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» Ad Money Moves from Billboards to Print 
Report finds cigarette marketing to teens through magazine advertising increased after the Master Settlement Agreement took effect in November
http://www.tobacco.org/News/000515ma.html
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» Addicting the Young 
Article on recent tobacco industry tactics to recruit young customers, such as cartoon characters in cigarette ads, rock music promotions, and making cigarettes easily available to youth.
http://multinationalmonitor.org/hyper/issues/1992/01/mm0192_07.html
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» Ads for Tobacco and Alcohol Swamp New Swimsuit Issue 
Article looks at the ads in the 1998 Sports Illustrated annual swimsuit issue, in light of nearly 24 percent of the magazine's readers being between the ages of 12 and 17.
http://search.csmonitor.com/durable/1998/03/12/feat/media.1.html
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» BAT Lures Young smokers With Online Scheme 
British American Tobacco is planning an extraordinary internet campaign to drive unwitting young consumers to bars and clubs where it promotes its cigarettes, according to a leaked company memo. Article explains, and provides the memo.
http://media.guardian.co.uk/newmedia/story/0,7496,427373,00.html
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» Big Bad Wolf Isn't the Only One Puffin' 
Study on tobacco use in children's animated feature films finds substantial tobacco use, no showing of consequences, and good characters use as much as bad characters.
http://research.unc.edu/endeavors/fall99/cartoons.htm
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» Big Tobacco Up to Old Tricks 
USA Today editorial focuses on tobacco industry marketing attractive to teens.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/comment/2001-03-19-edtwof2.htm
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» Big Tobacco: Still Addicting Kids 
Research reports on tobacco industry and marketing to kids before and after the Master Settlement Agreement with the states in November 1998.
http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/addicting/
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» Cigarette Ads - A Promise Broken 
Summarizes research showing that tobacco ad spending has not decreased since the tobacco industry agreed to stop targeting youth; examines where the ad budget goes.
http://faculty.washington.edu/chudler/smokead.html
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» Cigarette Ads Stomp Out Anti-Smoking Efforts 
Study concludes that cigarette ads lead young people to identify smoking with popularity and relaxation, and these associations are stronger than any perceived risk picked up from anti-smoking ads.
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=88094&page=1
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» Cigarette Brand Preferences Among Adolescents 
Paper from the Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan. Concludes: "The very high rates of cigarette smoking found among American teenagers in the late 1990s are associated with the popularity of just three brands..."
http://monitoringthefuture.org/pubs/occpapers/occ45.pdf
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» Court Snuffs "Kool MIXX" 
Court determines that Brown and Tilliamson's "Kool MIXX" ad campaign targets children.
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/kool_mixx_court.html
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» Do Candy Cigarettes Encourage Young People to Smoke? 
Paper in British Medical Journal. Executives of both the tobacco and candy industries regarded candy cigarettes as good advertising to future smokers; tobacco companies granted candy makers permission to use cigarette pack designs and tolerated trademark
http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/321/7257/362
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» How Tobacco Ads Target Teens 
Information and advice for parents, teachers, and health educators on how to recognize and counter tobacco industry promotion to youth.
http://medialit.med.sc.edu/tobaccoarticle.htm
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» Philip Morris Polled Teens on Smoking 
The nation's largest tobacco company used pollsters through the 1970s and 1980s to learn more about teens' smoking attitudes.
http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/9612/15/youth.smoking/
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» Philip Morris Schoolbook Covers 
Commercial Alert takes a hard look at Philip Morris's giveaway of school book covers.
http://www.commercialalert.org/index.php?category_id=2&subcategory_id=38&article_id=45
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» Philip Morris and Targeting Kids 
Factsheet outlines how tobacco giant Philip Morris (Altria) targets kids, and documents what Philip Morris says in private about marketing to kids and about its anti-youth-smoking ads as a public relations ploy.
http://tobaccofreekids.org/research/factsheets/pdf/philipmorris.pdf
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» R.J. Reynolds Fined for Ads in Youth Magazines 
Washington Post article; a judge found that a major tobacco company violated the terms of the 1998 national tobacco settlement by running magazine cigarette ads aimed at teenagers.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A8888-2002Jun6?language=printer
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» RJR on the "youth market" 
Document from R.J. Reynolds (RJR) site shows that 14 year old smokers were not just a viable, but a very sought after market for RJR.
http://www.tobacco.org/Documents/dd/ddrjryouth.html
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» Smoke This 
Op-ed on tobacco industry promotions to youth.
