CDC newly posted surveillance data on smoking in films shows less smoking in PG-13 movies

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted its eighth annual update on “Smoking in the Movies” on November 10, 2020. 

This year’s sum-up of content trends and company performance highlights several key developments in 2019:

      • R-rated incidents per film hit a record high

      • Tobacco levels in G and PG films hit a 10-year peak

      • Incidents in PG-13 films dropped by nearly 30 percent, after a 2019 drop in box office for PG-13 biodrama films with fake smokers.

      • Only Disney and ViacomCBS showed progress against youth-rated smoking overall.

Long term, the CDC concludes that the “66% increase in tobacco incidents in PG-13 movies and doubling of incidents in R-rated movies from 2010 to 2019 are of particular public health concern because of the established causal relationship between youth exposure to smoking in movies and smoking initiation.”

Industry data indicate these smokier films are now seen many times more often on video than in theaters. Video channels have no age-gates to prevent child or teen exposure. The good news?

Commenting on in-theater tobacco exposure, the CDC observes: “Most of the 80% decline in tobacco impressions delivered by youth-rated movies from 2002 to 2019 is explained by a decline in movies with larger budgets (more than $50 million).” 

In May 2020, UCSF-Breathe California reported that this unprecedented decline in PG-13 tobacco exposures was accompanied by a large rise in R-rated impressions (up 58 percent). In 2019, 85 percent of all in-theater audience exposures were delivered by R-rated films — which can now find even larger audiences, of all ages, on video channels. 

Note: Profound thanks to our over-extended colleagues at the CDC for continuing to pursue tobacco — the other epidemic. With our other public health allies, they’ve brought real change to Hollywood’s big-ticket “franchise” films, which we hope will hold post-COVID.

__________________

See more CDC reports on screen smoking

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention posted its eighth annual update on “Smoking in the Movies” on November 10, 2020. 

This year’s sum-up of content trends and company performance highlights several key developments in 2019:

      • R-rated incidents per film hit a record high

      • Tobacco levels in G and PG films hit a 10-year peak

      • Incidents in PG-13 films dropped by nearly 30 percent, after a 2019 drop in box office for PG-13 biodrama films with fake smokers.

      • Only Disney and ViacomCBS showed progress against youth-rated smoking overall.

Long term, the CDC concludes that the “66% increase in tobacco incidents in PG-13 movies and doubling of incidents in R-rated movies from 2010 to 2019 are of particular public health concern because of the established causal relationship between youth exposure to smoking in movies and smoking initiation.”

Industry data indicate these smokier films are now seen many times more often on video than in theaters. Video channels have no age-gates to prevent child or teen exposure. The good news?

Commenting on in-theater tobacco exposure, the CDC observes: “Most of the 80% decline in tobacco impressions delivered by youth-rated movies from 2002 to 2019 is explained by a decline in movies with larger budgets (more than $50 million).” 

In May 2020, UCSF-Breathe California reported that this unprecedented decline in PG-13 tobacco exposures was accompanied by a large rise in R-rated impressions (up 58 percent). In 2019, 85 percent of all in-theater audience exposures were delivered by R-rated films — which can now find even larger audiences, of all ages, on video channels. 

Note: Profound thanks to our over-extended colleagues at the CDC for continuing to pursue tobacco — the other epidemic. With our other public health allies, they’ve brought real change to Hollywood’s big-ticket “franchise” films, which we hope will hold post-COVID.

__________________

See more CDC reports on screen smoking

This item, prepared by Jonathan Polansky, is cross-posted from the Smokefree Movies blog.

Published by Stanton Glantz

Stanton Glantz is a retired Professor of Medicine who served on the University of California San Francisco faculty for 45 years. He conducts research on tobacco and cannabis control and cardiovascular disease/

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