Did 1960s TV Influence Kids To Smoke? Jurors Spent The Day Looking At Examples Of Cigarette Placement In Vintage TV Clips The Latest | The Players | They Said It The Paperwork | The Archives: How We Got Here | The Front Page ST. PAUL, Posted 5:28 p.m. March 09, 1998 — One woman juror kept time with the music as the theme from “The Beverly Hillbillies” was played Monday in Minnesota’s tobacco trial to show how cigarettes were marketed to youth. In the introduction to the television show, Jed Clampett and his family drove their jalopy alongside a Winston truck. The theme music ended with the sponsor’s slogan, “Winston tastes good like a cigarette should.” The 1963 ad and others from “The Flintstones” cartoon show aired in the early 1960s were introduced during the testimony of Cheryl Perry, an expert on youth smoking from the University of Minnesota. The programs were popular family shows in the early 1960s. By integrating the cigarette commercials, Perry said, “a young person would begin to see smoking, or Winstons, as a part of normal life.” Such advertising, she said, plays an important part in a youngster’s decision to begin smoking. She also cited television commercials showing the Marlboro man and print ads for Camel cigarettes featuring the cartoon character Joe Camel. The ads were shown by the state and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota in their lawsuit to recover $1.77 billion they say was spent treating smoking-related illness. They also are seeking punitive damages. The plaintiffs allege the tobacco industry knew about the dangers of smoking and hid their knowledge while marketing to youth and manipulating nicotine to keep people hooked. Perry said internal tobacco industry documents show cigarette makers considered underage smokers critical to their future business and tracked the smoking ha
bits of children for decades. “The tobacco companies viewed smokers under age 18 as what they called replacement smokers; that without them their market would die,” Perry said. “They know that the teen-age years, that’s when people begin to smoke and that’s when they begin to make their brand selection,” said Perry, who helped prepare the 1994 Surgeon General’s report on preventing tobacco use among young people. Perry cited documents from Philip Morris Inc., R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. and Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp. during her testimony. A 1984 Reynolds marketing document specifically addressed the importance of young smokers. “Today’s young adult smoking behavior will largely determine the trend of industry volume over the next several decades,” the document said. The importance of young people to the tobacco industry is not in how many cigarettes they smoke because their consumption will increase over time, Perry noted. One document from Philip Morris files, a 1973 survey by Opinion Research Corp., showed about 13 percent of those surveyed between the ages of 12 and 17 were smokers and smoked an average of more than 10 cigarettes a day. For those 18 and over, the data showed 18 percent were smokers and smoked an average of more than 20 cigarettes daily. It did not specify who was surveyed. The majority of new smokers also are under age 18, the legal age for smoking in most states, Perry said. A 1994 report cited by Perry found that, of the 3 million people who tried their first cigarette in 1994, 2.5 million were under the age of 18. “If someone doesn’t start smoking by age 18, the overwhelming majority will not smoke at all,” she said. Meanwhile, the state Court of Appeals on Monday temporarily delayed an order that the defendants must hand over an additional 39,000 secret industry documents to the plaintiffs while the appellate court reviews the order.