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Liquor Ads Return to Prime Time
February 17, 2009

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News Summary

Economic considerations are driving TV networks to broaden their acceptance of advertising for alcohol products, the Los Angeles Times reported Feb. 13.

Local CBS affiliates in Los Angeles and 14 other cities aired ads for Absolut Vodka during the Grammy Awards broadcast earlier this month, the first time in years that hard-liquor ads have been aired on network television. Such ads have been shown on cable TV for about the last decade, but the volume has tripled between 2001 and 2007, experts say.

Ad buyer Kathy Doyle of Universal McCann said broadcast networks that would have rejected liquor ads a year ago are now giving them serious consideration. "The bottom's dropped out in the market, and they're looking for new sources of revenue," she said.

"We're looking at a different world than we were three years ago, relative to the economy," agreed Jim Burke, president of sales for Fox Television Stations, which owns a number of local Fox stations. "We're looking at a number of categories, trying to find ways to increase our revenue."

The NBA also has lifted a ban on courtside liquor ads at basketball games, and Google and Facebook also are allowing liquor ads on websites. Facebook allows alcohol ads on pages of users ages 21 and older, while Google allows ads on searches for alcohol-related keywords.

"When you have the evaporation of advertising revenue, you have to look for new and creative ways of getting sellers in the door," said Tim Winter, president of the Parents Television Council. "It's coming in the way of adult-themed products and content."

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by wanda on 17 Feb 09 04:36 PM EST
Alcohol ads should not be on tv, at the risk of young kids and teens seeing it. They should not be allowed on tv until after ten at night. Make your big bucks and don't care if a under age teen drinks and drives because the commercials make it look like fun and the in thing to do. Our children are more important then these large companies needing money for their ceo's. A life is worth more than seeing these companies stay in business. This world is losing all of its character and respect for our young kids.

Posted by steve on 18 Feb 09 09:25 AM EST
interesting how during tough economic times, we sell our souls to the devil to make a few bucks.

Posted by Jay Orth on 18 Feb 09 10:01 AM EST
The straight out advertising almost seems diversionary to me. The bigger problem as I see it is the way nearly all TV programing is subtly including the glorification of alcohol and often other substance use. As in the 70s & 80s comedy programs are portraying hazardous substance use and intoxication as funny again. I also see substance use portrayed as a means of handling stress, sadness, loneliness, reward and as an expectation. Not only does this set a norm being internalized by the young but the marketeers are also well aware of how subtle cues impact those in treatement and/or recovery. I am starting a log to back up what I am seeing; anybody else? Who might be interested in the data?

Posted by Ruth A. Bowles on 18 Feb 09 10:02 AM EST
I would ask to reveal the statistics on increased alcohol use during economic downturn. Many people who never used alcohol before will begin to use alcohol to relieve the stress of recession. I also will ask young people to think critically about the media they view. Alcohol does not make you glamorous,better at sports, sexier, or sophisticated.

Posted by Theresa Pacheco on 18 Feb 09 10:24 AM EST
Here we go again. We use our current recession to justify our accpetance of substance abuse and to make our youth more desensitized to reality.

Posted by Karen on 18 Feb 09 10:32 AM EST
I agree wholeheartedly that alcohol ads should NOT be on television. They should not be in magagzines that young people look at or read. Alcohol companies should not be allowed to increase their revenues at the expense of our young people. Just like the tobacco companies, they are trying to hook the next generation to replace the smokers and drinkers that die from use and abuse of their products. I would like to see our TV broadcasters take a stand on this. I am sure, like the rest of us, they can cut corners and spend less and keep operating. Young people are very vulnerable to advertising, that's no secret. I hope the TV giants will reverse course on this destructive media.

Posted by Diana on 18 Feb 09 11:03 AM EST
We really are at all time lows....in every sense of the phrase!

Posted by Stan on 18 Feb 09 11:42 AM EST
Kids are being abused and dying everyday. Families are being destroyed. The number one cause is alcohol and the media. America "WAKE UP"

Posted by maxwood on 18 Feb 09 07:08 PM EST
Alcohol ads and traffic in binge-drinking are God's gift to the tobacco companies. Kids among their peers at a competitive sporting event are easily pushed into competitive drinking, based on a prove-you-can-take-it psychology. Later they won't remember how many cigarettes they smopked while drunk, or how much side-stream smoke inhaled at some party while passed out. A week later trying to catch up with their schoolwork and cramming for a test, cigarettes will look like an attractive option for staying awake all night.

