Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Food and beverage marketing has been associated with childhood obesity. We quantified the number and type of food or beverage brands promoted by music celebrities, assessed the nutritional quality of the products, and examined Teen Choice Award data to assess the celebrities’ popularity among adolescents.
METHODS:
This was a descriptive study. A list of music celebrities associated with the 2013 and 2014 Billboard Hot 100 Chart, which ranks songs according to sales and radio impressions, was compiled. Data on celebrity endorsements were gathered from official company Web sites, YouTube commercials, an advertising database, and media reports. Nutritional quality of foods was assessed according to the Nutrient Profile Index, whereas nonalcoholic beverages were evaluated based on calories from added sugar. Teen Choice Award nominations were used to measure the celebrities’ popularity among adolescents.
RESULTS:
Of the 590 endorsements made by the 163 celebrities in the sample, consumer goods (eg, fragrances, makeup) represented the largest endorsement category (26%), followed by food and beverage (18%) and retail (11%). Sixty-five celebrities were collectively associated with 57 different food and beverage brands owned by 38 parent companies. Of these 65 celebrities, 53 (81.5%) had ≥1 Teen Choice Award nomination. Forty-nine (71%) of the 69 nonalcoholic beverage references promoted sugar-sweetened beverages. Twenty-one (80.8%) of the 26 endorsed foods were energy dense and nutrient poor. Baauer, will.i.am, Justin Timberlake, Maroon 5, and Britney Spears had the most food and beverage endorsements.
CONCLUSIONS:
This study demonstrates that music celebrities who are popular among adolescents endorse energy-dense, nutrient-poor products.
What’s Known on This Subject:
Exposure to unhealthy food advertisements is associated with excessive consumption. Studies have shown that celebrities’ food endorsements promote higher product preferences. Research has also demonstrated an association between familiarity with songs mentioning alcohol and drinking behaviors in adolescents and young adults.
What This Study Adds:
The study examines the use of music celebrity endorsements of food and beverage products. Furthermore, it assesses nutritional value of endorsed products and the popularity of the celebrity endorser among adolescents.
The Institute of Medicine and surgeon general have stated that individual-level health-promoting behavior changes are very difficult to achieve because of the current unhealthy environment.1 Food and beverage marketing has been identified as a significant environmental contributor to childhood obesity.1–6 Exposure to food marketing promotes excess consumption, increased purchase requests, and higher preference for the product among children and adults.2–5 A cued-recall assessment demonstrated that fast food advertising receptivity (ie, exposure and response to ads) is associated with youth obesity.7 Food and beverage companies spend $2 billion annually on youth-targeted advertisements.1 Public health experts have called for a shift toward marketing messages that encourage consumption of healthy foods and beverages and policies to establish protective thresholds for food marketing exposure targeting youth.8–12
Research has shown that the use of celebrity endorsements in marketing can enhance brand equity and the desirability of a product, leading consumers to more positively associate with, and easily recognize, brands.13–15 This effect is particularly relevant in the context of music celebrity endorsements because adolescents ages 12 to 18 years report spending almost 2 hours listening to music each day,16 and black and Latino youth spend 3 hours listening to music daily.17 This frequent exposure is notable in the context of previous research that showed that 20% of popular US songs mentioned alcohol brands and associated alcohol with positive consequences (eg, wealth, sex, luxury).18 This exposure is linked to self-reported alcohol consumption, with 1 study demonstrating that familiarity with songs that mention alcohol brands was associated with drinking behaviors in adolescents and young adults.19 These findings are consistent with industry data showing that celebrity endorsement campaigns are more likely than noncelebrity campaigns to lead to substantial increases in immediate profits and long-term increases in profitability.20 Given the high level of brand exposure created by these multi–million-dollar endorsement deals, public health experts have expressed concern over the potential effects of these marketing techniques on adolescents, who represent a vulnerable population well attuned to popular music trends. Indeed, grassroots action and media attention regarding celebrity athletes’ endorsement of tobacco have coincided with declining tobacco endorsements21,22 and could provide useful lessons for addressing music celebrities’ endorsements of unhealthy food and beverage products.
The food industry capitalizes on music celebrities’ popularity with youth by engaging in multi–million-dollar endorsement deals. In 2012, Beyoncé Knowles signed an endorsement deal with Pepsi worth an estimated $50 million, and Justin Timberlake received an estimated $6 million for his involvement in the McDonald’s “I’m lovin’ it” tune.23,24 In addition, beverage industry publications credit Latino rapper Pitbull’s endorsement of Dr Pepper with 4.6 million advertising impressions (ie, any views or exposure to ads) and boosting Dr Pepper sales among Latinos by 1.7%, despite overall declines in carbonated soft drink sales.25 Although this instance is anecdotal, it is important to note the industry perceives it as an example of effective celebrity endorsements.
