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ThoBuyb 07-11-116 Buy Buy Baby How
Consumer Culture Manipulates Parents and Harms Young Minds Susan Gregory Thomas Houghton
Mifflin Company, 2007, 230 pp., ISBN 0-618-46351-0 |
I thought I
would buzz through this book, but it turned out to be a research book on marketing
and education in regard to babies and toddlers. The author is a GenX investigative
journalist and broadcaster and formerly a senior editor at U.S. News & World Report. Like many books,
this one is "over titled."
It makes no startling fresh claims that children are being turned into
zombies. However, youngsters early
learn to recognize and demand the licensed characters they see. It is clear that videos and toys teach
nothing but brand recognition to children under two. And there are a number of warnings that too
much time with stimulating toys and screens can be detrimental to mental
development. The best thing is for
parents to play with their children.
Imagine that! "The
executive tells me that the moment a baby can see clearly, she becomes a
consumer." (2) Television is the single most powerful force in targeting
toddlers as a market. (2) Popping in a
baby video or flicking on the TV set is a national reflex. (3) Children can
discern brands as early as 18 months and by 24 months can ask for products by
name. (5) GenX parents are
very concerned about getting a good educational jump with their kids. That's why "Baby Einstein" turned
out to be such an ingenious product name.
(6) More than a quarter
of American children under the age of two have a TV in their room. The American Academy of Pediatrics
recommends that children under two not watch television at all! (9) The fastest
growing segment of pre-school toys is marketed as "educational."
(9) Babies and
toddlers reared on TV, videos, and blinking, beeping 'smart' toys may
ultimately suffer from problem-solving deficit disorder. Very young children who appear glazed over
and numb may be overstimulated. They
simply cannot integrate the sensory overload and begin to tune out. Constant distractions impair children's
cognitive development in other ways too. (12) Less involvement
in consumer culture leads to healthier kids.
Higher levels lead to increased depression, anxiety, lower elf-esteem
and more psychosomatic complaints. (14) There is no
evidence that any learning toys or videos are any more educationally
stimulating than shaking a rattle or playing with blocks. (18) Babies are eager
communicators who require no input other than typical mutually enjoyable
interchanges of baby and caregiver. (35) Children who are
'bathed' in language from the start -- spoken to, read to, encouraged to tell
their own stories and share their thoughts -- are far more likely to be able
to read by school age than those who aren't. (43) Gen-X is now a
desirable marketing demographic.
Two-thirds of mothers with children under 12 are Gen-Xers. (54) Star Wars
products grossed almost three times as much as the movie, so much so that the
whole idea of play was changed.
(56) Many of their toys were
action figures that were not even human. (57)
Gen-X moms say
they are not concerned about how smart their child is, that they don't like
toys aggressively marketed as educational -- but they buy them anyway. (65) Gen-Xers were
left alone a lot. They want their
children to feel they are always there, no matter how briefly they are
gone. Consequently, it helps when the
toy or gadget feels like an extension of herself. (68)
"Marketing infant and toddler products to the Gen-X mom requires playing
to her blind spots. Marketers must
deftly disguise her absence not as a chance for a break but as a learning
opportunity for her young child." (70) The Children's
Television Workshop never claimed that watching Sesame Street would offer a child a richer experience than direct
contact with a loving, interested caregiver.
However, the suggestion that preschool education could be outsourced
to a television show was irresistibly compelling to many in academia and
politics. (76) Sesame Street was never
designed for babies or toddlers. (85) By 1999
so-called educational television and videos were being marketed specifically
for infants and toddlers. (86) One professor of pediatrics says children
under two should not be watching TV and to target them with a show is
immoral. (87) Like Baby
Einstein, Teletubbies, a fixture in American media culture, flattened the
barrier that kept infants and toddlers from being deliberately planted in
front of television. (88) In a study that
scrambled some shows and not others, it was shown that the 6- to 12-month old
audience "was not learning anything that the producers of Teletubbies
intended them to learn or claimed they could learn from it. So far as babies were concerned, the show
was gibberish, no matter how you sliced it -- literally. So what were toddlers learning? Anderson wasn't entirely sure. But if they were gleaning any meaning from the
show, it was strong character recognition." (96) Every major
figure in the history of child development research believes that play is the
most important work of childhood and that it is essential for toddlers to
have the space to give 'focused attention' to play. (97) Child-adult interactions are substantially
decreased when the TV is on. Further,
even in the background, television breaks the child's focus, her ability to
think clearly. (98) Toddlers learn
new words best when taught by an adult caregiver and learn the least when the
new words are presented by television programs with animated characters. (100) A late 2003
study indicated that more than a quarter of American children under two had a
TV set in their room and on a typical day 59% of children 6 months to 2 years
watched TV and 42% watched a video or DVD.
