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Archive for December, 2009

Target toy catalog cover really just a sitting duck

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

I have been carrying around the 2009 Target toy catalog with me since I received it in November, showing it to friends and just delighting in the fact that this post would write itself. Guest blogger Monica at Sociological Images beat me to it, however, with this fantasic critique.

man up

Girl: I am a girl. I love being in love. Barbie, you are so lucky to have a big tough man like optimus prime to keep you safe. Now you can quit your job as a neurosurgeon and start having lots of babies! Yay! I think I’m going to skip dinner tonight so I can be skinny like you.

Boy: Optimus, no!! Don’t do it! She is only trying to trap you! Marriage is for pussies! Man up!!

You may also enjoy the comments, including a variation on my personal favorite: “If you’re analyzing this you’ve got too much time on your hands.”

Disney Princess Watch: French manicure, or, be careful or they’ll rip your little nails off!

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Somehow I survived my once-a-year trip to a mall and even had the joy of discovering a new Disney Princess product:

nails

Copy reads: Do not apply “ . . . to nails that are thin, damaged or infected. For children ages 5 +.”

Most five-year-olds’ nail are naturally thin. I would not want to be around when those things have to come off, either during normal bath time or by accident, when the little princess tries to actually play (except the sit-on-a-chair-like-a-princess-and-don’t-move-for-hours-game).

Ouch.

The smart parent should take their daughter to this salon in Texas, which recently installed special chairs for children:

salon chairs

For cute! But the French manicure costs extra!

As close to a gift guide as you’ll get from the Corporate Babysitter

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

Enough with the gift guides. If you’re looking for a gift — eco-friendly, BPA-free, safe, local, gender neutral, fair-trade, all-natural or small-enough-to-fit-your-budget — the internets are full of guides to help you. You don’t need another from me.

What you may need is some inspiration. Perhaps I’m projecting. But check out:

CCFC Guide to Commercial-Free Holidays 2009
New American Dream’s Simplify the Holidays 
Unplug Your Holidays from Mom Unplugged
“Please Don’t Buy Me Any Stuff” Gift Guide from Annie Fox

Have your own inspiration? Please share in the comments.

approved

Bonus! Three Babysitter Approved gift suggestions:

A book: Actions Speak Loudest delves into the heart of thirty-two issues, ranging from childhood obesity to climate change, that are critical to the well-being of the next generation.  All proceeds go back into the causes and organizations in the book.

A tee shirt: Pigtail Pals redefines girly. 

A cause: Support The Advantage and Disadvantage of Zine: Self-Publishing in Cambodia, a long-term, multifaceted collaboration between PEM friend Anne Elizabeth Moore and a group of young women college students in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

FTC confirms violent PG-13 movies intentionally marketed to young children, or, industry self-regulation fails again

Friday, December 4th, 2009

The FTC recently issued Marketing Violent Entertainment to Children:  A Sixth Follow-Up Review of Industry Practices in the Motion Picture, Music Recording & Electronic Game Industries.  At the urging of the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC), this year’s review included a thorough examination of the marketing of violent PG-13 films to young children.  CCFC’s Susan Linn comments:

The FTC’s report is must-read for anyone concerned about the marketing of violent media to children.  The report demonstrates that, when it comes to protecting young children from marketing for violent PG-13 movies, industry self-regulation has been a complete failure. The MPAA continues to turn a blind eye toward studios making an end run around parents in order to target children directly with violent content.

screen time

The FTC’s review of ad placements confirms CCFC’s findings that targeting young children for violent PG-13 films is pervasive.  PG-13 movies were regularly advertised on children’s networks such as Nickelodeon and the Cartoon Network, even though 2- to 11-year-olds comprise 50% of viewers on these stations regardless of time of day. The FTC’s review of studio marketing plans demonstrates that violent PG-13 movies are deliberately targeted to young children, even when studios are aware that parents object to this practice. In one shocking example, when market research found that many parents of children ages 7 to 12 were concerned that a movie was too violent, the studio did not alter its plan to market the film to young children.  Instead, the studio changed its advertisements to deemphasize the violent content to “convince more parents that [this movie] will be ’safe for their kids to see.’”  Another film was heavily promoted to young children through tie-ins with foods and toys, even though the studio’s market research found that many parents considered the film too disturbing for their children.  

We are pleased that FTC questions the effectiveness of the film industry’s self-regulatory efforts.  The report dismisses the MPAA’s much-hyped referral agreement with the Children’s Advertising Review Unit — an agreement the MPAA claimed would address concerns about PG-13 marketing — as “not a meaningful self-regulatory measure.”  The report also notes that the MPAA does not consider movie cross-promotions or other marketing tie-ins to be within its purview, despite the fact these techniques are often part of a deliberate strategy to target younger children.   In one instance, the FTC found that the target demographic for licensed products was for a violent PG-13 film was boys 3 to 11.

While the FTC does an admirable job of documenting the problem, the Commission’s proposed solution– that the MPAA develop an explicit policy for the marketing of PG-13 to young children — is too little, too late.  For years, parents, advocates for children, and even the FTC’s staff have asked the MPAA to develop such a policy, but the MPAA seems far more concerned with protecting film industry profits than protecting the wellbeing of children.  Since the MPAA is unwilling to enforce marketing standards based its own rating system, the FTC should develop its own set of rules.  If there is any question whether the Commission has that authority, then Congress should explicitly empower the FTC with full rulemaking authority to protect children from harmful advertising.

Read the FTC Report. 

photo courtesy hoyasmeg

Will eat snack food for airfare

Wednesday, December 2nd, 2009

I would so love to attend this FTC forum in D.C. that I am almost willing to snack on [fill in name of food industry sponsor]’s delicious products all day long. While standing in the front of the room. And passing out coupons.  

FTC Announces Agenda for December 15 Forum to Explore Food Marketing to Children
Will Address Developments in Self-Regulation; Report on Recommended Nutritional Standards

The Federal Trade Commission announced the agenda and speakers for its December 15, 2009 public forum titled “Sizing Up Food Marketing and Childhood Obesity.”

The forum participants will present new research on the impact of various food advertising techniques on children and discuss the statutory and constitutional issues surrounding governmental regulation of food marketing. Panelists also will address the food and entertainment industries’ self-regulatory efforts and implementation of the recommendations in the FTC’s 2008 report, Marketing Food to Children and Adolescents: A Review of Industry Expenditures, Activities, and Self-Regulation. In addition, the Interagency Working Group on Food Marketed to Children – comprised of representatives from the FTC, Food and Drug Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and U.S. Department of Agriculture – will report on the status of recommended nutritional standards for foods marketed to children, followed by a Town Hall discussion.

An agenda for the forum is available. Updated information will be posted as it becomes available.

Read the rest of the press release.