Recent food marketing research has focused predominantly on children <12 years old, whereas adolescents’ exposure and response to advertising have been relatively understudied. More research on adolescents and food marketing is needed, especially in recognition of adolescents’ unique standing as impressionable consumers with more purchasing power and independence than their younger counterparts.26,27 In fact, research demonstrates that adolescents can be highly impulsive with purchases, in part because of peer pressure,28 fear of negative evaluation,28 and underdeveloped self-control systems.29 This descriptive study was designed to examine the use of music celebrity endorsements of food and nonalcoholic beverage products. We aimed to determine the number and type of music celebrity endorsements, evaluate the nutritional quality of endorsed products, and assess how popular these music celebrities are among adolescents and the general public.
Methods
We listed the top 100 songs that appeared on the 2013 and 2014 Billboard Hot 100 Chart, which ranks the year’s “most popular songs across all genres, ranked by radio airplay audience impressions as measured by Nielsen Music, sales data as compiled by Nielsen Music and streaming activity data provided by online music sources.”30 These songs were used to identify celebrities associated with various endorsements. Some celebrities appeared multiple times on the lists, and some songs had multiple celebrities listed as performers. Thus, we identified 163 unique music celebrities for the study. We then cataloged every endorsement associated with each music celebrity between 2000 to 2014 by searching for celebrity names on AdScope, an advertisement database that contains all forms of ads (eg, television, radio) dating back to 1997. Researchers also searched for official commercials on YouTube or endorsement announcements in news media sources.
After we listed endorsements associated with each celebrity who appeared on the 2013 and 2014 Billboard Hot 100 Chart, a research assistant blind to the purpose of the study sorted all endorsed brands into the following 11 categories: food and nonalcoholic beverages, automotive, consumer goods (eg, makeup, headphones), communications (eg, cell phone companies), finance (eg, credit cards), sports (eg, Nike), retail, tobacco and alcohol, services (eg, Google), airlines, and other. These categories were developed on the basis of the sponsorship categories created by the marketing firms.31
To assess the popularity of these music celebrities among adolescents, we compiled a list of music celebrities who appeared on the Teen Choice Award nomination lists between the years 2000 and 2014. The Teen Choice Awards is an annual awards show that uses adolescent viewers’ votes to honor celebrities in music, movies, sports, television, and fashion.32 We then created endorsement profiles that indicated the number and type of endorsements associated with each celebrity in the sample and the number of times each celebrity was nominated for a Teen Choice Award.
To assess the general population’s exposure to the celebrities and their food and nonalcoholic beverage endorsements, 2 raters independently searched YouTube for the celebrity and product or company name and cataloged the number of views associated with each of the videos. Inclusion criteria for YouTube videos consisted of official commercials, promotional videos, or music videos in which the celebrity, their song, or the endorsed product was featured that were uploaded between 2000 and 2014. Even though the Billboard Hot 100 list is restricted to 2 years for our study, capturing 14 years of endorsements enabled us to create a comprehensive profile that portrays a fuller picture of their prominence as an endorser. YouTube videos in languages other than English were excluded. Viewership data for YouTube videos represent the total number of views as of January 2016.
Nutritional Analysis
We reviewed all advertisements featuring endorsements by music celebrities in the sample. A celebrity was considered to endorse a product if an advertisement featured the celebrity, the celebrity’s song, or a music group to which the celebrity formerly belonged at the time of the endorsement. The nutrition information for products associated with celebrities’ endorsements was collected from official company Web sites or actual nutrition labels.
A nutrition score for each endorsed food product was generated from Nutrient Profile Model (NPM). The NPM was selected because it has been used in food marketing research studies and is used as the standard for child-targeted food marketing in United Kingdom.33–35 The NPM provides a score that represents the healthfulness of each food product based on nutrient content. Foods gain points for nutrients that should be limited (calories, saturated fat, sodium, or sugar) and lose points for nutrients that are encouraged (fruits, vegetables, nuts, fiber, and protein). Higher scores represent less healthful products, whereas lower scores represent products with healthy qualities. To translate the NPM score to an easy-to-understand scale, the final NPM score was converted to a Nutrient Profile Index (NPI), where 1 is the worst nutrition score and 100 is the best score. The NPI has been used in previous food marketing research.36 The NPI uses the following formula: NPI score = −2 × NPM score + 70. A score ≥64 is considered the threshold for products that can be advertised to children in the United Kingdom. One limitation of the NPM is that it codes some sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) as healthy. Therefore, we coded nonalcoholic beverages into 11 drink categories, 3 sugary drink subcategories, and 5 other drink categories as outlined in the Rudd Center’s Sugary Drink FACTS Report.37
In some instances, celebrities endorsed a brand that did not mention a specific product or a brand that offered mixed meals (eg, fried chicken, biscuits, cole slaw) that could not easily be entered in the NPM formula. In those cases, we generated the NPM scores based on the Rudd Center’s Fast Food FACTS Report,38 a comprehensive analysis of all menu items for a variety of food and nonalcoholic beverage brands. In cases where data were not available through the FACTS report, we assessed the nutrition information for every food product associated with that brand and averaged the NPI scores of the entire line of products listed on the company Web site. Five companies (Chili’s, Pizza Hut, Longhorn Steakhouse, Wingstop, and Michael Jackson’s Premium Chocolate) were excluded from the nutritional analyses because the serving size information for most items was unavailable or unusable (eg, “serving size equals one slice”).
