Nearly all youth watch television
frequently:
• Ninety-seven percent of teens aged 12 to 19 said
in the spring of 2004 that they had watched television in the last
week, reporting an average of 10.45 hours in front of the
television that week. More teens reported watching television than
doing any other activity, and it took up more of their time than
any of the other activities listed, including listening to music,
hanging out with friends, and talking on the phone.1
• More teens say they own television sets than
backpacks, wristwatches or bicycles.2
Alcohol advertising on television—and
youth exposure to it—grew dramatically between 2001 and 2003:
• Teens aged 12 to 19 ranked ads for Budweiser and
Bud Light as number one when asked to choose their favorite
television commercial in a spring 2004 study. Among the other
brands ranked behind Budweiser in popularity in teens' top 10 were
GEICO, Pepsi, M&Ms and Nike ads. Ads for Miller Lite were eighth
on their top ten list, and were favorites for more teens than ads
for NFL, Blockbuster, Mountain Dew or McDonalds.3
• Nearly 90,000 more advertisements for alcohol
appeared on television in 2003 than just two years earlier. The
number of alcohol ads aired on television increased each year
between 2001 and 2003.4
• The number of ads that underage youth, ages 12
to 20, were more likely per capita to see than legal-aged adults
increased each year as well, from 51,084 in 2001 to 66,218 in 2002
to 69,054 in 2003.5,6 ,
• In 2001, 2002, and 2003, almost a quarter of
alcohol ads that aired on television were more likely to be seen
by underage youth per capita than by legal-age adults.7
• The average underage person saw two beer ads on
television for every three seen by the average adult in 2003.8
Three “alcopop”9 ads were seen by the average underage
person for every four seen by the average adult.10
• Driving the increases in alcohol advertising on
television from 2001 to 2003 was the explosion of ads for
distilled spirits on national cable networks—from 513 in 2001 to
33,126 in 2003. Spending on distilled spirits advertising on
television increased by 148% between 2002 and 2003.11
Teens' favorite television programs had
alcohol advertising in 2003:
• All 15 of the television shows most popular with
teens aged 12 to 17 had alcohol ads in 2003. The same was true in
2002, and 13 of the 15 shows most popular with teens had alcohol
ads in 2001.12
• Throughout 2003, alcohol companies placed 2,608
ads on the top 15 teen shows, which included shows such as Fear
Factor, Friends, Smallville and According to Jim at a
total cost of more than $30 million.13
The industry's voluntary guidelines are
inadequate:
• Alcohol industry self-regulation is the primary
means of regulating alcohol advertising's exposure of youth. The
current alcohol industry standard, announced in September 2003,
sets the maximum permissible youth audience composition for
alcohol advertising at 30%. Because youth ages 12 to 20 are only
13.3% of the national television viewing audience, a threshold of
30% allows alcohol ads to be placed on programs where there are
more than twice as many youth as in the viewing population.14
• In 2001, 2002, and 2003, around 12% of the
alcohol ads aired each year appeared on programs with an underage
audience of 30% or more.15
• Beer and distilled spirits industry groups
announced in September 2003 that they would codify a 30% underage
threshold for their members' advertising. Yet a CAMY analysis
shows that this change will require a major shift in course. In
fact, a preliminary review of 137,034 alcohol ads placed on
television from January 2004 through June 2004 showed that
11.6%—consistent with the proportions in 2001, 2002, and 2003—were
placed on programming where the underage audience was greater than
30%.16
• In 2003, the National Research Council/Institute
of Medicine recommended that alcohol companies move toward a 15%
threshold. This threshold would leave 79% of television
programming still accessible to alcohol advertising while
significantly reducing youth exposure to it. More than 22% of
alcohol ads—67,725 ads, costing more than $117 million—exceeded
this 15% threshold in 2003.17

1Teenage Research Unlimited, Spring
2004, Wave 43, 121-4.
2Teenage Research Unlimited, Spring 2004, Wave 43, 205.
3Teenage Research Unlimited, Spring 2004, Wave 43,
80-86.
4Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003: More of the Same
(Washington, DC: Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, 2004), 4.
5"More likely to see" (as well as percentage measures
of youth overexposure and other comparisons of adult and youth
exposure to alcohol advertising in this fact sheet) is based on
"gross rating points," which measure how much an audience segment
is exposed to advertising per capita. Another way of measuring
advertising exposure is "gross impressions" (the total number of
times all the members of a given audience are exposed to
advertising). The adult population will almost always receive far
more "gross impressions" than youth, because there are far more
adults in the population than youth.
6Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 8.
7Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 8.
8Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 6.
9Most of the beverages in this category have alcohol
content of between 4% and 6%, similar to most traditional malt
beverages. Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), "Notice
No. 4—Flavored Malt Beverages and Related Proposals," Federal
Register (March 24, 2003): 14293.
10Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 6.
11Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 3, 7.
12"Most popular" refers to the regularly scheduled
programs with the largest teen audiences during a single
representative week in each year. See report for methodology.
Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol Advertising on
Television, 2001 to 2003, 13.
13Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 13.
14Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 1, 8, 11-12.
15Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 11.
16Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth, Alcohol
Advertising on Television, 2001 to 2003, 11-12.
17For more information, see Alcohol Advertising on
Television, 2001 to 2003. Audience is at least 15% ages 12 to
20 out of a total viewing audience of all aged two and older. TNS
Media Intelligence/CMR, 2003; Nielsen Media Research, 2003.