Directory Help
Search only in AdvertisingSearch the Web  

Advertising
  Society > Issues > Health > Tobacco > Advocacy > Pro-Tobacco > Critiques > Advertising   Go to Directory Home  

Web Pages
View in Google PageRank order               Viewing in alphabetical order
A Day in the Life of an Advertising Man http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/321/7257/366
Internal documents from the UK tobacco industry's principal advertising agencies reveal that tobacco advertising is intended to increase consumption as well as brand share.
Ad Money Moves from Billboards to Print http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/11/suppl_2/ii54
A review of money spent promoting cigarettes finds that the Master Settlement Agreement has not reduced tobacco promotion, but merely moved it to different places.
Bibliography: Advertising's Effects on Tobacco Addiction Rates http://www.medchi.org/grants/tobaccoads/bibliography.asp
Bibliography of scientific articles put together by Maryland State Medical Society.
Big Tobacco Shifts Ads from Billboards to Stores http://tobaccofreekids.org/reports/stores/
UIC research shows that tobacco companies have increased retail store advertising and promotions since a ban on tobacco billboard advertising took effect. Pictures show typical retail spaces, filled with tobacco ads.
Brand-stretching http://www.ash.org.uk/?brand
ASH-UK briefing on brand-stretching: the use of tobacco brand names on non-tobacco merchandise or services to get around bans on direct advertising.
Fact Sheet - Tobacco Advertising http://www.nsma.org.au/adverts.htm
Brief factsheet compiled by the Non Smokers' Movement of Australia.
Holy Smoke! http://www.motherjones.com/politics/1998/07/holy-smoke
The Virgin Mary was a Marlboro woman--and other marketing that the industry uses abroad.
In-store Tobacco Ads http://www.bizjournals.com/wichita/stories/1998/06/22/editorial2.html
Commentary explains tobacco industry point-of-purchase advertising and promotion; how it works, who gets paid for it, and what mechanisms are used.
Keep Smiling - No One's Going to Die http://www.tobaccopapers.com/keepsmiling/index.htm
Report analyses thousands of internal documents from the UK tobacco industry's five main advertising agencies, reveals industry activities intended to recruit new smokers, discourage existing smokers from quitting, undermine advertising regulations, and subvert government policy.
Low Tar, Light Cigarettes Called Deliberate Deception http://unisci.com/stories/20021/0312022.htm
Industry documents show the tobacco industry knew that low-tar and light cigarettes were no safer but marketed them to "offer an image of health reassurance".
Marketing the Myth of "Light" and "Mild" http://www.essentialaction.org/tobacco/qofm/0111.html
Collection of industry promotion strategies in different countries aroundthe world promoting "light" and "mild" cigarettes as less harmful.
Memorandum by Centre For Tobacco Control Research http://www.parliament.the-stationery-office.co.uk/pa/cm199900/cmselect/cmhealth/27/27ap29.htm
University of Strathclyde (UK) analysis of tobacco advertising agency documents finds they "provide a unique glimpse into the mindset and tactics of both tobacco advertisers and their clients."
Operation Storefront Report 1998 http://www.mass.gov/dph/mtcp/reports/1998/osrep.htm
Massachusetts study on tobacco point-of-sale advertising analyses where the ads are placed, who is targeted, how pervasive they are, and what results they get.
The Cigarette Pack As Image: New Evidence From Tobacco Industry Docuemnts http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/11/suppl_1/i73
Tobacco industry internal memos and reports reveal the industry used a highly sophisticated research program to develop the cigarette pack as a potent advertising tool in its own right.
The Dark Side Of Marketing seemingly 'Light' Cigarettes: Successful Images and Failed Fact http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/11/suppl_1/i18
Extensive review of internal tobacco industry memos and documents finds that for 50 years filtered and low tar cigarettes were a marketing campaign designed to reassure smokers, not reduce risk.
The Dark side of Marketing Seemingly "Light" Cigarettes: Successful Images and Failed Fact http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/abstract/11/suppl_1/i18?ijkey=bs.c8JGOcRW1g
Research on advertising and promotion of "light" and filtered cigarettes: what the ads promised and what the product actually delivered.
The Tobacco Reference Guide: Advertising http://www.globalink.org/tobacco/trg/Chapter28/Chapter28AdvertisingPage23.html
Collection of facts, fully footnoted, outlines the dimensions and purposes of tobacco advertising and marketing.
Tobacco Advertising and Promotion http://www.smokehelp.org/html/ads_kill.html
Short description and statistics on promotional items.

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor

Modified by Google - ©2009 Google
Advertise with Us - Jobs, Press, Cool Stuff...