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For more information contact:

 
Rev. Michael Crosby, OFMCap.
Province of St. Joseph of the Capuchin Order
Milwaukee, WI 53244
Phone 414-271-0735
email: mikecrosby@aol.com
      or
Conrad MacKerron
Proxy Information
311 California St., Suite 510
San Francisco, CA 94104
Phone: (415) 391-3212, x 31
email: cm@proxyinformation.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Smoking and Movies Shareholder Outreach Network


Resources

  •             The most important evidence has been provided by a Dartmouth Medical School Study, released last year which found that those teens who saw the most smoking in movies over that period were three times more likely to start smoking than those who saw the least.  

               (For the pdf text of this study, click here

     

  •            A second study, released in July in the journal Pediatrics, found that 14% of the teens free to watch tobacco-intensive R-rated movies took up smoking, compared to 3% of teens whose parents barred them from viewing R-rated fare.  

                (For the abstract of this study, click here. The full text can be obtained for a fee)

     

  •            A third study done by the University of California , San Diego demonstrated that girls whose favorite stars smoke are more likely to begin smoking. It also documented an 80% increase in the share of estimated tobacco impressions delivered to theater audiences by youth-rated as opposed to R-rated movies between 1999 and 2003.  

               (For the full version of this study, click here)

     

  •             A fourth recent study released in July by the Harvard School of Public Health reports a decade of “ratings creep,” finding that content once concentrated in R-rated films, including smoking, is increasingly found in films rated PG and PG-13.

                (For the full version of this study, click here. The article requires free registration)

  •             Summaries of two CDC studies examining trends in cigarette smoking among high school children that concluded that smoking in movies was a primary factor for  children picking up the habit. 

                (For summary of 2002 study, click here. For summary of 2004 study, click here)

  •             There are also studies showing that anti-smoking advertisements shown before the screening of movies in theatre work toward decreasing the rate of smoking in high school students and teens. 

               (For the first study, click here. For the second study, click here.)

  •             Please visit the Smoke Free Movies campaign at www.smokefreemovies.ucsf.edu

  •            Another interesting site to visit is www.hollywoodunfiltered.org, an effort by the Directors Guild of America to talk to other fellow directors to urge them to be more responsible about smoking.