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New article name is Tobacco Advertisement and African Americans

Introduction

Menthol in Tobacco

Menthol has been used as a medicinal practice for thousands of years. [1] It is steamed and distilled from peppermint oil to serve as a mild anesthetic that numbs the throat.[2] Simultaneously, it protects the throat from the harsh elements of tobacco smoke, thus allowing for a deeper and longer inhalation.[3] In 1926, Axton-Fisher introduced a mentholated cigarette called “spud” after its original patent-holder.[4] B&W then launched a mentholated Kool in 1933 and priced it at $0.15, 25 cents cheaper than spud.[5] Thus began the idea of mint flavored cigarettes and the eventual targeting of African Americans.

Health Effects

Menthol cigarettes have higher carbon monoxide concentrations than non-mentholated cigarettes and may be associated with greater absorption of nicotine. Specifically, research indicates that mentholated cigarettes may increase the risk of lung and bronchial cancer by promoting lung permeability and diffusion of smoke particles.[6]

African Americans are the only ethnic group to suffer disproportionately from smoking-caused chronic and preventable diseases. [7] Evident in the approximately 45,000 African Americans who die from smoking caused illness each year. Studies indicate that an estimated 1.6 million African Americans under the age of 18 who are alive today will become regular smokers.[8] Consequently, about 500,000 of these individuals well die prematurely from tobacco-related disease. [9] This is a direct result of the targeting of cigarette advertisements, specifically mentholated advertisements, to African Americans.

Cool and “Kool”

Vernacular Origins of Cool: Jazz

The vernacular origins of cool stemmed directly from the jazz culture of the 1950s and 1960s. It was during this time that the term cool went from a definition of cold to an urban deffinition of being: "The Birth of Cool".

Prior to Miles Davis' "Birth of Cool," to the Caucasian population, jazz was a preppy, college aged event that involved playing jazz music in garages and small groups. The African American understood jazz as a music closer to bee bop. It was incredibly fast paced compared to the jazz of today. With the "Birth of Cool," Miles Davis infused the use of drugs into jazz and turned it into a laid back entity completely about being one's self--being cool. People did not have much, what mattered was not tomorrow, but the idea of living passionately and differently in the present.

Being cool was not just about being bad, but it was to take ownership in one's self. To be cool was to be stoic in regards to emotion. it was to be confident and have a clear vision of one's self. It was being true to ones self and one's culture; finding one's self and "keeping it real." This is the culture that transformed the Harlem Renaissance--living differently and in style.


Kool

The Kool brand capitalized off this new culture of "coolness" in African American culture that evolved from the Davis' jazz movement.[10] The drew upon the idea of "coolness" to define their brand, "Kool." It was then associated with a very positive, glamorous self image which embodied the idea of cool fond in jazz. This attempt was evident in their first tagline: "'To be cool you smoke Kool'." Later, they further infused the idea of cool and glamorous with the line, "'Smoking a Kool? Like riding a Rolls Royce'." [11] B&W used Kool to substantiate the idea of a cool lifestyle. Kool was freshness, cold, but more importantly, Kool was cool.

Marketing

Targeting

Tobacco companies directly advertised to mentholated tobacco products to African Americans. This became clear in a 2002 study where it was found that within poor environments that had a greater quantity of African Americans, there were more interior and exterior tobacco advertisements retail outlets than in predominant white and middle to upper class communities.[12] These were mentholated cigarette advertisements. Tobacco companies pushed mentholated cigarettes to this "poor and minority neighborhoods"[13], "not because they're African American", but, "because they like menthol cigarettes."[14] Through advertisements of Kool, B&W capitalized on many African Americans' positive view of mentholation and its medicinal properties. Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). R.J. Reynolds, on the other hand, promoted their brand of mentholated cigarettes, Salem in an effort to achieve the same results. [15] Through direct targeting mentholated cigarettes towards of African Americans tobacco companies hoped to secure a niche within the market and significantly boost their sales.

