Parents and
Advocates Will Sue Viacom & Kellogg
Lawsuit Aimed at Stopping Junk-Food
Marketing to Children by
Kellogg and Viacom’s Nickelodeon
WASHINGTON—Parents and advocacy groups today announced
their intent to file suit against Viacom and Kellogg to stop
them from marketing junk food to young children. The plaintiffs
contend that these two companies are directly harming kids’
health since the overwhelming majority of food products they
market to children are high in sugar, saturated and trans fat,
or salt, or almost devoid of nutrients. They will ask a
Massachusetts court to enjoin the companies from marketing junk
foods to audiences where 15 percent or more of the audience is
under age eight, and to cease marketing junk foods through web
sites, toy giveaways, contests, and other techniques aimed at
that age group.
The plaintiffs are the Center for Science in the
Public Interest (CSPI), the Boston-based
Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood, and two Massachusetts
parents, Sherri Carlson of
Wakefield and Andrew Leong of Brookline. Their announcement
comes six weeks after a landmarkreport from the Institute of
Medicine concluded that food advertising aimed at kids gets them
to prefer— and request—foods high in calories and low in
nutrients.
“Nickelodeon and Kellogg engage in business
practices that literally sicken our children,” said
CSPI executive director Michael F. Jacobson. “Their marketing
tactics are designed to convince kids that everything they hear
from their parents about food is wrong. It’s a multimedia
brainwashing and reeducation campaign—and a disease-promoting
one at that. And parents are fed up.”
Massachusetts’ consumer protection law requires
30 days’ notice of such a lawsuit, which the
plaintiffs served on the defendants today. “As a parent, I do my
best to get my kids to eat healthy foods,” said Sherri Carlson,
a plaintiff and mother of three. “But then they turn on
Nickelodeon and see all those enticing junk-food ads. Adding
insult to injury, we enter the grocery store and see our beloved
Nick characters plastered on all those junky snacks and cereals.
This irresponsible marketing to young children undermines my
efforts as a parent and must be stopped.”
This
past fall, CSPI analyzed food advertising on Nickelodeon’s
televised programming and in
Nickelodeon magazine and marketing on food packaging that bears
Nickelodeon characters. CSPI also analyzed Kellogg’s
Saturday-morning television advertisements, ads in kid-targeted
magazines, onpackage marketing, and other media. Nickelodeon’s
programming is aimed at kids aged 2 to 11, according to company
documents, and the Nick Jr. block of programming is aimed at
kids aged 2 to 5. Of 168 ads for food that appeared on
Nickelodeon during CSPI’s review, 88 percent were for foods of
poor nutritional quality. The September and October issues of
Nickelodeon magazine contained seven full-page food ads, all of
which were for junk foods. Of 15 foods bearing Nickelodeon
characters at a Washington, DC, supermarket, 60 percent were
junk foods, including Fairly Odd Parents Orange & Creme
Miniatures Kit Kat bars and SpongeBob SquarePants Wild Bubble
Berry Pop-Tarts.
CSPI
also reviewed 27.5 hours of Saturday-morning programming to
analyze Kellogg
marketing. CSPI found 54 Kellogg ads, 98 percent of which were
for nutritionally poor foods. (Another Kellogg ad, for Apple
Jacks cereal, had previously come under fire from CSPI for
disparaging apples, of all things.) Of 80 Kellogg foods found in
the supermarket with kid-friendly on-package marketing, 84
percent were for nutritionally poor foods. CSPI found 21
kid-friendly web sites for Kellogg products, all of which
highlighted junk foods. And of 92 child-oriented branded items
Kellogg had for sale on the web, 82 percent had a logo or mascot
from a junk-food brand.
“The
thrust of Nickelodeon’s and Kellogg’s likely defense will be to
blame parents, since, after
all, parents ultimately are responsible for their kids’ diets,”
said CSPI litigation director Steve Gardner, lead counsel for
the plaintiffs. “But then again, Kellogg and Nick aren’t
directing their marketing messages at parents; they’re going
right behind parents’ backs. Parents are ultimately responsible
for making sure their young kids don’t get hit by cars. But if
someone’s recklessly driving around your neighborhood at 80
miles an hour, you’re going to want to stop them.”
In 1977
CSPI and Action for Children’s Television first petitioned the
Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) to curb junk-food advertising aimed at
children. The commission staff began
proposing remedies, including one that would have banned all
advertising to children, since it found that any ads aimed at
young children were inherently unfair and deceptive.
Broadcasters, food makers, and other companies quickly prevailed
upon their congressional allies to quash the FTC’s nascent
effort.
Now, a
self-regulatory body, the Children’s Advertising Review Unit (CARU),
sets voluntary technical guidelines for advertising to kids and
adjudicates disputes. One former broadcasting executive,
Lisa Flythe, who served as director of commercial clearances for
MTV Networks and vetted ads on Nickelodeon, says CARU lacks
teeth. “There are no real penalties for running afoul of CARU’s
guidelines, and most of their guidelines are very general,” said
Flythe. “Besides, CARU does not arbitrate what foods are
appropriate to market to children."One company, Kraft, has set
nutritional guidelines for the foods it markets to children, and
does
not advertise to children under six.
Although
Nickelodeon has engaged in public relations activities on
the issue of childhood nutrition, notably a promise to make
SpongeBob and other characters available to marketers of some
healthful foods, it hasn’t set minimum nutrition thresholds for
the foods its characters plug or that run on its station.
Certainly most of the Kellogg’s products that feature SpongeBob
are of poor nutritional quality.
“For
over thirty years, public health advocates have urged companies
to stop marketing junk
food to children,” said Susan Linn, co-founder of the Campaign
for a Commercial-Free Childhood.
“Even as rates of childhood obesity have soared, neither Viacom
nor Kellogg has listened. We can no longer stand by as our
children’s health is sacrificed for corporate profits.”
The
Massachusetts statute the plaintiffs are suing under provides
for damages of $25 per
violation of unfair or deceptive advertising. In this case, a
violation would be occur each time that a Massachusetts child
sees an ad for a junk food on Nickelodeon, sees a Kellogg
junk-food ad on that or another network, or sees Kellogg
junk-food packaging that bears SpongeBob SquarePants, Dora the
Explorer, or other cartoon characters. If the companies go to
trial and are found liable, the verdict could be in the billions
of dollars, but CSPI’s attorneys say the plaintiffs would settle
for a commitment from the companies to change their marketing
practices.
“In any
other sphere of American life it would be considered creepy and
predatory for adults to
propose commercial transactions to toddlers and young children,”
said Jacobson. “Yet companies like Kellogg, Nickelodeon, and
others have been doing it with impunity, and government has done
nothing for decades. This litigation is truly a last resort—and
vitally important to children’s health.”
Read CCFC's Susan
Linn Statement in Support of the Lawsuit
Take Action: Tell Viacom and Kellogg to Stop Marketing Junk Food
to Young Children
Frequently Asked Questions
About the Lawsuit