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monitoring, statutory rape, damage young, news paper, abuse prevention, polanski, netvideo , king chile , on, milf hunter summer , health, 13year old jazz sensation from france by boulou cd music, | This also doesn't count the important introduction of commercial-free or largely commercial-free premium cable tv such as letter to the editor HBO letter to the editor Family or the Disney Channel. There is no good evidence on the prevalence of food ads on those media. This is the most comprehensive reseach on the question of the relationship between the purported link between food letter to the editor advertising and the rise in children's obesity to date. It is consistent with what some of us predicted previously that further research would likely find. The findings were reported at a joint FTC-HHS workshop on Marketing, Self-Regulation, and Childhood Obesity. The workshop concludes today. There are call-in numbers for those who are interested in listening in to the proceedings, but cannot make it to Washington. FTC Chair Deborah Majoras also reiterated in her remarks opening the workshop that there remains no plan for the FTC to ban food advertising on children's television, a policy decision that is reinforced by the findings reported yesterday: In opening the workshop, FTC Chairman Deborah Platt Majoras said it |
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There were very large drops in children's advertising for cereal and candy products and small increases in ads for restaurants, movies, video games, dvd's, and other kinds of food such as yogurt. The large drop in food advertising may be explained in part by the health fact that much more of the health television ad time today is being given over to promotional ads for other programs, as well as an increase in advertisements for products such as dvd's and video games, which either didn't exist 28 years ago or did so on a much health smaller scale than today. Moroever, my earlier research finds, somewhat surprisingly, that there has been a substantial downward trend in commercial television viewing by children during this same period, from about 4 hours a day, to a little under 3 hours, which probably explains some of the decline in viewing of ads. As parents will quickly realize, however, this drop in television viewing has been offset by a larger rise in "screen time" such as computers, video games, and dvd's and videos, such that even though kids are watching less television (and seeing fewer paid ads) they are probably engaging in more sedentary activity. |
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