cannabisnews.com: FDA Scrambles Drug Ads





FDA Scrambles Drug Ads
Posted by FoM on February 21, 2001 at 13:04:10 PT
By Dennis Hans, AlterNet
Source: AlterNet
So you fellas want to advertise your drug on TV? Terrific! In case you didn't already know, there are different advertising standards for different drugs. Let me tell you about them. If your commercial is for a prescription pharmaceutical drug, it must provide a fair assessment of the benefits and risks and describe the side effects that can occur when the consumer uses the drug as prescribed. 
The Food and Drug Administration regulates these ads -- after they've gone out over the airwaves for a spell. If an ad is misleading, the FDA has the authority to yank it off the air. But just between you and me, as watchdogs go the FDA is on the sleepy side. Unless you tell a whopper it won't even bark, let alone bite. If you want to advertise the drug nicotine, the message must be 100 percent negative. Some of the best sponsors on teen-oriented shows are the anti-tobacco groups. Governments give them big bucks to produce and air commercials on the dangers of smoking and the wickedness of tobacco executives. That's only fair, considering for many years that networks ran nothing but seductive ads that helped persuade millions of youngsters to light up. That wouldn't have been such a bad thing except nicotine has one of the highest addiction rates. Now that wouldn't be such a bad thing given that nicotine fiends, unlike crackheads and alcoholics, aren't dangerous to themselves or others when under the influence. Of course, the long haul is another story: One in three smokers dies before his or her time, and that's reason enough to focus solely on the downside. The networks also run ads by the tobacco companies themselves urging youngsters not to smoke. Mind you, they want youngsters to smoke. Companies know they gotta hook 'em early, because hardly anyone waits till adulthood to give cigs a try. No, these ads are an insurance policy against future lawsuits: They can say, "Didn't we warn you when you were ten not to take up smoking?" One tobacco giant, Philip Morris, also spends hundreds of millions on ads to tell viewers about the million or two it spends to help women battered by disturbed, drunken husbands and boyfriends. Now let's say you want to advertise a mind-altering recreational drug. Boob-tube barons accept ads for illicit street drugs -- negative ads, that is, produced for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. The Partnership is a band of dedicated advertising and communication professionals who donate their time and talents to warn youngsters about the dangers of those drugs that don't enrich the advertising industry. The government has zero tolerance for balanced presentations of the risks, benefits and side effects of marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine or heroin. You won't see any Tinseltown testimonials about coke being the perfect pick-me-up after a hard day on the set. The more negative the ad, the better. Why you can even imply that all illegal drugs are equally dangerous. For some strange reason most of these ads focus on marijuana, which is the least dangerous mind-altering drug -- legal or illegal. The other recreational drug advertised on TV is alcohol. Now alcohol is alcohol, whether it comes in a shot of whiskey, a glass of wine or a can of beer. Nevertheless, the networks decided long ago not to accept ads for liquor, only beer and wine. Don't ask me why. A while ago I said it's the job of the FDA to require pharmaceutical makers to describe the risks as well as the benefits of their drugs. Well, even though alcohol is a drug and the "D" in FDA stands for "Drug," the FDA does not regulate ads for beer and wine. Now that could be because alcohol isn't as dangerous as Claritin. No, wait a minute. It couldn't. Even though the "D" in ONDCP stands for "Drug," that office doesn't regulate beer and wine ads. Nor does ONDCP include alcohol in its "anti-drug" ads. Now that could be because alcohol isn't as dangerous as marijuana or ecstasy. No, wait a minute. It couldn't. Why even Barry McCaffrey, the pot-obsessed former drug czar, calls alcohol the "most destructive drug in America." Anyway, the Federal Trade Commission oversees alcohol advertising. Did I say oversees? I meant overlooks. Once in a blue moon it will take a company to task for blatantly unfair or deceptive ads, but the FTC believes "self-regulation" is best for brewers and wine merchants, who couldn't agree more. The brewers drew up a hard-hitting voluntary code that permits them to run ads on shows where 49.9 percent of viewers are under the drinking age and to use humor and animated characters that appeal to kiddies -- so long as the humor and characters also appeal to 21-year-olds. Beer ads accentuate the positive. Make no mistake, there is a positive side: It's a tasty beverage that gives shy guys the courage to talk to pretty gals. If you use good judgment you can enjoy it in good health for a lifetime. But somewhere in the ads you'd think a conscientious corporation would insert the words "drug," "addictive" and "cirrhosis," or remind women that fetal alcohol syndrome is the leading cause of birth defects. Maybe tell kids and teens they can die from an overdose, and that alcohol is a prime factor in the leading causes of death for young people -- not just drunk driving, but drownings, falls, homicide and suicide. Alcohol is, by far, our most widely abused mind-altering drug. Yet beer commercials give viewers the impression everybody drinks -- white guys who throw sofas out of third-floor windows and black guys who say "Whassup," not to mention dogs, frogs, lizards, lobsters, and beavers -- and no one ever develops a problem. Brewers are a lot like Norman Vincent Peale: They believe in the power of positive advertising. So, fellas, those are the standards. Now which drug would you like to push? Dennis Hans is a freelance writer whose essays have appeared in the New York Times, Washington Post, National Post (Canada) and elsewhere. He has taught courses in mass communications and American foreign policy at the University of South Florida. Source: AlterNetAuthor: Dennis Hans, AlterNetPublished: February 19, 2001Copyright: 2001 Independent Media Institute. Contact: info alternet.org Web Site: http://www.alternet.org/Writer's Guidelines: http://www.alternet.org/guidelines.htmlMessage Board: http://www.alternet.org/cgi-bin/wwwthreads.plCannabisNews Articles - AlterNethttp://cannabisnews.com/thcgi/search.pl?K=AlterNet
Home Comment Email Register Recent Comments Help




