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The Lung Association to Hollywood : Stop Luring Canadian Youth into Smoking

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August 20, 2010

"Jessica Simpson made short shorts a hit; Paris made puppies in Prada a trend. Youth are the biggest consumer of movies and elevate the profile of Hollywood stars by mimicking movie star behaviour, taking on-screen scenes to the streets. A report released today states that smoking in movies is no different.

Youth from the Youth Advocacy Training Institute (YATI), a program of The Lung Association, reacted strongly to findings that suggest nearly 43,000 Canadian youth will die after being lured into smoking by Hollywood moviesi. Citing the Tobacco Vector, a recent study conducted by Physicians for a Smoke-free Canada, YATI is advocating for youth-rated films not to allow smoking.

"This is an issue that is having a huge impact on our generation. Youth just like me are being influenced to start smoking because of smoking on the big screen," says Sal Anania, youth member of YATI. "We don't want to stop seeing the movies we like, so it's more about making filmmakers care about our health and stop glamourizing smoking in youth-rated movies."

The Tobacco Vector study suggests that 130,000 Canadian teenagers who smoke were originally lured by the silver screen. By presenting tobacco in a glamourous fashion, the actual health risks are minimized, misleading young fans about the harmful short and long-term consequences. Many Hollywood R-rated films change to youth ratings when they cross over into Canada. As a way to protect Canadian young people, YATI's youth members want the government to eliminate smoking in youth rated films by changing the rating system to designate movies with smoking an "18+" rating.

"Good actors should be able to nail a character without using a cigarette as a distraction," says Mimosa Kabir, youth member of YATI. "Actors, movie studios and our leaders need to take the findings of today's study for what they are: shocking. As Canadians, we should be really concerned that more than two-thirds of all youth-rated movies had smoking in them over the past five years."

Most people who smoke begin in their teens. The nicotine in tobacco speeds up the brain and central nervous system making it highly addictive. In addition, there are more than 4,000 toxins present in each cigarette. About 15 percent of Canadian youth, between 15 and 19, smoke dailyii.

"We pay good money to see movies and shouldn't be manipulated by the tobacco industry's product placement," continues Kabir. "The film industry and government need to better protect children and youth against glamourous celebrity smoking with the same vigilance as other R-rated content.""--from website.

For more information: http://www.newswire.ca/...






last modified Aug 20, 2010 06:19 AM
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