Too much junk food advertisement increases momentum in obesity epidemic, but I often remember seeing "under the fruit" advertisement when I was young. It's not only what is displayed in business but what it feels like to me. In commercial advertising, the boy opened a snack with a tip of excitement. He will unfold it and start scrolling up and down as if it were yours. Then it is used as a jump. The boy used dance and snacks as props. He stared at it over and over again, and his smile was always there.
The argument about advertising junk food for children is a microcosm of a more extensive discussion of the devastating effects of obesity and 'entangling power'. The combination of the power of lobbying in the food industry has exacerbated the debate over obesity and the government is very interested but makes Ofcom a convenient situation for both parties.
Too much junk food advertisement increases momentum in obesity epidemic, but I often remember seeing "under the fruit" advertisement when I was young. It's not only what is displayed in business but what it feels like to me. In commercial advertising, the boy opened a snack with a tip of excitement. He will unfold it and start scrolling up and down as if it were yours. Then it is used as a jump. The boy used dance and snacks as props. He picked it up.
Despite the reasons mentioned above, various institutions are causing opposition. Food companies and advertising companies that make junk foods and fast foods think that advertising food to children does not cause childhood obesity. According to them, childhood obesity is caused by lack of self-control and parenting and children's discipline, so parents can not control the intake of children of these foods and can not eat them in the way they want . However, fast food and processed foods contain unhealthy hazardous substances, regardless of whether they are ingested moderately or not.
Some junk food advertisers adhere to current regulations in order to prevent children from advertising food on TV and promoting methods to obesity. ACMA, communications and media regulators seem to express sympathy for these claims. In 2005 we concluded that it was difficult to judge the benefits of banning junk food advertisements during children 's television viewing time as part of the review of CTS. In suggesting this statement, ACMA quotes the British regulator's Ofcom estimate and the relevance of ads to junk food consumption is discreet - the change in eating habits caused by junk food advertisements About 2%