Comment #6 posted by don on April 24, 2001 at 11:21:43 PT:
very informative
I saw this article as a very informative, and helped me greatly in my report.
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #5 posted by dddd on February 21, 2001 at 21:38:16 PT
FDA
Here's a wonderful item about the honest folks of the FDA.http://www.thomasjmoore.com/pages/fda_crisis.html
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #4 posted by CannabisMythsExposed on February 21, 2001 at 16:37:17 PT
Outstanding !
Cannabis prohibition simply cannot survive such journalism.
Cannabis Myths Exposed
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #3 posted by aocp on February 21, 2001 at 14:25:07 PT:
That was awesome!
As i've said before, i'm sick and tired of trying to shed light on the illicits for the uninformed. Instead, i'm going below the belt and hitting the drugs the antis tolerate, use and abuse legally. You wanna tell me all about why we need to have the illicits stay illicit? Fine with me, but you damn well be ready to defend tobacco and booze, in all forms. As i see it, both of those are Schedule I substances, as defined by the gov't that makes money off of them. Disgusting.
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #2 posted by dddd on February 21, 2001 at 14:01:46 PT
Truly
a wonderful article....Drug ads are a hobby of mine.My favorite recent ad,is for some new sleeping pill formula.I was in stitches when I heard the usual subdued qualifications that are required atthe end of the ad....The side effects included diarhea ......"I finally got to sleep after taking the new sleepacin pills,,,yup,,I was out like a light.Igot a good nites sleep....but I wasnt that happy in the morning when I woke up in a hot pool of shit juice."
[ Post Comment ]


Comment #1 posted by Ethan Russo, MD on February 21, 2001 at 13:33:29 PT:
Finally, We See Things in Perspective
I love it when someone is able to present the inconsistencies and hypocrisy of government policy so nicely, not to mention so entertainingly.
[ Post Comment ]


Post Comment


Name: Optional Password: 
E-Mail: 
Subject: 
Comment: [Please refrain from using profanity in your message]
Link URL: 
Link Title: