10 Really Bad Things the Tobacco Industry Has Done to Entice Kids to Start Smoking

Tobacco companies have decades of experience marketing their products to kids and teens. From ad campaigns to product placement to cartoon characters, Big Tobacco has spent big bucks on getting kids to start smoking. Tactics are deceptive and gloss over the fact that tobacco is the leading cause of preventable death in the United States. The truth is the tobacco industry needs kids to start smoking to make up for the adults that die from tobacco-related disease. Every day, more than 100 kids and teens who had previously been occasional cigarette smokers become regular daily cigarette smokers.

Take a look at some of the duplicitous schemes tobacco companies have used to hook kids into a lifetime of addiction:

1. Candy- and Fruit-Flavored Products

Vanilla, cherry, chocolate, blueberry – even flavors from popular children’s cereals. The use of flavors in cigarettes with the glaring exception of menthol cigarettes, was prohibited in 2009, but flavored cigars, e-cigarettes and other tobacco products are still made and sold with candy and fruit flavorings. In April 2021, the Biden Administration announced that FDA will propose two rules to remove menthol cigarettes and flavored cigars from the marketplace, however no action has been taken.

2. Celebrity Endorsements

Famous names and well-known faces have a lot of influence and it's no surprise a kid might want to be just like his or her favorite rock star.

3. Misleading Health Claims

The tobacco industry has promoted "low harm" versions of their products since day one. However, light, low tar or filtered cigarettes are not any less dangerous. In fact, a federal judge convicted the major tobacco companies on racketeering charges in part because they lied to the public with their health claims. The truth is that the risk of dying from smoking has increased over the last 50 years at the same time that most smokers switched to these "healthier" cigarette types.

4. Smoking is Just a Game

The tobacco industry frequently uses sweepstakes and contests to get people hooked and keep the profits rolling in like this 2015/2016 Newport menthol cigarettes ad. However, smoking is anything but a game, ultimately killing up to half of long-term users.

5. Buy One, Get One Free

The cost of cigarettes has a very significant effect on youth smoking. Price discounts such as buy one, get one free, are among the largest of the tobacco industry’s marketing expenditures. But even if they are practically giving them away now, the tobacco industry will recoup its money over the lifetime of kids newly addicted to their products.

6. Ads in Popular Magazines

Found in the November 30, 2009 edition of Sports Illustrated

Big Tobacco pushes their message by placing ads—big ones—in magazines and publications that are popular with kids. The more exposure adolescents and teens have to tobacco advertising, the more likely they are to start smoking.

7. Product Placement on TV and in Movies

1962 Flintstones cartoon selling Winston's cigarettes

Saturday morning cartoons have been the staple of American childhoods for the past half century, but Big Tobacco has muddied even this innocent memory – placing their products in cartoons, normalizing their appearance to kids.

8. Cartoon Characters

"Smooth" cartoon characters such as Joe Camel were deployed to appeal to young audiences at an impressionable age. One 1991 study found Joe Camel was at least as well-known as Mickey Mouse among 3- to 6-year-olds. Cartoons became so effective at addicting kids to tobacco, they were prohibited as part of the historic tobacco Master Settlement Agreement 46 states and the District of Columbia reached with the five largest tobacco companies in 1998.

9. In-store Promotions

Tobacco advertisements and promotions are on display front, center and back in convenience stores, gas stations and other retail locations frequented by youth, including some retailers with pharmacies. It’s not a coincidence that the average height of these advertisements is at the eye level of youth. The vast majority of the industry’s marketing dollars are spent in retail stores.

10. Replacement Smokers

Calling youth their "replacement smokers," tobacco companies callously and aggressively advertise to youth, because they know they are killing their current customers. An infamous quote from one tobacco industry document gives insight on how they view recruitment:

"Younger adult smokers have been the critical factor in the growth and decline of every major brand and company over the last 50 years. They will continue to be just as important to brands/companies in the future for two simple reasons: The renewal of the market stems almost entirely from 18-year-old smokers. No more than 5 percent of smokers start after age 24. [And] the brand loyalty of 18-year-old smokers far outweighs any tendency to switch with age... Brands/companies which fail to attract their fair share of younger adult smokers face an uphill battle. They must achieve net switching gains every year to merely hold share... Younger adult smokers are the only source of replacement smokers... If younger adults turn away from smoking, the industry must decline, just as a population which does not give birth will eventually dwindle." February 29, 1984 RJR report, "Young Adult Smokers: Strategies and Opportunities". Bates No. 501928462-8550 

Images courtesy of TrinketsAndTrash.org

Page last updated: April 17, 2024