disproportionately’ targeting black youth – study
http://rt.com/usa/205851-fast-food-black-children/
AFP Photo / Romeo Gacad
Children in lower-income, black communities are more heavily targeted by fast-food advertising and gimmicks designed to appeal to them, according to a newly published academic study.
Between 2010 and 2012, researchers at Arizona State University and the University of Illinois at Chicago examined 6,716 fast-food restaurants across the country to analyze the use of what is called child-directed marketing (CDM), i.e. free toys, kids’ play areas, posters featuring cartoon characters inside and outside restaurants.
READ MORE: Russia may ban fast food commercials in TV programs for kids
The study did not take into account fast-food advertising found in the media and digital ads.
The US fast-food industry spends “nearly a quarter of their marketing budgets targeting youth aged 2 to 17 years,” Arizona State University nutrition professor, Punam Ohri-Vachaspati, the lead author of the study, said.
“In 2009, fast food restaurants spent more than $700 million to market their products to children and adolescents; nearly half of the amount went toward premiums such as kids’ meal toys.”
“Majority black communities, rural areas, and middle-income communities are disproportionately exposed,” the study concluded.
http://rt.com/usa/205851-fast-food-black-children/
AFP Photo / Romeo Gacad
Children in lower-income, black communities are more heavily targeted by fast-food advertising and gimmicks designed to appeal to them, according to a newly published academic study.
Between 2010 and 2012, researchers at Arizona State University and the University of Illinois at Chicago examined 6,716 fast-food restaurants across the country to analyze the use of what is called child-directed marketing (CDM), i.e. free toys, kids’ play areas, posters featuring cartoon characters inside and outside restaurants.
READ MORE: Russia may ban fast food commercials in TV programs for kids
The study did not take into account fast-food advertising found in the media and digital ads.
The US fast-food industry spends “nearly a quarter of their marketing budgets targeting youth aged 2 to 17 years,” Arizona State University nutrition professor, Punam Ohri-Vachaspati, the lead author of the study, said.
“In 2009, fast food restaurants spent more than $700 million to market their products to children and adolescents; nearly half of the amount went toward premiums such as kids’ meal toys.”
“Majority black communities, rural areas, and middle-income communities are disproportionately exposed,” the study concluded.