Marketing Analysis
To assess the popularity of the celebrities among adolescents, we compiled a list of music celebrities nominated for a Teen Choice Award between the years 2000 and 2014. We cross-referenced the list of Teen Choice Award nominees with celebrities in our sample who endorsed food and nonalcoholic beverages. To assess broad audience exposure (ie, adults, adolescents, children), we quantified the number of YouTube video views associated with the celebrities’ food and nonalcoholic beverage brand endorsements.
Results
We identified 590 endorsements associated with 163 unique music celebrities in the sample. Consumer goods was the largest endorsement category (26%), followed by food and nonalcoholic beverages (18%) and retail (11%). We cataloged 107 food and beverage brand endorsements, although several brands appeared multiple times because multiple celebrities endorsed the brand. Overall, full-calorie soft drinks were the most commonly endorsed food or nonalcoholic beverage product. In contrast, water-related endorsements appeared 3 times in the form of a Brita filter endorsement, CORE Hydration, and WAT-AAH!’s water brand. The celebrities with the highest number of food and nonalcoholic beverage endorsements were Baauer (N = 5), will.i.am (N = 4), Britney Spears (N = 3), Justin Timberlake (N = 3), Maroon 5 (N = 3), Pitbull (N = 3), and Jessie J (N = 3) (Table 1).
TABLE 1.
Music Celebrity | Endorsed Food or Beverage Brands | Number of Food or Beverage Endorsements | Mean NPI Score for Food Productsa | % of Endorsements That Are Food or Beverage Brands |
---|---|---|---|---|
Baauer | A&W Restaurants, Dr Pepper, Hot Pockets, Red Bull, Pepsi Regular | 5 | 50.43 | 71 |
will.i.am | Coca-Cola, Doritos, Dr Pepper, Pepsi Regular | 4 | 42.59 | 15 |
Britney Spears | GG Tea, McDonald’s, Pepsi Regular | 3 | 48 | 27 |
Justin Timberlake | Chili’s,b McDonald’s, Pepsi Regular | 3 | 46.75b | 25 |
Jessie J | McDonald’s, Pop Tarts, Cadbury’s | 3 | 34.18 | 100 |
Pitbull | Dr Pepper, Pepsi Regular, Sheets Energy Strips | 3 | 70 | 30 |
Maroon 5 | Coca-Cola, Snapple | 2 | — | 18 |
Chris Brown | Got Milk, Wrigley’s Doublemint | 2 | 46.89 | 100 |
Snoop Dogg | Hot Pockets, Monster Energy | 2 | 52.67 | 20 |
Psy | Wonderful Pistachio, Nongshim Shin Ramyun Black Cup | 2 | 48 | 33 |
Shakira | Pepsi Regular, Activia | 2 | 71.46 | 40 |
Carrie Underwood | Vitamin Water, Hershey | 2 | 27.88 | 40 |
Usher | Honey Nut Cheerios, Twix | 2 | 33.9 | 50 |
Juicy J | CORE Hydration, Red Bull | 2 | — | 100 |
Katy Perry | Pepsi Regular, PopChips | 2 | 51.86 | 22 |
Blake Shelton | Pepsi Regular, Pizza Hutb | 2 | b | 40 |
Nelly | Honey Nut Cheerios, Mike and Ike | 2 | 44.23 | 50 |
Macklemore | Cracker Jack, Dr Pepper | 2 | 39 | 20 |
One Direction | Nabisco, Pepsi Regular | 2 | 43.47 | 29 |
Ne-Yo | Pepsi Regular | 1 | 65.67 | 40 |
—, indicates that the artist only endorsed beverage products, meaning NPI scores did not apply.
Lower scores represent less healthful foods.
Complete nutrition information was unavailable for this company, so it was excluded from analyses.
Endorsements by Food or Beverage Brand
There were a total of 107 food and beverage endorsements in the sample, associated with 38 parent companies. Fifty-one music celebrities were associated with 69 beverage references in 63 beverage advertisements (ie, ads were defined as television commercials, print ads, or promotional videos [eg, concert sponsored by Pepsi]) (Table 2). The number of references (ie, references were defined as the image of beverage can or bottle, verbal mention of the brand, or image of the parent company logo) exceeds the number of ads because 5 of the ads included a reference to multiple types of beverages (eg, Pepsi ad showing both Pepsi Regular can and Diet Pepsi can). Of the 69 beverage references, 49 were for SSBs, 7 were for non-SSBs (ie, diet beverage or water), and 13 references were associated with verbal mention of the brand or image of the parent company logo (ie, no product shown). Full-calorie soft drinks were the largest category of endorsements overall (N = 33). In terms of company prominence in endorsements, PepsiCo endorsements appeared most frequently (N = 23), followed by the Coca-Cola Company (N = 8) and Dr Pepper Snapple (N = 4) (Table 3). Seven no-calorie nonalcoholic beverage endorsements included diet soft drinks (N = 5), water (N = 1), and milk (N = 1).