Practice

The advertisement of mentholated tobacco was employed within the African American community efficiently and effectively. In 1997, R.J. Reynolds spent an estimated $10-15 million on advertisement for a new Camel menthol brand inside a leading advertising-related magazine entitled "Advertising Age."[16] Likewise, in July of 1999, Philip Morris began testing a new version of their best selling Marlboro menthol brand in hopes of attracting more African American customers.[17] Companies found themselves capitalizing off the use of menthol in African American culture and thus directly targeted their mentholated products towards them. Exemplifying the capacity of this targeting practice, a 2008 study in California stated that the number of cigarette ads per store, and the proportion of stores with at least one ad for a sales promotion, increased more rapidly in neighborhoods with a higher proportion of African Americans.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page). Many products were made just for African American consumers such as Marlboro Menthol Shorts which were advertised as being "exquisitely designed for the African American lung.[18]

The late 90s start sponsoring hip hop events and give out free cigarettes. An important marketing tool for tobacco companies was the corporate sponsorships for they served as both sales promotions and public relations functions. During the period 1995-99, tobacco companies sponsored at least 2733 events, programs, and organization s throughout the United States and the minimum total funding of these sponsorships was $365.4 million. the sponsorships involved numerous small, community based organizations that received funding and grants through larger umbrella organizations, many of these were part of the public health infrastructure. Due to this, public health practitioners need to develop better surveillance systems for monitoring tobacco sponsorships, to seek alternative funding sources for tobacco sponsored events and organizations, and to consider promoting a ban on tobacco sponsorship, possibly linking such regulation to the creation of alternative funding sources. [19]

However, using hip-hop culture had gotten the Kool brand in trouble. The attorney generals of New York, Maryland, and Illinois versus the Brown & Williamson Tobacco Co. over the marketing of Kool cigarettes. the lawsuits had asserted that the company's 2004 "Kool MIXX" promotion--which was billed by the company as a supposed celebration of Hip-hop music and culture--violated the 1998 tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) by targeting African American youth. The Kool Mixx campaign featured images of disc jockeys, young rappers, and dancers on cigarette packs and in advertising. All of the contests and events held appealed to the youth, especially African American.[20] At the same time, B&W was introduction a new line of flavors using images of African Americans and theme appealing to them. [21] A settlement was reached with R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., which acquired the assets of Brown & Williamson in July. Under the settlement, R.J. Reynolds agreed to substantial limitations on all future "Kool MIXX" promotions, and agreed to pay $1.46 million to be used for youth smoking prevention purposes. "This settlement is important for two reasons. First, it sends a strong message to the tobacco industry that we will not tolerate efforts to market cigarettes to children," said Attorney General Spitzer. "Second, this is the first time that the industry has agreed to marketing limitations that are even stricter than those set forth in the MSA, which will be helpful in future enforcement efforts. Overall, this landmark settlement will reduce the number of children who start smoking, and thereby protect them from a lifetime of addiction and disease." "As the nation's leading cause of preventable death, tobacco kills over 45,000 African Americans each year. This campaign targeted a hip hop audience, including youth. I hope this settlement sends a strong message that kids are off-limits for tobacco companies," said Maryland Attorney General Joseph Curran.“Under the settlement, R.J. Reynolds agreed to significant restrictions on all future Kool MIXX promotions, including:

  • Prohibiting use of the words "Kool," "Mixx" or "House of Menthol" on any merchandise;
  • Prohibiting the use of Hip Hop songs and interactive games on the CD-ROM;
  • Limiting the distribution of CD-ROMs to "adult-only" facilities and by mail to known adult smokers;
  • Prohibiting the sale of "special edition" packs in retail stores, and instead limiting distribution to "adult-only" facilities;
  • Prohibiting the separate "House of Menthol" website; and
  • Ensuring that any "Kool MIXX" print advertisements are placed only in magazines with relatively low youth readership.”[22]

