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September 27, 2000 INDUSTRY SOLUTIONS FALL SHORT OF NEEDED REFORMS, PARENT GROUP SAYS Washington, DC – Promises offered by Hollywood executives in anticipation of today’s Senate Commerce Committee hearing fall far short of reforms needed to protect the nation’s children, according to a national grassroots parents’ organization. The recent Federal Trade Commission report on the marketing of violence to children laid bare the dark underbelly of a U.S. "entertainment" industry that aggressively markets violent movies, video games and music to our young children, the group said. In light of the abuses highlighted in the FTC report, the time has come for serious reform of industry marketing practices – not band-aid fixes to a deeply flawed system," said Daphne White, executive director of The Lion & Lamb Project. Lion & Lamb is a national grassroots parents’ organization working to stop the marketing of violence to children. "The FTC report demonstrated all too clearly that movie studios, video game companies and music executives have abused the trust placed in them by millions of parents by marketing violence to children and teens," White added. "These marketing practices – which reach into schools, camps and even organizations such as the Campfire Girls – make it difficult for parents to teach a set of values to their children," White said. Now that the movie industry has been forced to acknowledge that there is a problem, millions of Moms and Dads will be watching closely to see what, if any, changes actually take place after the Senate hearing concludes. Lion & Lamb has members in all 50 states, and parent groups nationwide will be monitoring industry marketing practices. The stakes are high. Recently, six public health groups – including the American Medical Association, the American Psychological Association, and the American Academy of Pediatrics – issued a joint statement to Congress, concluding that "Viewing entertainment violence can lead to increases in aggressive attitudes, values and behavior, particularly in children." "That statement caps 40 years of research that clearly demonstrates the link between violence on the screen and violence in the streets, between shootings in the media and shootings in our schools," White said. "The evidence is now in: viewing or playing with violent media products is harmful to children’s health." Lion & Lamb called for a cohesive set of actions applying to all industry groups, including:
In addition, industry needs to enforce the ratings system at the retail level, White said, so children can no longer buy or rent adult-rated "entertainment" products or walk into R-rated movies without an adult. "Just as congress has mandated that children cannot buy cigarettes or alcohol, it must now protect children from violent materials that are also dangerous to their health," she said. White is available for interviews concerning today’s hearing, the FTC report, and related issues. |
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