TABLE 2.
Company | Brand | Drink Category | Music Celebrity Associated With Each Drink Category |
---|---|---|---|
PepsiCo | Pepsi | Regular soda, full calorie | will.i.am,a Christina Aguilera, Justin Timberlake,a Britney Spears, Pitbull, Kelly Clarkson, Nicki Minaj, One Direction, Mariah Carey, Calvin Harris, Blake Shelton,a P!nk, Enrique Iglesias, Shakira, Beyoncé, Lee Brice, Wiz Khalifa, Michael Jackson |
PepsiCo | Pepsi | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Ne-Yo, Hunter Hayes |
PepsiCo | Diet Pepsi | Other, diet drink (soda) | Baauer, will.i.am,a Justin Timberlakea |
PepsiCo | Mountain Dew | Regular soda, full calorie | Mac Miller, Jason Aldean, Brantley Gilbert |
PepsiCo | Lipton Iced Tea | Iced tea, full calorie | Lady Antebellum, American Authors |
PepsiCo | Pepsi-Cola: Real Sugar | Regular soda, full calorie | Blake Sheltona |
PepsiCo | Gatorade Thirst Quenchers | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Lil Wayne |
PepsiCo | Brisk (Lipton) | Iced teas, full calorie | Eminem |
Coca-Cola | Coke | Regular soda, full calorie | Christina Aguilera, Daft Punk, Calvin Harris, Jay Z, Of Monsters and Men |
Coca-Cola | Glaceau Vitamin Water | Flavored water, full calorie | Alicia Keys, Kelly Clarkson, Carrie Underwood |
Coca-Cola | Coke | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | will.i.am, Maroon 5 |
Coca-Cola | Sprite | Regular soda, full calorie | Imagine Dragons, Wale, Drake |
Coca-Cola | Diet Coke | Other, diet drink (soda) | Taylor Swift |
Coca-Cola | Fuze | Parent company logo or name only | Rihanna |
Dr Pepper Snapple Group | Dr Pepper | Regular soda, full calorie | will.i.am, Macklemore, Pitbull, Baauera |
Dr Pepper Snapple Group | Diet Dr Pepper | Other, diet drink (soda) | Baauera |
Dr Pepper Snapple Group | Snapple | Iced tea, full calorie | Maroon 5 |
Red Bull | Red Bull | Energy drink, full calorie | Pharrell, AWOLNATION |
Red Bull | Red Bull | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Of Monsters and Men, Baauer |
Nestle | Nesquick | Children’s drinks, full and reduced calorie | Ariana Grandea |
Nestle | Nestea | Iced tea, full calorie | Nico & Vinz |
Nestle | Nescafe | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Mariah Carey |
Nestle | Nespresso | Iced tea or coffee, reduced sugar | Lana Del Rey |
Monster Energy Company | Monster Energy | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Snoop Dogg |
Starbucks | Starbucks | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Lady Gaga |
Vita Coco | Vita Coco Pure Coconut Water | Flavored water, full calorie | Rihanna |
Celsius | Celsius | Energy drink, reduced sugar | Flo Rida |
Wat-Ahh! | Wat-Ahh! | Other, plain water | Ariana Grande |
Core Hydration | Core Hydration | Parent company logo or brand name mention onlyb | Juicy J |
Got Milk? | Got Milk? | Other, low- and no-fat milk | Chris Brown |
Indicates that the music celebrity endorsed SSBs and non-SSBs.
Indicates that the ad featured only the parent company logo or verbal mention of the brand or did not feature a product with a label indicating diet or SSB.
TABLE 3.
Company | Brand | No. Artists Endorsed | Music Celebrity Name |
---|---|---|---|
PepsiCo | Pepsi | 23 | Bauuer, Beyoncé, Blake Shelton, Britney Spears, Bruno Mars, Calvin Harris, Christina Aguilera, Enrique Iglesias, Hunter Hayes, Justin Timberlake, Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson, Lee Brice, Mariah Carey, Michael Jackson, Ne-Yo, Nicki Minaj, One Direction, P!nk, Pitbull, Shakira, will.i.am, Wiz Khalifa |
Mountain Dew | 4 | Brantley Gilbert, Jason Aldean, Lil Wayne, Mac Miller | |
Coca-Cola | Coca-Cola | 7 | Calvin Harris, Christina Aguilera, Daft Punk, Jay-Z, Maroon 5, Of Monsters and Men, will.i.am |
Diet Coke | 1 | Taylor Swift | |
Sprite | 3 | Drake, Imagine Dragons, Wale | |
Red Bull GmbH | Red Bull | 5 | AWOLNATION, Bauuer, Juicy J, Of Monsters and Men, Pharrell |
Dr Pepper Snapple Group | Dr Pepper | 4 | Bauuer, Macklemore, Pitbull, will.i.am |
Energy Brands/Glacéau | Glacéau Vitamin Water | 3 | Alicia Keys, Carrie Underwood, Kelly Clarkson |
McDonald’s | McDonald’s | 3 | Britney Spears, Jessie J, Justin Timberlake |
General Mills | Honey Nut Cheerios | 2 | Nelly, Usher |
Hot Pockets | 2 | Bauuer, Snoop Dogg | |
Nabisco (Mondelez) | Nabisco | 2 | 5 Seconds of Summer, One Direction |
Twenty-nine music celebrities were associated with 38 food endorsements in our sample. Thirty-three of those endorsements were unique because several brands (eg, McDonald’s) were endorsed by multiple celebrities. Fast food was the largest category of food endorsements (N = 6), with McDonald’s accounting for the most food endorsements in the sample. The remaining endorsements involved chips, candy, cereal, non–fast food restaurants, and miscellaneous snacks. There were no endorsements for fruits, vegetables, or whole grains, but one celebrity endorsed Wonderful Pistachio, which was the only food product with a healthy score (66/100).