The TV was on in the home about 6 hours a day and 40% of parents with
young children reported the TV was on "most" or "all" of
the time. (100) Infants and
toddlers attach themselves to creatures that look like them, cute creatures
with big eyes and rounded features.
They are also attracted to bright primary colors such as Elmo- or
Clifford-red. (111) Elmo's breakaway
popularity confirmed that the character-licensing business in the infant and
toddler market was enormous. (113)
"Executives in the kids' entertainment business use the word
'toyetic' to describe television characters that will translate well into
toys…." (119) Little People
and Rescue Heroes are both marketed to babies as young as twelve months
old." (121) "Animarketing
refers to the practice of using 'spokescharacters' (usually cartoon
characters) to market products or services -- or an overarching brand -- to
children." (124) "A
spokescharacter is effective for its brand when there is a relationship
between: 1. The character and the child; 2. The character and the brand; 3.
The brand and the child." (124) "It has
been estimated that corporations whose marketing campaigns appeal to a
toddler can expect to collect as much as $100,000 from her over the course of
her lifetime…." (125) Age compression
and Kids Getting Older Younger (KGOY) refer to the phenomenon of today's
grade-school children playing and acting in ways that adolescents did 15 to
20 years ago and so on down the age scale.
Power Rangers were originally marketed to boys 6 or 7 in the 1990s but
by the 2000s there was a three-year-old fan base. (137-38) Cinderella
emerged as the brightest star of the Disney Princesses. A toddler's environment was saturated with
images of Princess characters. She
began to ask for them and wanted to look like them. And she wasn't satisfied with just any
fancy Cinderella; it had to be the Disney Cinderella. Ironically competition for the
accoutrements often appeared less like the heroine of modesty and kindness
and more like the behavior of the wicked stepsisters! The point of the story was pretty much
lost. Infants and
toddlers form attachments to characters designed to appeal to them. "The main thing that infants and
toddlers learn from such characters…is the ability to recognize them -- which
should not be confused with actually learning anything 'educational.' Third, infants' and toddlers' attachment to
characters deepens the more often they encounter them, no matter what the
medium. Finally, the presence of such
characters on a wide variety of merchandise seems to be toddlers' first
experience of developing loyalty to an early concept of a brand." (143) The average
Gen-X adult spends 18% more on luxury goods that the average Baby
Boomer. "The primary
characteristic that most Generation Xers share is shopping." (146) These moms want
to treat their children as people worthy of respect and dignity. "They will include children as young
as two -- and even younger -- in decisions ranging from buying breakfast cereal
to acquiring a car or home." (147) Parents yearn to
share with their children the playthings of their youth." "These parents' image of childhood is
rooted not in activities or experiences but in buying the brands of their
youth." (150) Two-thirds of mothers
interviewed reported that their children asked for specific brands before the
age of three, while one-third said their kids were aware of brands at age two
or earlier. Those that kids knew best
included Cheerios, Disney, McDonald's, Pop-Tarts, Coke, and Barbie."
(155) "Girls who
had either grown up with Barbie or been denied them were now eager to relive
a piece of their own childhood by buying Barbie for their babies or by giving
them a toy they themselves had coveted.
The Barbie brand seemed to have such a strong emotional pull for Gen-X
women that they impulsively bought it without heeding the suggested age
range." "…it was as if
'Barbie' and 'happy girlhood' had become synonymous." (1560 Every marketing
executive in the toy business knows that the most efficient way to increase
toy sales is to launch a television show starring the toy itself. (161) Thomas the train
jump started sales by putting trains in bookstores. Preschoolers were spending more time there
and the interest in the trains was a win-win.
