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scamper
01-19-2006, 09:53 AM
Nickelodeon, Kellogg face lawsuit
WASHINGTON (AP) — Advocacy groups and parents are suing the Nickelodeon TV network and cereal maker Kellogg in an effort to stop junk-food marketing to kids.

SpongeBob SquarePants was criticized for promoting what the center calls junk food.
Nickelodeon via AP

The plaintiffs are citing a recent report documenting the influence of marketing on what children eat. Ads aimed at kids are mostly for high-calorie, low-nutrition food and drinks, says the government-chartered Institute of Medicine.

Wakefield, Mass., mother Sherri Carlson said she tries to get her three kids to eat healthy foods.

"But then they turn on Nickelodeon and see all those enticing junk-food ads," Carlson said. "Adding insult to injury, we enter the grocery store and see our beloved Nick characters plastered on all those junky snacks and cereals."

Carlson and another plaintiff, Andrew Leong of Brookline, Mass., spoke at a news conference organized by the Center for Science in the Public Interest and the Boston-based Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood.

They intend to sue Kellogg and Nickelodeon parent Viacom in state court in Massachusetts and served the required 30 days' notice on Wednesday.

"For over 30 years, public health advocates have urged companies to stop marketing junk food to children," said Susan Linn of the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood. "Even as rates of childhood obesity have soared, neither Viacom nor Kellogg has listened."

The center said that, of 168 ads for food that appeared on Nickelodeon during a review in the fall, 88 were for foods with poor nutritional quality. Nickelodeon characters such as SpongeBob SquarePants also appear on packages of Kellogg's Wild Bubble Berry Pop-Tarts, which the center categorized as junk food.

Both companies said they have commitments to healthy lifestyles.

Nickelodeon spokesman Dan Martinsen said the kids' cable network has been a leader in helping kids and their families be more active and healthier and has pushed advertisers for more balance.

Kellogg spokeswoman Jill Saletta said the company is proud of its contributions to healthy diets and will keep educating people about good nutrition and exercise.

A food industry-backed group defended the companies, saying the lawsuit assumes that parents can't turn off televisions, have no control over the food they buy and can't make kids go outside to play.

"Going out on a limb here, perhaps her (Carlson's) kids want these foods not because of ads, but because they're children," said Dan Mindus, spokesman for the Center for Consumer Freedom.

The lawsuit seeks to stop the companies from marketing junk food when 15% or more of the audience is age 8 or younger. It targets not only commercials but websites, toy giveaways, contests and other marketing aimed at that age group.


http://www.usatoday.com/money/advertising/2006-01-18-kellogg-usat_x.htm



Be responsible for yourself, don't blame other people for your fat kids.