Nutritional Quality of Celebrities’ Endorsements
NPI scores were determined for 26 food brands. Results indicate that Doritos, Cracker Jack, Mike and Ike candy, Nabisco, Eckrich, Kentucky Fried Chicken, McDonald’s, Burger King, Hot Pockets, A&W Restaurants, Wrigley’s gum, Chipotle, Cadbury, Hershey’s, Pop-Tarts, Twix, Nongshim USA, Dairy Queen, Honey Nut Cheerios, and PopChips had NPI scores <64, indicating that they are energy dense and nutrient poor (Table 1). In contrast, Big Red gum, 5 Gum, Taco Bell, Subway, Activia, and Sheets Energy Sheets were the only brands endorsed by these celebrities that had NPI scores of ≥64.
Endorsement Viewership and Teen Choice Award Ratings
Celebrities in the sample appeared frequently on the nominee lists for the Teen Choice Awards between 2000 and 2014. Of the 163 celebrities in the sample, 102 appeared at least once on the Teen Choice Award nominee lists. Additionally, there were a total of 312 849 504 views of the YouTube video versions for food and beverage endorsements associated with celebrities in the sample. Rihanna’s 2006 song “We Ride,” which promotes the Coca-Cola product Fuze, had a total of 61 712 783 views since being first uploaded to her YouTube VEVO channel in 200939 (Table 4), the most YouTube views in our sample. Pepsi’s 2004 ‘We Will Rock You” commercial featuring Britney Spears, P!nk, and Beyoncé was the second most watched video in the sample, with >42 million views since the video was loaded on YouTube in 200940 (Table 4). Pepsi’s 23 celebrity endorsement commercials had the most collective YouTube views in the sample (N = 160 293 981) (Table 5).
TABLE 4.
Music Celebrity Name | Endorsed Food or Beverage Brand | Number of Teen Choice Award Yearsa | Number of YouTube Viewsb |
---|---|---|---|
Chris Brown | Got Milk, Wrigley’s Doublemint | 20 | 29 969 |
Britney Spears | GG Tea, McDonald’s, Pepsi | 12 | 56 395 174 |
Beyoncé | Pepsi | 11 | 54 695 715 |
Usher | Honey Nut Cheerios, Twix | 11 | 31 254 |
Carrie Underwood | Hershey, Vitamin Water | 10 | 138 884 |
Justin Timberlake | Chili’s, McDonald’s, Pepsi | 9 | 846 424 |
Rihanna | Fuze, Vita Coco | 9 | 61 929 844 |
Eminem | Lipton Iced Tea | 8 | 4 447 961 |
Christina Aguilera | Coca-Cola Regular, Pepsi | 7 | 579 272 |
Taylor Swift | Diet Coke | 7 | 514 091 |
Pitbull | Dr Pepper, Pepsi | 7 | 247 227 |
Selena Gomez | Borden Milk | 6 | 464 925 |
Kelly Clarkson | Pepsi, Vitamin Water | 6 | 120 657 |
Maroon 5 | Coke, Snapple | 6 | 90 851 |
Katy Perry | Pepsi, PopChips | 5 | 1 217 070 |
Nicki Minaj | Pepsi | 5 | 177 125 |
Nelly | Honey Nut Cheerios, Mike and Ike | 5 | 22 158 |
Bruno Mars | Pepsi | 4 | 18 873 728 |
Coldplay | Chipotle | 3 | 9 126 275 |
One Direction | Nabisco, Pepsi | 3 | 7 673 116 |
Shakira | Pepsi, Activia | 3 | 4 449 956 |
Mariah Carey | Nescafe, Pepsi | 3 | 1 010 914 |
Juicy J | CORE Hydration, Red Bull | 1 | 26 367 501 |
Teen Choice Award Data 2000–2014.
YouTube as of January 2016.
TABLE 5.
