Do I offend you?
There has been a great deal of controversy swirling around the recent ad campaign here in Georgia regarding the Childhood Obesity billboards and video! I see the posters and have posted some of the commercials currently airing on local television here. The larger point is addressing the problem, yes it is in your face, but is there any nice way to address this?
http://www.npr.org/2012/01/09/144799538/controversy-swirls-around-harsh-…
It reads: “75 percent of Georgia parents with overweight kids don’t recognize the problem.”
—–I disagree with the above statement. People have mirrors and common sense. You do not need to be a rocket scientist to know that slew of health risks associated with being overweight and obese.
According to Rodney Lyn of Georgia State University’s Institute of Public Health, “This campaign is more negative than positive.”
—-I agree with this. You are really not helping with this AD.
Therefore, my opinion on the topic is stop wasting time and money putting together something to demonstrate the problem. The problem is OBVIOUS. True time and money should be invested in the solutions. I hope to work on that in the future!
Fuel the Movement,
JM
In our society, as they say in marketing and publicity “even negative attention is better than no attention at all!” Although I’m NOT a proponent of negative ads, negative reinforcement, or negative motivation, I have to say that if this series of ads serves to shine more attention and light on the subject of childhood obesity, then it may have served its purpose. After all, the purpose of advertising is to bring a product, subject or issue to light, to the public’s view etc. This series of ads seems to already be accomplishing this purpose!
LaRue, CSCS
www.lecfitness.com
[email protected]
I’m more offended by the ads coming from MacDonalds,Burger King, 7/11, Taco Bell, Wendys etc than this billboard.
I think we are in a real obesity crisis, particularily among children: My opinion is that the food industry is marketing and packaging “fake food?”, and that processed foods are rampant.
Parents are working and don’t want to bother with preparing “real food”, so they take the quick fix
I think it’s going to cost us dearly in the long run.
Kids don’t know their fat because it’s become status quo.
Usually it takes a crisis for our society to pay attention