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Since its
founding in 2000, CCFC has successfully taken on some of the
world’s largest, most powerful, multi-national corporations.
2009
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After years of effort, including a Federal Trade Commission complaint, CCFC convinces the Walt Disney Company to offer an unprecedented refund to anyone who bought a Baby Einstein video over the past five years. CCFC had sought the refund for parents as part its ongoing campaign to stop the false and deceptive marketing of baby videos as educational.
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After a three campaign by CCFC, BusRadio - the company that planned to "take targeted student marketing to the next level" by advertising on school buses - ceases operations. CCFC monitored BusRadio’s content and advertising and organized parents to stop BusRadio in some of the biggest school districts around the country.
- After CCFC documents how violent blockbuster PG-13 movies were being marketed extensively to children as young as preschoolers, the Federal Trade Commission agreed to vestigate the marketing plans for several films rated PG-13 for violent content.
- CCFC received the 2009 Josephine Scout Fuller award from Psychologists for Social Responsibility. The award is given each year to an individual or organization involved with peace and social justice for children.estigate the marketing plans for several films rated PG-13 for violent content.
- CCFC's report on the commercialization of Scholastic's Book Clubs is featured in the New York Times and Associated Press and launches a national conversation about Scholastic's role in schools.
- Over 6,000 people vote for CCFC’s first TOADY (Toys Oppressive And Destructive to Young Children) award to highlight the commercialization of children’s play. The winner? The Dallas Cowboy Cheerleader Barbie.
2008
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After
receiving more than 5,000 emails from CCFC members,
Scholastic, Inc. agrees to stop marketing the Bratz Brand in
schools.
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In Seminole
County, Florida, we successfully pressure McDonald’s to end
its practice of sending report cards in envelopes advertising
Happy Meals.
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In response
to CCFC’s complaint about the marketing of violent PG-13
movies to young children, the Federal Trade Commission urges
the Motion Picture Association of America to develop a
marketing policy consistent with the PG-13 rating.
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After CCFC
partners with the Association for Booksellers for Children to
protest product placement for Cover Girl Makeup in Kathy’s
Book, its publishers drop the advertising from the
paperback edition.
2007
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After
eighteen months of negotiations, CCFC and the Center for
Science in the Public Interest announce a settlement to a
pending law suit with Kellogg, putting an end to all of their
elementary and preschool marketing, placing restrictions on
television and Internet advertising, and limiting the
company’s use of licensed characters like Shrek
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Working with
local activists and parents, we successfully stop BusRadio—a
company that plans on “taking student targeted marketing to
the next level”—in school districts around the country.
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We help draft
legislation and organize support for a Massachusetts bill that
would end all marketing in schools and on-school grounds.
Using our bill as a model, CCFC members help introduce
similar legislation in Vermont in 2008.
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Our campaign
to fire Shrek from his role as spokescharacter for the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services launches a national
discussion about the use of licensed characters to market junk
to children.
2006
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Alerted by a
parent, CCFC launches a successful letter-writing campaign
after Hasbro announced plans for a new line of dolls—for girls
as young as six—based on the Pussycat Dolls, a real-life
burlesque troupe turned singing group.
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Our public
letter, signed by dozens of state and local politicians and
community leaders—including the mayors of both Boston and
Cambridge—convinces the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority to
institute a policy prohibiting the advertising of violent
video games on trains and buses.
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CCFC ignites
a national debate about the questionable educational value of
screen viewing for babies and raises awareness about the
American Academy of Pediatrics’ recommendation of no screen
time for children under two.
2005
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McDonald’s
drops a plan to pay rap artists to promote Big Macs in their
songs after CCFC’s protest receives international press
coverage.
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Joining with
labor and environmental groups, CCFC helps persuade the
pension giant TIAA-CREF to remove Coca-Cola from its Social
Choice Account. It is the first time that marketing junk food
to children is cited as a reason for removing a company from a
socially-screened fund.
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At a major
FTC conference on food marketing to children, CCFC is the only
organization on the program to speak out about the failure of
industry self-regulation.
2000-2004
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Working with
environmental groups, CCFC’s convinces the United States Youth
Soccer Association to end its promotional partnership with
ChemLawn.
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CCFC holds
its first congressional briefing on marketing to children.
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CCFC protests
the Golden Marble Awards—the advertising industry’s
celebration of marketing to kids—in New York City in 2000.
The following year, Scholastic ends its sponsorship of the
awards after a letter-writing campaign. In 2003, after three
years of protests, the awards are cancelled.
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In response
to growing concerns about the impact of marketing on children,
Susan Linn and Diane Levin—along with Enola Aird, Priscilla
Hambrick-Dixon, Allen Kanner, Velma LaPoint, and Alvin F.
Poussiant—form Stop Commercial Exploitation of Children. The
Coalition is renamed the Campaign for a Commercial-Free
Childhood in 2004.
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Email:
ccfc<at>commercialfreechildhood.org
Phone: 857-241-2028
Fax: 617-737-1585
CCFC
NonProfit Center
89 South St., #404
Boston, MA 02111
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