Social Mobility

Tobacco advertising to African Americans also reflected the classic ideas of the American dream.[23] Historically, African Americans were subject to less access than whites to the commodities which comprised this dream. On the heels of the Civil Rights movement and the mist of Vietnam, companies such as Kool took advantage of the new opportunities for African American upward mobility and marketed toward these desires. This opportunity for social mobility, while available was privy to everyone. middle class African Americans still found themselves making 10% less than the average white. [24] In particular, inside the 1967 issue of Ebony magazine, "Negro Youth: Anger, Anxious and Aware," Kool seized the opportunity to market themselves as the glamorous alternative to reality.[25] Behind a cover, "illustrating a broke brick wall," was an advertisement of luxury and leisure-"come up to the Kool taste". [26] African Americans were very much concerned about their image as cool. [27] tobacco advertisement directly played into this need by representing African Americans as happy, confident, successful and wealthy, in love, attractive, strong and independent.[28] This was opposite their normal portrayal of African Americans in the media. Ads instead represented an assimilation of aspirations;" males were tall, dark and handsome, females had light skin and straight hair.[29] What was represented was more than a world full of leisure products that before the 1960s were used solely by white consumers, it attempted to portray a would utopia. The world was de-racialized exemplified in the Kool ad question mark. Not only did all ethnicities belong, they were successful and most importantly, smoked tobacco with one another.

Additional Case

Brown vs. Philip Morris, Inc.

In the case of Brown versus Philip Morris, Inc., the Reverend Jesse Brown attempted to highlight the economic racism of cigarette marketing through a civil rights claim. The Brown complaint stated that the "Defendant have for many years targeted African Americans and their communities with specific advertising to lure them into using mentholated tobacco products."[30] Brown raised the issues of discrimination, niche marketing, and the "staggering loss of life, premature disability, disease, illness, and economic loss" that were the result of the "Tobacco Companies international and racially discrimination fraudulent course of mis conduct."[31]

Brown contended that menthol cigarettes contained enhanced dangers over other cigarettes. Brown began by explaining that the ingredient menthol contains compounds such as benzopyrene, which are carcinogenic when smoked. Second, he argued that mentholated cigarettes contain higher nicotine and tar levels than non-mentholated cigarettes. thirdly, Brown claimed that menthol encourages deeper and longer inhalation of tobacco smoke, increasing the addictive properties of the cigarette and decreasing the lung's ability to rid itself of carcinogenic components of smoke. Based on evidence submitted in Brown, mentholated cigarettes account for between 60-75 percent of the cigarettes smoked by African Americans--and 90 percent of African American youth who smoke, smoke menthols. The case was dismissed by the United States court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in 2001. Most likely due to the fact that Reverend Brown brought this injury claim as a civil rights suit, providing a radical departure from defective products. By claiming transgression of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, originally written to protect recently freed slaves from a variety of discriminatory practices, the complainants of the Brown suit sought to show the unconstitutionality of targeting African Americans with defective products. The Brown complaint failed to take into consideration that the menthol cigarettes were still posing a threat to non-African American as well and that harm was being caused to more than just the African American community.

References

  1. ^ (jain, 302)
  2. ^ jain 301
  3. ^ jain 301
  4. ^ jan 301
  5. ^ jain 301
  6. ^ (Marketing 2-3)
  7. ^ (Marketing 3)
  8. ^ (Marketing 3)
  9. ^ (Marketing 3)
  10. ^ (Jain302)
  11. ^ (Jain 303)
  12. ^ (Marketing 1)
  13. ^ jstor16
  14. ^ (jain 301 jeffrey g. weil)
  15. ^ (marketing 2)
  16. ^ (marketing 2)
  17. ^ (marketing 2)
  18. ^ (212, sweet and spicy)
  19. ^ (BU-jsotr 239)
  20. ^ (Marketing 2)
  21. ^ (marketing 2)
  22. ^ internet artic
  23. ^ marketing 2
  24. ^ jain
  25. ^ jain 304
  26. ^ jain 305
  27. ^ jain 303
  28. ^ marketing 2
  29. ^ jain 305
  30. ^ jain 296
  31. ^ jain 296

External links