07/11/2008 GAAS:521:08 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Print Version | Email / Share
Governor Schwarzenegger Joins Entertainment Industry Foundation and Major Hollywood Studios to Deliver Anti-Smoking Ads on Youth-Rated Movies
Governor
Arnold Schwarzenegger joined with the California Health and Human Services
Agency, the Entertainment Industry Foundation (EIF) and major Hollywood studios
today to announce an unprecedented agreement that will help protect
children around the nation from tobacco use by placing California's anti-smoking
ads before tens of millions of viewers watching motion picture DVDs that include
scenes with tobacco use. Under the agreement, Sony Pictures, Universal Studios,
Time Warner, Paramount Pictures, Walt Disney Studios and Twentieth Century Fox
will place California's anti-smoking ads in the opening minutes of DVDs of all
new movies with tobacco use that
are rated G, PG and PG-13.
"By
agreeing to include our anti-smoking ads in the opening minutes of DVDs that
contain tobacco use, we will reach millions of young movie viewers with a proven
anti-smoking message at no expense to taxpayers," said Governor Schwarzenegger.
"This is a great day for the health and welfare of our young people, and it is
another example of what you can accomplish when you bring everyone together for
the greater good."
"This is a
strong and responsible step on the part of the entertainment industry that will
go a long way toward countering the influence of tobacco use in films," said Kim
Belshé, California Health and Human Services Secretary. "With this agreement, we
will be able to promote benefits of living tobacco-free to tens of millions of
viewers in a venue that will encourage important conversations between parents
and their children about the dangers of smoking."
The
Entertainment Industry Foundation helped coordinate the agreement between the
state of California and the studios and is paying
associated talent costs for 21 months for use of the ads. The agreements with
the studios run through 2009.
"We
applaud Sony, Universal Studios, Time Warner, Paramount, Walt Disney Studios and Twentieth
Century Fox for supporting our efforts to educate tens of millions of young
people about the dangers of smoking," said EIF President and CEO Lisa Paulsen.
"California's
Tobacco Control Program has produced some of the most effective ads in the
country. Placing these ads on DVDs will remind viewers that movies are fiction,
but the damage smoking does is real."
Under the agreement, the
studios will begin using four anti-tobacco ads, "Icons," "Bubbles,"
"Programmed," and "Daddy's Tape." The commercials are targeted toward children
and will be seen not just by California's
youth, but those who watch Hollywood movies
around the world. "Icons" contrasts tobacco industry images of a cowboy, a
hip-hop DJ and a twenties-era flapper with a more accurate depiction of the
repercussions of smoking: a dying man in a wheelchair who warns, "The reality is
you can end up looking like this." "Icons" will be the first ad to appear when
Sony releases the movie "21" on DVD on July 22.
"Bubbles"
features adults in a variety of typical smoking situations holding bubble wands
rather than cigarettes, with bubbles floating through the air and a closing
message, "Imagine a world without cigarettes."
"Programmed," which
juxtaposes a smoker with a laboratory rat who drinks from a yellow,
nicotine-filled water bottle every time the smoker inhales; and "Daddy's Tape,"
which features a boy supporting his father's efforts to quit smoking by making
him a motivational tape to play in his car. Other state ads may be made
available as well.
In
addition to the announcement, California Department of Public Health Director
Dr. Mark Horton sent a letter to National CineMedia to urge it to consider
donating time to run the state's anti-smoking ads before movies shown in
theaters that contain smoking.
California's Tobacco
Control program is one of the nation's longest running and most emulated
anti-tobacco programs, credited with helping reduce smoking by more than 33
percent and significantly reducing lung cancer rates in California since its
inception in 1989. The statewide media campaign has relied on three primary
strategies: countering pro-tobacco messages, promoting smoking cessation and
educating people about the dangers of second-hand smoke. More information can be
found at www.TobaccoFreeCa.com.




