Lion & Lamb Project

Email : lionlamb@lionlamb.org

Phone : (301) 654-3091
Fax : 301-654-2394


June 28, 2002

Entertainment Industries Still Marketing
Adult-Rated Products to Children, FTC Report Finds

Industry Self-Regulation is Clearly Not Working, Parent Group Says

 Spokesperson Available for Interview

June 28, 2002 -- Almost two years after a landmark Federal Trade Commission report found that the movie, video game and music industries were “pervasively and aggressively” marketing adult-rated products to children, a follow-up report concludes today that industry advertising practices have shown “little change.”  

“It is clear that violent, adult-rated movies, video games and music are still being marketed to children,” said Daphne White, executive director of The Lion & Lamb Project.  “Industry self-regulation has amounted to very little over the past two years, and there is no indication that the situation will improve.”   

The Federal Trade Commission report found “little change in the practices of all three industries with regard to advertising violent R-rated movies, M-rated games, and explicit content labeled recordings in media popular with teens.”  The FTC also found that although R-rated movies and M-rated games are less likely to be advertised in media with a large percentage of teens in the audience, they continue to be advertised in programs with a large number of teens in the audience. 

“Industry self-regulation has not worked with companies like Enron, it hasn’t worked with accounting firms like Arthur Anderson, and it hasn’t worked with businesses like WorldCom,” White says.  “Why should the entertainment industries be expected to regulate their member companies when self-regulation has resulted in such spectacular failures?” 

The FTC praised the movie industry for progress made in some areas, but the fact remains that Hollywood continues to market adult-rated movies through the most effective medium available to them, which is television.  “The movie industry continues to advertise R-rated films on television shows that are very popular with teens,” the FTC found. 

The report found that the video game industry continues to advertise Mature-rated games in both teen magazines and popular teen websites.  The video game industry’s highly-touted self-regulatory standards “would appear to rein in only the more extreme examples of under-17 targeting, while leaving largely intact the ability to reach a substantial teen audience,” the report found. 

The music industry, with the exception of one major recording company, has been the most intransigent and the FTC found “virtually no change in industry practices” since the 2000 report. 

Every major public health organization in the country— including the American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, and the American Academy of Child &Adolescent Psychiatry— has concluded that media violence is one of the ways that children learn violent attitudes and behaviors. 

Despite the scientific consensus – and the lack of significant marketing changes over the past two years – the Federal Trade Commission continues to put their faith in industry self-regulation. 

Daphne White, an outspoken activist against violent entertainment targeted to children, is available for interviews in reaction to this report.  White, who has testified before Congress on this issue, founded The Lion & Lamb Project in 1995.  She can be reached at 301-654-3091.

 

The Lion & Lamb Project


The Lion & Lamb Project is an initiative of the Tides Center.