Posted by Lorinda, Orchard Recovery Center on 19 Feb 09 03:18 AM EST
Allowing Alcohol advertising on TV is going backwards not forwards. It is wrong. Youth binge drinking is deadly and on the rise. Drinking and driving kills people. Abstinence from alcohol is hard enough without constant images from the media glorifying it's use. Treatment Centers are full of people trying to repair the damage caused by alcohol abuse. Supporters of this type of advertising should spend a day in any Addiction Treatment Center on Family Day and listen to the people trying to stop using their products and the affects on the family who live with them. Alcohol is a Drug. Vodka is the drug of choice for many alcoholics.

Posted by Al on 19 Feb 09 03:13 PM EST
I have to wonder why this is buried so deep in the headlines.

Posted by Ned Shaffner on 23 Feb 09 09:25 AM EST
I am still amazed that our society can still even ponder the idea that we can advertise a mind altering substance on the media at all, let alone have a suggestion that they need to do it to stay in business. Whats next, Crown Royal advertising on Sesame Street?

Posted by RUTH on 23 Feb 09 09:52 AM EST
As the mother of two children - one 31 and one 43, both of whom have abused alcohol and subsequently became addicts, I find it very offensive in a time when we need families and family support that regardless of economics we would open an avenue of "fashionable" drinking when RX has certainly shown that teen drinking leads to abuse and too often substance abuse. What a stinking way to encourage the poor to "drown their sorrows and problems" in a bottle of alcohol.

Posted by Stan on 23 Feb 09 11:00 AM EST
Prescription drugs advertising is at an all time high on TV networks and all other media sources. Kids who abuse prescription drugs is also at all time high and continues to increase. Then we ask WHY?

Posted by Hiawatha Bouldin on 23 Feb 09 11:23 AM EST
The media is rapidly becoming the primary influencer of our youth population, (our future leaders and providers). We can either use it (the media) to encourage and inspire them or confuse and destroy their moral compass and desire to live free of these riskproducing products. If you (the media) needs to make your profits, why not pay for the destruction you cause to our future citizens

Posted by jed on 23 Feb 09 11:38 AM EST
I used to drink a lot of Absolut vodka in my prime time drinking years. I ended up jobless, with a swollen liver and other health problems, and distant from everyone who ever cared about me. The worse things got, the more I drank. It's a struggle to stay sober and the last thing I need to see is booze ads when I'm trying to enjoy a little prime time TV.

Posted by Kathleen on 23 Feb 09 05:15 PM EST
The alcohol industry, like the tobacco industry will advertise through all avenues legally available. They will only cut back when they are forced to by legislation. Until we push for laws banning alcohol advertising and product placement, it will only get worse, and cost more lives. As for those alcoholics in recovery, the industry would obviously gain if they can nudge them back to drinking anyway they can. We need to decide as a society if we are willing to stand by and let it happen.

Posted by Cheryl on 23 Feb 09 05:38 PM EST
Yeah. Why don't we start taking money from the tobacco industry again to market to our kids. After all, times are tough. They would love to take advantage of the challenging financial times and get back on tv. I agree, this country has lost its hold on any kind of censorship, anything goes. The alcohol industry gets away with glamorizing alcohol and portraying it as a whole lotta fun and our kids are getting the message. The media has sold its soul to the devil and we are losing our kids. Somebody stop this insanity.

Posted by Shelly on 24 Feb 09 09:35 AM EST
Utter disgust.I wonder what will be next? How about a driving tax?? or a freedom tax?? afterall, freedom is not free, right??

Posted by JD Anticoli on 26 Feb 09 03:41 PM EST
Regarding the advertising of hard liquor, The Ad executive states "they're looking for new sources of revenue". Sound familiar? coke to crack, meth to ice. No difference. Believe this: Drug prohibition must end. It is immoral, unbalanced "contest" that plays monkey-in-the-middle with law enforcement on one side and the drug enterprise on the other; the addict is the Monkey-ball. Only the players get rewarded-the ball just gets tossed around. But promote drug use? I say NO WAY! Yet hard liquor is legal and promoted to the HILT.

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