Literature DB >> 20159772

Promoting tobacco through the international language of dance music: British American Tobacco and the Ministry of Sound.

Caitlin R Stanton1, Alexandria Chu, Jeff Collin, Stanton A Glantz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Tobacco companies target young adults through marketing strategies that use bars and nightclubs to promote smoking. As restrictions increasingly limit promotions, music marketing has become an important vehicle for tobacco companies to shape brand image, generate brand recognition and promote tobacco.
METHODS: Analysis of previously secret tobacco industry documents from British American Tobacco, available at http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu.
RESULTS: In 1995, British American Tobacco (BAT) initiated a partnership with London's Ministry of Sound (MOS) nightclub to promote Lucky Strike cigarettes to establish relevance and credibility among young adults in the UK. In 1997, BAT extended their MOS partnership to China and Taiwan to promote State Express 555. BAT sought to transfer values associated with the MOS lifestyle brand to its cigarettes. The BAT/MOS partnership illustrates the broad appeal of international brands across different regions of the world.
CONCLUSION: Transnational tobacco companies like BAT are not only striving to stay contemporary with young adults through culturally relevant activities such as those provided by MOS but they are also looking to export their strategies to regions across the world. Partnerships like this BAT/MOS one skirt marketing restrictions recommended by the World Health Organization's Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. The global scope and success of the MOS program emphasizes the challenge for national regulations to restrict such promotions.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20159772      PMCID: PMC3023012          DOI: 10.1093/eurpub/ckq009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Public Health        ISSN: 1101-1262            Impact factor:   3.367


  11 in total

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4.  Young adults: vulnerable new targets of tobacco marketing.

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6.  How Philip Morris built Marlboro into a global brand for young adults: implications for international tobacco control.

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9.  Tobacco related bar promotions: insights from tobacco industry documents.

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  7 in total

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Review 3.  The vector of the tobacco epidemic: tobacco industry practices in low and middle-income countries.

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6.  Exposure to celebrity-endorsed small cigar promotions and susceptibility to use among young adult cigarette smokers.

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7.  Denormalising tobacco at a Danish music festival.

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