Study: Beer ads target youths
Washington ? Young Americans are exposed to more television commercials for beer than for sneakers, gum or jeans, according to a study released Tuesday.
Young people ages 12 to 20 saw two beer or ale ads in 2001 for every three such commercials aired on programs viewed primarily by adults, the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth at Georgetown University found.
“The alcohol industry monitoring their own advertising and current standards aren’t protecting youth from alcohol marketing,” said Jim O’Hara, the center’s executive director.
The study analyzed $811 million spent on alcohol advertising on television during 2001, representing 208,909 ads.
Underage viewers were more likely than adults of legal drinking age to have been exposed to a quarter of the 208,909 commercials aired.
Beer ads on television amounted to $695 million. Roughly 18,000 ads were for beer, compared with 10,000 for sneakers, 16,000 for gum and 4,000 for jeans, the research found.
The Beer Institute said in a statement that the industry doesn’t target underage consumers.
“The way to address illegal underage drinking is to encourage others to get behind programs that are working instead of wasting valuable time censoring advertising to adults of legal drinking age,” the institute said.

