Brewers Urged to Stop Marketing Beer Shirts to Young Girls
Center for Science in the Public Interest
April 29, 2008
The nonprofit
Center for Science in the Public Interest today urged
Miller Brewing Co., Foster’s, and Diageo, the parent
company of Guinness, to stop allowing logos for those
beers to be used on tee shirts sold at Forever 21, a
retailer popular with teenage girls. CSPI says that the
arrangement is in violation of the beer industry’s
voluntary advertising and marketing code. Though it is
administered by the Washington, D.C., lobby group the
Beer Institute, the code explicitly states that no beer
brands or logos “should be used or licensed for use on
clothing …intended for use primarily by persons below
the legal drinking age.”
Forever 21 claims it is among the top three teen
shopping brands nationwide.
“Adolescent and teenage girls hardly need further
inducements to drink,” wrote George A. Hacker, director
of the alcohol policies project at CSPI. “Heavy drinking
imposes special risks for girls, due to their lower body
weights and different metabolisms and the contributing
role of alcohol in sexual assaults, date rape, and
unwanted and unplanned pregnancies.”
CSPI is forwarding copies of its letters to the brewers
to the Federal Trade Commission, which has begun
applying greater scrutiny to the marketing practices of
alcoholic-beverage makers. CSPI also called on the
retailer to remove all beer or alcohol-themed tee shirts
from its web site and approximately 400 outlets around
the country. In addition to carrying shirts bearing
Miller, Foster’s, and Guinness logos, the chain sells
shirts that read “I’m awesome at beer pong,” “beer is my
anti-drug,” and “save water, drink beer.”