http://www.localaccess.com/wfwc/issue7/smoke.htm
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» Special Report: Philip Morris Has Not Changed 
Report on tobacco giant Philip Morris finds the tobacco giant is still bombarding kids with cigarette advertising, and still fighting effective tobacco education programs for kids.
http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/reports/philipmorris/
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» Study: Tobacco Companies Still Market Cigarettes to Teens 
New England Journal of Medicine study finds that a 1998 tobacco industry promise not to market to teens has had little effect; advertising for youth brands of cigarettes in youth-oriented magazines has not decreased.
http://edition.cnn.com/2001/HEALTH/08/15/tobacco.advertising/
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» The Marlboro Man lives 
Article in Salon magazine. "Big Tobacco money is being spent differently than before, but it's still targeting our youth."
http://archive.salon.com/health/feature/2000/02/10/tobacco_ads/
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» They said WHAT? 
Collection of quotes: what the industry says in its own internal documents on nicotine and addiction, tobacco products and health, legalese, youth, and evidence.
http://www.tobacco.org/Documents/documentquotes.html
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» Tobacco Ads May Undermine Good Parenting 
A new study presents evidence that tobacco industry marketing undermines the best efforts of parents to prevent their kids from smoking.
http://www.tobaccofreekids.org/Script/DisplayPressRelease.php3?Display=521
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» Tobacco Ads Still Luring Teens 
Despite tobacco industry claims, big tobacco's marketing campaigns continue to have the greatest influence on children to start smoking, a new study finds.
http://no-smoking.org/june02/06-18-02-4.html
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» Tobacco Advertising and Youth 
Factsheet from the Tobacco Reference Guide.
http://www.globalink.org/tobacco/trg/Chapter28/Chapter28Advertising.html
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» Tobacco Advertising in Magazines with Youth Readership 
Analysis of market research data shows the largest tobacco company is still spending $15 million a day on advertising, much of it in magazines and other venues that impact kids.
http://tobaccofreekids.org/reports/doubletalk/
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» Tobacco Company Magazine Ads Continue To Target Children 
Research report from Harvard Business School analyzes advertising expenditures in 30 adult- and youth-oriented magazines, finds that young people smoke cigarettes advertised in youth magazines.
http://www.oncolink.com/resources/article.cfm?c=3&s=8&ss=23&id=1568
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» Tobacco Documents Show Companies Vied for Youth Market 
CNN.com reports that R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. was envious of Philip Morris' domination of the youth market and designed a marketing strategy in the mid-1970s to try to increase its share, according to a secret document.
http://www.cnn.com/US/9810/30/tobacco.trial/
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» Tobacco Giant's Secret Papers Revealed 
Britain's biggest tobacco company was so concerned that it would lose market share to hard drugs such as cocaine and heroin that it attempted to market a 'rebellious' image for cigarettes to make them more attractive to youngsters.
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,6903,1037005,00.html
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» Tobacco Industry Reviewed Potential Smoking Habits of 5-year-olds 
Brown and Williamson Tobacco engaged a marketing research firm to look at the potential smoking habits of children as young as 5, according to internal company documents. A judge said Brown and Williamson "blatantly abused" attorney-client priv
http://www.cnn.com/US/9803/07/minn.tobacco/
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» Tobacco Marketing and Young People 
Research finds the tobacco industry has detailed pictures of the values and aspirations of smokers as young as 15 years.
http://www.tobaccopapers.com/casestudies/index.htm#tobaccomarketing
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» Tobacco and the Media 
Slide presentation from Media Influence on the Health of Adolescents at Andrews University.
http://www.andrews.edu/IPA/education/adolescent_health/Media_Influence/sld028.htm
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» Two Studies Show: Ads Get Kids to Smoke 
Two research studies find that cigarette advertising and promotion are the single most important factor in influencing kids to smoke, more important than family or friends who smoke.
http://www.no-smoking.org/feb98/02-17-98-3.html
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» UK tobacco firm targets African youth 
BAT (British American Tobacco) hands out free cigarettes to teenagers at sports events in Africa, a BBC investigation finds.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/933430.stm
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» Waxman: Marketing Tobacco to Children 
Letter from Congressman Henry Waxman to his colleagues highlights what the tobacco industry says in private about marketing cigarettes to kids.
http://democrats.reform.house.gov/Documents/20040827161614-28789.pdf
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» Youth: Target Group 12-17 
Examines marketing and market analysis of 12-17 year olds by the tobacco industry.
http://web.idrc.ca/en/ev-28828-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html
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