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Black Stats
Frequently requested
data on African American consumers
Black Buying Power:
$679 Billion (2004)
Black U.S. Population:
38.3 million
Top Five Black Cities
- New York
- Chicago
- Detroit
- Philadelphia
- Houston
Top Five Black Metros:
- New York-New Jersey
- Washington-Baltimore
- Chicago-Gary
- Los Angeles
- Philadelphia
Top Five Expenditures:
- Housing 110.2 bil.
- Food 53.8 bil.
- Cars/Trucks 28.7 bil.
- Clothing 22.0 bil.
- Health Care 17.9 bil.
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More fast-food ads shown on Black-oriented TV, study says
Lindsey Tanner
Associated Press
(April 3, 2006) There are far more ads for fast food and snacks on
Black-oriented TV than on channels with more general programming,
researchers report in a provocative study that suggests a link to high
obesity rates in Black children.
The results come from a study that lasted just one week in the summer.
Commercials on Black Entertainment Television, the nation's first
black-targeted cable channel, were compared with ads during afternoon and
evening shows on the WB network and Disney Channel.
Of the nearly 1,100 ads, more than half were for fast food and drinks,
such as sodas.
About 66 percent of the fast-food ads were on BET, compared with 34
percent on WB and none on Disney. For drinks, 82 percent were on BET, 11
percent on WB and 6 percent on Disney; and for snacks, 60 percent were on
BET, none on WB and 40 percent on Disney.
The study in a pediatric medical journal accompanies separate research: a
study indicating kids consume an extra 167 calories, often from advertised
foods, for every hour of TV they watch; and a report suggesting even
preschoolers get fat from watching more than two hours of daily TV.
The articles appear in April's Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent
Medicine, a theme issue on media and children's health released Monday.
The studies clearly illustrate "that the media have disturbing potential
to negatively affect many aspects of children's healthy development," Amy
Jordan of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at University of Pennsylvania
wrote in a journal editorial.
"Such evidence offers increasing support for the American Academy of
Pediatrics' recommendation that children older than 2 years spend no more
than two hours per day with screen media, preferably educational screen
media," Jordan said.
Still, Jordan said the ads study doesn't prove that a disproportionate
number of commercials for unhealthy foods causes black kids to become
overweight, and said more research is needed "to more convincingly
directly tie exposure to effects."
Obesity affects about 18 percent of Black children, compared with about 14
percent of white youngsters, according to 2001-02 data. The rate was
almost 20 percent for Hispanics. New estimates coming later this week are
expected to show the numbers have increased for both blacks and whites.
BET spokesman Michael Lewellen said BET's target audience is Blacks aged
18 to 34 and said its programming "does not target children." He also
questioned the study's methods since the researchers included ads shown
during prime time, "when virtually all networks target adults."
The researchers examined ads shown from 3 p.m. to 9 p.m. for one week last
July. Programming generally was music videos on BET; cartoons and talk
shows on WB; and cartoons and kid-oriented shows, including "That's So
Raven" and "Kim Possible" on Disney. The same programming is offered
during the school year, said Corliss Wilson Outley, a University of
Minnesota researcher and the lead author.
While Disney is not an advertiser-supported channel, the researchers
counted company-announced sponsors of Disney programs as commercials.
McDonald's Corp. was the leading fast-food advertiser.
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12th
Annual Edition Available
Latest
'Buying Power' report shows black consumers spending more on home life
As the American economy continues to move sluggishly,
African-American households are curtailing their spending in many
categories, including food, clothing and basic household items, while
investing more in home repair, home entertainment and consumer
electronics. Although they are trimming back, black consumers are still
spending more than their white counterparts on most of these products.
Story and statistics
continued
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