The kids played with the trains so mom could shop. (162)
Public
librarians have given up trying to interest kids in books that don't feature
licensed characters. That's all they
want. (165) "The Clifford the Big Red Dog series is
part of a comprehensive brand marketing campaign, including home
entertainment, consumer products, publishing extensions, such as television
tie-in books, interactive media and consumer promotions, supporting
Clifford's position as a leading pre-school brand." (171) "The only
time a child drives a book purchase is when the book features a licensed
character." "Your kid riding
in a shopping cart points at it, and wants it, so you buy it." "…the child has not been attracted to
a book; he has been drawn in by branding." (177) A typical writer
for licensed character children's books tries not to spend more than 15 hours
on each one. "These books are not
sold on the writing," she says…
"These books are sold on concept and cover design." (178) By 2003 Clifford
was one of the early child celebrities, a full-fledged media brand. Clifford has been licensed in more than 80
countries. It was such a hit that Scholastic
initiated a brand extension, Clifford's
Puppy Days. Scholastic soon
launched a whole range of baby Clifford products. (182)
Using the "Ten Big Ideas" as its centerpiece, Scholastic
assembled a prekindergarten curriculum for sale to daycare centers, private
preschools, and pre-K programs.
"The whole package was boxed and marketed as Clifford's Kit for
Personal Social Development…."
(183) "Clifford's
entire message is centered on building character: sharing, compassion, responsibility. [But] Toddlers are not developmentally
capable of learning empathy -- that is, imagining how another person might
feel -- until they are at least two and a half. …toddlers could not really learn what the
Clifford curriculum was designed to teach.
They would, however, certainly develop a strong bond to Clifford as a
character." (184-5) "More than
half of American children under the age of three spend most of their waking
hours in the care of people other than their parents and in places other than
their own homes." (185) "The
daycare market is successful…because the younger the target audience, the
more open it is to accepting an advertising message as truth." (197) "In
addition to developing its own curricula, Scholastic hires itself out to
corporate marketers who wish to target children in daycare or preschool
programs and their parents." (201) "The effect
of screened media (particularly television and videos) on very young children
is clearly an important health issue…." (215) Research is
beginning to show that "foreground television does not have a positive
educational impact on babies and toddlers." (215) "One
Columbia University health professional…told me she feared that the reason
babies seemed so riveted by Baby Einstein videos was that they were actually slipping
into what could be described as a low-level seizure state. That is only a hunch, but it is the hunch
of a professional whose career has been spent working with children who have
sensory-integration problems."
"In 2006, Cornell economists found a high correlation between
cases of reported autism and television watching by very young children."
(216) "Licensing
itself has become a form of advertising to children under eight and
especially to babies and toddlers. The
most obviously damaging form is the marketing of junk food." (218) Regarding
Gen-Xers. "We didn't get stable
homes, we didn't get our parents' attention, but we did get them to buy us stuff.
According to marketers, that's what we are still doing: buying
stuff." (222) "Studies
have shown that two-year-olds can recognize the difference in volume and tone
of the commercial voice on television and know it intimately in a way that they
don't respond to the editorial voice.
And you internalize that voice, so that marketing no longer seems like
an alien external manipulative force; rather, it's just part of your world. It's part of something that goes on inside
you and outside you." (222) "In the
marketing culture to which Generation X seems especially susceptible, the
division between image-doctoring and news, sales pitch and fact, is
fuzzy." (223) There is a sense
that little kids must be kept busy and entertained at every juncture. Today it is hard for even the youngest
children to enjoy doing Nothing, which used to be one of the staples of early
childhood. If a mother needs to take a
shower, she pops in a baby video because she finds it deeply unacceptable
that her infant might have to occupy himself for ten minutes and might cry.
(225) "Constant
busyness has consequences. As they get
older, these children begin to feel the stress of nonstop motion." (226) Generation X was
raised on a heavy dose of loneliness.
"To reverse that legacy, Gen-Xers overstimulate, overschedule,
overshop for, and overobsess about their own children." (226) "Doing
Nothing means that adults and their young children have periods of
unstructured time when they can see what just unfolds." "For a parent, doing Nothing involves
watching and listening to see what the young child gravitates to on her own
and following her lead, with no agenda or goal in mind. Doing Nothing lets parents and children
play and connect with each other in their own way -- and lets each one
discover what that means or does not mean." "It's just hanging out." (227) "All the
early childhood experts I spoke with said that spending time hanging out
together is the best possible thing parents can do for their young children's
development…." (228) |
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