Endorsed Food or Beverage Brand | Music Celebrity Names | Number of YouTube Viewsa |
---|---|---|
Pepsi | Baauer, Beyoncé, Blake Shelton, Britney Spears, Bruno Mars, Calvin Harris, Christina Aguilera, Enrique Iglesias, Hunter Hayes, Justin Timberlake, Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson, Lee Brice, Mariah Carey, Michael Jackson, NeYo, Nicki Minaj, One Direction, Pitbull, P!nk, Shakira, will.i.am, Wiz Khalifa | 160 293 981 |
Red Bull | AWOLNATION, Baauer, Juicy J, Of Monsters and Men, Pharrell | 31 948 643 |
CORE Hydration | Juicy J | 26 363 187 |
Chipotle | Coldplay | 9 126 275 |
Nestea | Nico & Vinz | 7 855 423 |
Lipton Brisk | Eminem | 4 447 961 |
Coca-Cola Regular | Calvin Harris, Christina Aguilera, Daft Punk, Maroon 5, Of Monsters and Men, will.i.am | 1 396 110 |
Sprite | Drake, Imagine Dragons, Wale | 1 284 256 |
Popchips | Katy Perry | 1 213 441 |
McDonald’s | Britney Spears, Jessie J, Justin Timberlake | 385 008 |
YouTube, January 2016.
Discussion
This descriptive study demonstrates that music celebrities often endorse energy-dense, nutrient-poor products. Food and nonalcoholic beverage brands were the second largest endorsement category behind consumer goods (eg, fragrances, makeup). Full-calorie soft drinks were the largest category of food or nonalcoholic beverage endorsements, and Baauer, will.i.am, Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Maroon 5, Pitbull, and Jessie J had the most food/nonalcoholic beverage endorsements. Celebrity ads appear to be popular, with >312 million viewers watching the 94 videos associated with celebrity food and nonalcoholic beverage endorsements in this sample on YouTube alone. However, it is impossible to conclude that all these viewers are indeed unique because a portion of the views may be repeated exposure. Although YouTube does not provide demographic data on viewers, the frequent appearance of these celebrities on the Teen Choice Award nomination lists suggests high levels of popularity among adolescents.
Obesity has become such a pressing public health issue that society must acknowledge the human suffering and costs associated with diabetes, obesity, and associated comorbidities. Musicians, actors, and other celebrities can be tremendously influential, particularly for the young fan base that may be swayed by their endorsements. Celebrities should leverage their influence to promote more healthful messages, and more effort should be made to reduce the exposure of children and adolescents to marketing, particularly for unhealthy food and nonalcoholic beverages. Every year, American children see 4700 advertisements, and adolescents view 5900 advertisements.1 The scale of this exposure is similar to that of youth-targeted tobacco advertisements, which permeated television, video games, sporting events, and movies.41–44 However, voluntary corporate pledges related to food marketing (eg, Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative) focus only on reducing marketing to children <12 years old, whereas tobacco policies restrict advertisements targeted to anyone <18 years old.
Given the heavy targeting of adolescents36–38 and the amount of money adolescents spend on food and beverages, voluntary food marketing reduction pledges should expand to include adolescents. Expanding voluntary pledges to include adolescents would also be consistent with the food marketing reduction recommendations published by the American Academy of Pediatrics (2006),45 which encourage pediatricians to support local and national efforts to reduce food marketing while also counseling patients to limit screen time. Finally, grassroots action and media attention can help make celebrity food endorsements a public liability in the same way these methods have been used for other celebrities who endorsed tobacco.21 Although a number of professional athletes endorsed tobacco in the early 1900s, policy changes and shifts in public perception of smoking coincided with declining endorsements; when Liu Xiang, an athlete on the Chinese Olympic team, endorsed cigarettes in 2006, public outcry led him to be labeled an “inappropriate” ambassador for tobacco, demonstrating a strong shift in public opinion about endorsements.22
This study has some limitations. We may not have captured every endorsement that occurred between 2000 and 2014, which would lead to an underestimate of exposure to celebrity endorsements. Furthermore, we do not have direct adolescent viewership data, and 21 commercials were not available on YouTube, thus leading to conservative estimates of exposure. One limitation related to assessing popularity among adolescents includes criticism of the Teen Choice Awards’ lack of transparency in whether the winners are ultimately determined by adolescents’ votes or by the show’s corporate producers.46 This limitation may lead to inaccuracies in determining celebrities’ popularity among adolescents.
Future research should examine the effect of music celebrities’ food and nonalcoholic beverage endorsements on consumption, particularly for children and adolescents. Additionally, researchers should examine the effect of music celebrity endorsement on youth attitudes toward food brands and purchase intentions. The popularity of music celebrities among adolescents makes them uniquely poised to serve as positive role models, so these celebrities should be aware that their endorsements could exacerbate society’s struggle with obesity and endorse healthy products instead.
These results can inform policies designed to address the use of celebrities in food marketing. Many food and beverage companies have agreed not to target children <12 years old, but these pledges should include adolescents as well. To reduce exposure to energy-dense food and beverage endorsements, research is needed on the regulations of food marketing in environments highly populated by both children and adolescents.
Acknowledgments
We thank the following research assistants from the NYU SeedProgram for their valuable assistance in collecting data and preparing the report: Margaret Eby, Caitlin Crowley, Tami Hardoby, Elizabeth Stephens, Natasha Pandit, Yrvane Pageot, Silvia Beltran, Rachel Kuo, Josh Choe, Alex Bragg, Carolyn Fan, Caroline Mundela, and Carola Zurob.
