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July 5 2008
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Introduction Striking a Balance: Protecting Youth From Overexposure to Alcohol Ads and Allowing Alcohol Companies to Reach the Adult Market In September 2003, both the Beer Institute and the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States ("DISCUS") finally followed the Federal Trade Commission's 1999 recommendation and announced their members would raise the minimum adult audience composition of media in which they will advertise from a fairly meaningless 50 percent to a proportional 70 percent.1 This white paper seeks to examine the impact of this 70 percent threshold2 on reducing underage youth exposure to alcohol advertising. Specifically, the examination asks:
Table of Contents Introduction. I. Movement toward the 70 percent threshold was uneven in 2004. II. An effective proportional youth audience cap should prevent overexposure.
III. A 15 percent threshold balances reducing youth exposure and industry's right to advertise. Conclusion. Appendix A – Measuring compliance.
1See Beer Inst., Advertising and Marketing Code § 3(d) (2003) ("advertising and marketing materials shall only be placed in magazines, on television, or on radio where at least 70% of the audience is expected to be adults of legal purchase age"); Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S., Code of Responsible Practices for Beverage Alcohol Advertising and Marketing (2003) ("advertising and marketing should be placed in broadcast, cable, radio, and print communications only where at least 70 percent of the audience is reasonably expected to be above the legal purchase age"), http://www.discus.org/industry/code/code.htm. 2The new 70 percent standard is described herein as a floor on adult exposure or a 30 percent cap on youth (2 to 20) exposure depending on context. 3Overexposure is defined as disproportionate advertising exposure to youth as compared to adults per capita.
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