aggressive product placement firms to represent its interests in Hollywood. These firms placed products and tobacco signage in positive situations that would encourage viewers to use tobacco and kept brands from being used in negative situations. At least one of the companies, RJR, undertook an extensive campaign to hook Hollywood on tobacco by providing free cigarettes to actors on a monthly basis. Efforts were also made to place favourable articles relating to product use by actors in national print media and to encourage professional photographers to take pictures of actors smoking specific brands. The cigar industry started developing connections with the entertainment industry beginning in the 1980s and paid product placements were made in both movies and on television. This effort did not always require money payments from the tobacco industry to the entertainment industry, suggesting that simply looking for cash payoffs may miss other important ties between the tobacco and entertainment industries.
Conclusions: The tobacco industry understood the value of placing and encouraging tobacco use in films, and how to do it. While the industry claims to have ended this practice, smoking in motion pictures increased throughout the 1990s and remains a public health problem.”
November 18th, 2006 at 2:24 pm
Also see the Fifth Estate Denial Machine. On global warming but goes into a lot of detail about how the ’scientists’ who defend the tobacco companies are now being paid by the Exxon and the like to defend the oil industry. Plausible deniability. Canada sounds just like the US on this.
http://www.cbc.ca/fifth/denialmachine/index.html
November 19th, 2006 at 3:13 pm
Imagine Philip Morris asking Holllywood to do something that it’s unwilling to do itself – stop marketing nicotine addiction to children. Today Philip Morris spends billions for signs in and around neighborhood candy stores. Responsible merchants exclude either nicotine marketing or children from stores.
See http://whyquit.com/pr/031806.html
Philip Morris knows that today nearly 90% of its new customers are under 20 years of age. It must entice them into permanent chemical bondage or watch sales plummet. Clearly, this is just another in a long series of Philip Morris PR stunts.
John R. Polito
Editor WhyQuit.com