News Release FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Tuesday 25 July 2000
CONTACT: Simon Chaitowitz, Communications Director
tel: 202-686-2210, ext. 309; simonc@pcrm.org
Doctors Denounce Milk Ads
Starring Marc Anthony, Britney Spears, and Other Celebs as Deceptive
Group Petitions the FTC to Investigate "Milk
Mustache" Health Claims
Washington, D.C.—A doctors' organization will file a petition
tomorrow with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) requesting an immediate
investigation into health claims in "milk mustache" ads
featuring Marc Anthony, Britney Spears, and other celebrities. The
Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) will ask the
FTC to investigate whether the National Fluid Milk Processor Promotion
Board, the Milk Industry Foundation, the International Dairy Foods
Association, and Bozell Worldwide, Inc., an advertising agency,
have disseminated scientifically unsubstantiated, purposefully deceptive,
and harmful advertising.
The new Marc Anthony ad implies that milk can help prevent osteoporosis
in Hispanic Americans. What fans "need to know," the doctors
group says, is that there is little or no evidence that Hispanic
Americans benefit from milk-drinking. To add insult to injury, the
majority of Hispanic Americans—like Asian-, African-, and
Native Americans—are lactose intolerant and experience gastrointestinal
problems from milk.
The Latin heartthrob is one of dozens of celebrities whose images
have been exploited to sell milk. A Britney Spears ad advises girls
to get four glasses a day, which add up to 33 grams of fat, including
20 grams of heart-clogging saturated fat. "Britney's ad might
as well be captioned, ‘Oops, I did it again—sold out
for an unhealthy product,'" says PCRM president Neal D. Barnard,
M.D. Other celebrities unknowingly contributing to the milk-is-good-for-you
myth include the Dixie Chicks, Larry King, Tyra Banks, and even
the cartoon Simpsons.
"The dairy industry continues to whitewash the dangers of
cow's milk," says Dr. Barnard. "The ubiquitous ‘milk
mustache' campaign makes misleading claims about milk preventing
osteoporosis, lowering blood pressure, and enhancing sports performance.
Recent studies, including the Harvard Nurses' Health Study, have
shown that milk offers no protection against broken bones. And,
unlike prescription drug ads, the mustache ads don't reveal the
many unwanted ‘side-effects' of milk, among them increased
risk of prostate and ovarian cancer, diabetes, obesity, and heart
disease."
PCRM's petition is available by contacting Ms. Simon Chaitowitz
at 202-686-2210, ext. 309, or via e-mail at simonc@pcrm.org.
PCRM doctors and dietitians are also available for interviews.
Founded in 1985 and based in Washington, D.C., the Physicians Committee
for Responsible Medicine is a nonprofit organization dedicated to
promoting preventive medicine, especially good nutrition, and higher
standards in research. PCRM's membership includes 5,000 physicians,
one of whom was Dr. Benjamin Spock whose posthumously published
Baby and Child Care bestseller recommends against dairy consumption.
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