Bluesky Facebook Reddit Email

Colorado State Study Sheds Light On Adolescents' Response To Beer Ads

10.14.97 | Colorado State University

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C)

Apple AirPods Pro (2nd Generation, USB-C) provide clear calls and strong noise reduction for interviews, conferences, and noisy field environments.

FORT COLLINS--In one of the most comprehensive studies of alcohol advertising and youth, a team of Colorado State University researchers has found strong ethnic and gender differences in the way adolescents respond to television beer advertising.

The five-year study revealed that white adolescent males are more receptive to beer ads containing sports-related themes than their female counterparts. Overall, females were more likely to respond negatively to beer ads than males.

The study, funded by a $400,000 grant from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, also indicated that both male and female adolescents who responded positively to beer ads were more likely to use alcohol or say they planned to drink alcohol as adults. Adolescents who responded negatively to the ads or were more likely to criticize messages contained in those ads also were less likely to use alcohol or have plans to drink alcohol when they reached legal drinking age.

Researchers hope findings from the study, to be delivered in a final report to NIAAA headquarters this week, will help health educators more effectively teach adolescents about the risks of alcohol use and enable them to more skeptically view alcohol advertisements.

The findings could also help policy makers make more informed decisions regarding the use of beer ads with sports-related themes and other types of ads in television sports programs. The brewing industry spends an estimated $1.5 billion a year on television beer advertising. Previous studies have shown that over 1.5 alcohol ads appear per hour during television sports programs; many of those ads incorporate sports- or athletic-related themes.

"Brewers are criticized for putting beer ads in sports programming, especially when there are minors--particularly adolescent males--watching those programs," said Michael Slater, the project's lead researcher and an associate professor of journalism and technical communication at Colorado State. "Our results support public and official concerns that sports content in beer ads increases the ads' appeal to underage youth. However, they do not support concerns that sports programming might prime adolescents to be more receptive to beer ads."

Also participating in the study from Colorado State was Donna Rouner and Jim Van Leuven, professors in the department of journalism and technical communication; Frederick Beauvais, research scientist at the university's Tri-Ethnic Center for Prevention Research; psychology professor Kevin Murphy; and Melanie Domenech-Rodriguez, a doctoral candidate.

The study involved 401 male and female Anglo and Latino adolescents ranging in age from 12 to 18. Each participant viewed two television beer commercials with sports content, two beer ads without sports content and two non-beer advertisements. Half of the ads were seen during excerpts of television sports programs and half were seen during entertainment programs. A total of 72 ads, 24 of each type, were randomly selected from network television programs for use in the study. Twelve entertainment programs and 24 sports programs also were randomly selected. Participants wrote down their comments regarding the ads they saw; their responses were extensively coded and analyzed.

Other findings from the study include:

"The relatively high percentage of junior high school drinkers who perceive the people in beer ads to be underage is troubling," Slater said. "It is in junior high school that many young people make their first decisions about experimenting with alcohol. The fundamental cause for concern is that young people who already use alcohol might use their perception about underage people in the ads to reinforce their behavior."

Slater said the research team is currently analyzing the data from this study to see how sexual content in the ads shape responses among both male and female adolescents. In a separate, $665,000 study from the National Institutes of Health, Slater is examining the effectiveness of alcohol use warnings in television commercials. Preliminary findings from that research are expected next year.

-30-

Keywords

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Colorado State University. (1997, October 14). Colorado State Study Sheds Light On Adolescents' Response To Beer Ads. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XGVQXP1/colorado-state-study-sheds-light-on-adolescents-response-to-beer-ads.html
MLA:
"Colorado State Study Sheds Light On Adolescents' Response To Beer Ads." Brightsurf News, Oct. 14 1997, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8XGVQXP1/colorado-state-study-sheds-light-on-adolescents-response-to-beer-ads.html.