Glossary
- NPI
Nutrient Profile Index
- NPM
Nutrient Profile Model
- SSB
sugar-sweetened beverage
Footnotes
Dr Bragg originated the study idea and design, helped with data acquisition and analyses, led the writing of the manuscript, and had full access to all the study data; Ms Miller, Ms Elizee, and Ms Dighe helped with the data acquisition and analysis and provided feedback on the manuscript; Dr Elbel helped interpret the results and provided critical feedback on drafts of the manuscript; and all authors approved the final manuscript as submitted.
FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE: The authors have indicated they have no financial relationships relevant to this article to disclose.
FUNDING: This study was supported by the NIH Early Independence Award (DP5OD021373-01) from the NIH Office of the Director. Funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST: The authors have indicated they have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.
References
- 1.McGinnis JM, Gootman JA, Kraak VI, eds. Food Marketing to Children and Youth: Threat or Opportunity? Washington, DC: National Academies Press; 2006 [Google Scholar]
- 2.Halford JCG, Boyland EJ, Hughes G, Oliveira LP, Dovey TM. Beyond-brand effect of television (TV) food advertisements/commercials on caloric intake and food choice of 5–7-year-old children. Appetite. 2007;49(1):263–267 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 3.Halford JCG, Boyland EJ, Hughes GM, Stacey L, McKean S, Dovey TM. Beyond-brand effect of television food advertisements on food choice in children: the effects of weight status. Public Health Nutr. 2008;11(9):897–904 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 4.Halford JCG, Gillespie J, Brown V, Pontin EE, Dovey TM. Effect of television advertisements for foods on food consumption in children. Appetite. 2004;42(2):221–225 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 5.Harris JL, Bargh JA, Brownell KD. Priming effects of television food advertising on eating behavior. Health Psychol. 2009;28(4):404–413 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 6.Hastings G, Stead M, McDermott L, et al. Review of Research on the Effect of Food Promotion to Children. Glasgow, United Kingdom: Center for Social Marketing, University of Strathclyde; 2003 [Google Scholar]
- 7.McClure AC, Tanski SE, Gilbert-Diamond D, et al. Receptivity to television fast-food restaurant marketing and obesity among U.S. youth. Am J Prev Med. 2013;45(5):560–568 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 8.World Health Organization A Framework for Implementing the Set of Recommendations on the Marketing of Foods and Non-alcoholic Beverages to Children. 2012. Available at: www.who.int/dietphysicalactivity/framework_marketing_food_to_children/en/. Accessed June 1, 2012
- 9.Brownell KD, Horgen KB. Food Fight: The Inside Story of the Food Industry, America’s Obesity Crisis, and What We Can Do About It. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill; 2004 [Google Scholar]
- 10.International Association for the Study of Obesity A Junk-Free Childhood: Responsible Standards for Marketing Foods and Beverages to Children. 2011. Available at: www.iaso.org/site_media/uploads/A_Junk-free_Childhood_2012.pdf. Accessed June 1, 2012
- 11.Nestle M. Food marketing and childhood obesity--a matter of policy. N Engl J Med. 2006;354(24):2527–2529 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 12.Federal Trade Commission Perspectives on Marketing, Self-Regulation, and Childhood Obesity. Washington, DC: Federal Trade Commission; July 2008. Available at: www.ftc.gov/os/2008/07/P064504foodmktingreport.pdf. Accessed February 4, 2010 [Google Scholar]
- 13.Kamins M. Celebrity and non-celebrity advertising in a two-sided context. J Advert Res. 1989;29(3):34–42 [Google Scholar]
- 14.Ohanian R. Construction and validation of a scale to measure celebrity endorsers’ perceived expertise, trustworthiness, and attractiveness. J Advert. 1990;19(3):39–52 [Google Scholar]
- 15.Till BD, Shimp TA. Endorsers in advertising: the case of negative celebrity information. J Advert. 1998;27(1):67–82 [Google Scholar]
- 16.Rideout V. The Common Sense Census: Media Use by Tweens and Teens. Common Sense Media. 2015. Available at: https://www.commonsensemedia.org/research/the-common-sense-census-media-use-by-tweens-and-teens. Accessed April 6, 2016
- 17.Rideout VJ, Foehr UG, Roberts DF Generation M2: Media in the Lives of 8- to 18-Year-Olds. The Kaiser Family Foundation. 2010. Available at: http://kff.org/other/event/generation-m2-media-in-the-lives-of/. Accessed April 6, 2016
- 18.Primack BA, Nuzzo E, Rice KR, Sargent JD. Alcohol brand appearances in US popular music. Addiction. 2012;107(3):557–566 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 19.Primack BA, McClure AC, Li Z, Sargent JD. Receptivity to and recall of alcohol brand appearances in U.S. popular music and alcohol-related behaviors. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2014;38(6):1737–1744 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 20.Pringle H, Binet L. How marketers can use celebrities to sell more effectively. J Consum Behav. 2005;4(3):201–214 [Google Scholar]
