Crunch Pak Foodles are healthy snacks |
The Walt Disney Co. is announcing today (June 5,2012)
that it plans to advertise only healthier foods to kids on its TV
channels, radio station and website. Disney says it's the first major
media company to set a standard for food advertising on kid-focused TV
programming.
By 2015, all food and beverage products that are advertised, promoted or sponsored on the Disney Channel, Disney XD, Disney Junior, Radio Disney,
Disney.com and Saturday morning programming for kids on ABC-owned
stations (Disney owns ABC) will have to meet the company's nutrition
criteria for limiting calories and reducing saturated fat, sodium and
sugar.
Many foods, such as prepackaged
lunches, fruit drinks, candy and snack cakes, won't make the cut. The
nutrition criteria were created by experts to reflect the government's
dietary guidelines.
"Parents can be confident
that foods associated with Disney characters or advertised on Disney
platforms meet our new, healthier nutrition guidelines," Robert Iger, chairman and CEO of Disney said in a statement.
The
company says it's already working with major food companies to
reformulate products so they can be advertised during children's
programming.
The first lady and leading national nutrition experts hope other companies follow suit. Michelle Obama, who is attending the announcement today in Washington, D.C.,
said in a statement, "This new initiative is truly a game changer for
the health of our children. … With this new initiative, Disney is doing
what no major media company has ever done before in the U.S.—
and what I hope every company will do going forward. When it comes to
the ads they show and the food they sell, they are asking themselves one
simple question: 'Is this good for our kids?' "
"This
is landmark, because a major media company is taking responsibility for
what food they advertise to children," says Margo Wootan, director of
nutrition policy for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, a
Washington D.C.-based consumer group. "This should be a real wake-up
call to Nickelodeon and the Cartoon Network to do the same."
For
years, nutrition experts have called for sweeping changes in the
marketing of foods and beverages to children. They objected to kids
being bombarded with ads for fast food, snacks, sugary cereals and other
junk food on TV and websites. Food and beverage companies spend about
$2 billion a year on advertising and production promotion targeted at
young consumers, according to the Federal Trade Commission.
Wootan
says Disney's nutrition guidelines will get rid of advertising for "the
worst junk food — candy, snack cakes, sugary drinks."
But
the company will still be able to advertise "better-for-you versions of
products that are not perfectly nutritious. There are still going to be
SpaghettiOs and things like that in the mix."
Under
the new Disney nutrition standards, breakfast cereals that are
advertised will have to contain fewer than 10 grams of sugar in a
serving, Wootan says. "That's a good step forward, but it's not ideally
nutritious. That's about the amount of sugar in three Chips Ahoy
cookies."
Jon Leibowitz,
chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, says Disney is making this
move "at perhaps some peril to their revenues, so that's all the more
reason why we should commend them. These self-imposed restrictions will
be good for kids and empower parents."
Kelly Brownell,
director of Yale University's Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity,
says, "This is a significant advance by Disney. With their reach and
credibility, the tight nutrition standards they have set for specially
designated foods will touch millions of children."
Food
marketing is really "important because it shapes the way kids expect to
be fed," Wootan says. "If we don't deal with food marketing to kids, we
don't have any chance of addressing childhood obesity."
Currently,
a third of children and adolescents are overweight or obese, putting
them at a greater risk for type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol, sleep
apnea and other serious health problems.
Keith
Ayoob, an associate professor of pediatrics at Albert Einstein College
of Medicine in New York who worked with Disney on its new nutrition
standards, says, "Parents are hungry for ways to help their kids eat
better. Kids want food that's fun and tastes good. These guidelines
bring parents and kids together."
James Hill, executive director of the Anschutz Health and Wellness Center at University of Colorado,
who also consulted with Disney on the new guidelines, says, "Most of
the foods they are going to be advertising are good for kids and
families to eat. Our goal was to give people nutrition advice that is
useful today."
Disney's latest moves build on
actions the company has taken over the past few years. In 2006, Disney
introduced nutrition guidelines for food products promoted with company
characters. At its theme parks, Disney began offering healthier kids'
meals, serving carrots and other vegetables and fruits and low-fat milk
at meals as the default choice, instead of fries and soft drinks. The
parks also offer fruit and vegetables at food venues.
As part of its latest changes, Disney is:
•Introducing
the Mickey Check, a symbol that food and beverage products and menu
items can carry if they meet the company's nutrition standards.
•Reducing
the level of sodium by 25% in well-balanced kids' meals served at its
parks by 2013 and introducing new kids' breakfast meals that meet the
nutrition guidelines.
•Expanding its offering of fruits and vegetables to 350 of 400 food venues in its domestic parks by 2013.
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