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Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education
University of California, San Francisco

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Six months later: Are MPAA's tobacco ratings protecting movie audiences?
Jonathan R. Polansky, Onbeyond LLC
Stanton Glantz, PhD, University of California, San Francisco
Kori Titus, MBA, Breathe California of Sacramento-Emigrant Trails

Download the Paper (226 K, PDF file) - December 17, 2007 Tell a colleague about it.
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ABSTRACT:

In the six months (May 10-November 10, 2007) since the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) announced that all smoking would be a factor in movie ratings, there has been no substantial change in the percentage of movies with smoking, across rating categories; in the number of tobacco incidents in these films; nor in the estimated tobacco impressions delivered to audiences in movie theaters, compared to the same period in four previous years.

Percentage of movies with smoking: Of the movies that achieved “Top Ten” box office ranking for at least a week, released in the six months after the MPAA’s announcement, 65 percent (51/78) featured tobacco including:

• 39 percent of G and PG movies (7/18)

• 65 percent of PG-13 movies (20/31)

• 83 percent of R-rated movies (24/29).

The majority (53%, 27/51) of top box office movies with smoking released May 10-November 10, 2007, were youth-rated.

Number of tobacco incidents

Content analysis of the May 10-November 10, 2007, top box office movie sample finds no substantial difference (i.e., none beyond random year-to-year fluctuation) compared to the previous four years in the number of tobacco incidents in movies, in any rating category.

Impact on theater audiences

The total number of tobacco impressions delivered by movies with tobacco imagery showed no substantial change since the MPAA policy announcement, compared to the same period in earlier years.

MPAA’s use of tobacco descriptors

Data from weekly MPAA bulletins, which announce the ratings of films as they are awarded, indicate that eleven of the twenty-seven youthrated, top box office movies with smoking released to theaters in this survey period completed the MPAA rating process after May 10; none of these films received a tobacco descriptor.

After its May 10 announcement, the MPAA gave tobacco descriptors to eleven films released during the survey period by independent distributors (non-MPAA members) and to three such films from MPAA member companies; all fourteen of these films were given limited theatrical release or went directly to video. No films containing smoking that were rated after May 10 and then released nationally received tobacco descriptors. The eleven top box office films with smoking assigned a G, PG and PG-13 rating after May 10, but given no tobacco descriptors, have delivered an estimated three billion tobacco impressions to theater audiences in the U.S. and Canada.

Conclusion

Because ratings are awarded after a film has been completed and the MPAA announced last May that its policy was put into immediate effect, sufficient time has passed to observe any meaningful changes in tobacco exposures from youth-rated films. The lack of discernible change indicates that the MPAA’s approach is a failure.

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Jonathan R. Polansky; Stanton Glantz, PhD; and Kori Titus, MBA, "Six months later: Are MPAA's tobacco ratings protecting movie audiences?" (December 17, 2007). Center for Tobacco Control Research and Education. Tobacco Control Policy Making: United States. Paper MPAA2007.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ctcre/tcpmus/MPAA2007

 
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