- 21.Brownell KD, Warner KE. The perils of ignoring history: Big Tobacco played dirty and millions died. How similar is Big Food? Milbank Q. 2009;87(1):259–294 [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 22.Lee K, Fooks G, Wander N, Fang J. Smoke rings: towards a comprehensive tobacco free policy for the Olympic Games. PLoS One. 2015;10(8):e0130091. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 23.In Beyoncé Deal, Pepsi Focuses on Collaboration . December 9, 2012. Available at www.nytimes.com/2012/12/10/business/media/in-beyonce-deal-pepsi-focuses-on-collaboration.html?_r=0
- 24.Big new deal for McDonald’s. The New York Times. September 3, 2003. Available at: www.nytimes.com/2003/09/03/business/media/03ADCO.html
- 25.Mosaic Awards: Winning Campaigns. AdAge. September 24, 2012. Available at: www.adweek.com/sa-article/mosaic-awards-winning-campaigns-143849
- 26.Grier SA, Kumanyika S. Targeted marketing and public health. Annu Rev Public Health. 2010;31:349–369 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 27.Story M, French S. Food advertising and marketing directed at children and adolescents in the US. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2004;1(1):3. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 28.Cheng YH, Chuang SC, Wang SM, Kuo S. The effect of companion’s gender on impulsive purchasing: the moderating factor of cohesiveness and susceptibility to interpersonal influence. J Appl Soc Psychol. 2013;43(1):227–236 [Google Scholar]
- 29.Thamotharan S, Lange K, Zale EL, Huffhines L, Fields S. The role of impulsivity in pediatric obesity and weight status: a meta-analytic review. Clin Psychol Rev. 2013;33(2):253–262 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 30.Hot 100 songs. Billboard. 2013. Available at: www.billboard.com/charts/year-end/2013/hot-100-songs
- 31.Meenaghan J. Commercial sponsorship. Eur J Mark. 1983;17(7):5–71 [Google Scholar]
- 32.Teen Choice Awards 2000–2013. Available at: www.teenchoiceawards.com/
- 33.Rayner M, Scarborough P, Boxer A, Stockley L Nutrient Profiles: Development of Final Model. December 2005. Available at: www.food.gov.uk/multimedia/pdfs/nutprofr.pdf. Accessed February 4, 2014
- 34.Scarborough P, Boxer A, Rayner M, Stockley L. Testing nutrient profile models using data from a survey of nutrition professionals. Public Health Nutr. 2007;10(4):337–345 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 35.Lobstein T, Davies S. Defining and labelling “healthy” and “unhealthy” food. Public Health Nutr. 2009;12(3):331–340 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 36.Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity Cereal F.A.C.T.S.: Evaluating the Nutrition Quality and Marketing of Children’s Cereals. 2009. Available at: www.rwjf.org/content/dam/farm/legacy-parents/rwjf47984. Accessed April 1, 2014
- 37.Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity Sugary Drink F.A.C.T.S.: Evaluating the Nutrition Quality and Marketing of Children’s Cereals. 2014. Available at: www.sugarydrinkfacts.org/resources/SugaryDrinkFACTS_Report.pdf. Accessed January 3, 2016
- 38.Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity Fast Food F.A.C.T.S.: Food Advertising to Children and Teens Score. 2013. Available at: http://fastfoodmarketing.org/media/FastFoodFACTS_Report.pdf. Accessed April 1, 2014
- 39.Rihanna. We Ride [Video]. YouTube. November 23, 2009. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlvY1o6XKwA. Accessed January 23, 2016
- 40.Spears B, Beyoncé, Pink. We Will Rock You (Pepsi) [Video]. YouTube. February 2, 2011. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pES8SezkV8w. Accessed April 21, 2015
- 41.Moodie C, MacKintosh AM, Brown A, Hastings GB. Tobacco marketing awareness on youth smoking susceptibility and perceived prevalence before and after an advertising ban. Eur J Public Health. 2008;18(5):484–490 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 42.Chapman S. Advertising and smoking: A review of the evidence. In British Medical Association (Ed.), Smoking Out the Barons: The Campaign Against the Tobacco Industry. New York, NY: John Wiley; 1986 [Google Scholar]
- 43.US Department of Health and Human Services Reducing the Health Consequences of Smoking: 25 Years of Progress. 1989. Available at: https://profiles.nlm.nih.gov/ps/access/NNBBXS.pdf. Accessed November 17, 2015
- 44.Blum A. The Marlboro Grand Prix. Circumvention of the television ban on tobacco advertising. N Engl J Med. 1991;324(13):913–917 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 45.Strasburger VC; Committee on Communications, American Academy of Pediatrics . Children, adolescents, and advertising. Pediatrics. 2006;118(6):2563–2569 [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 46.Yahr E. Teen Choice Awards: claims of “rigged” winners cause teen meltdown on Twitter. The Washington Post, August 2014. Available at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/wp/2014/08/11/teen-choice-awards-claims-of-rigged-winners-cause-teen-meltdown-on-twitter/. Accessed January 14, 2016