Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

YouTube Kids runs ads that would be illegal on television, consumer groups say

- CECILIA KANG

WASHINGTON: For decades, advertisin­g to children on television has been held to tougher rules than commercial­s for adults. US regulators have long been concerned that kids are more vulnerable to marketing and have a tougher time distinguis­hing between an ad and a show.

Now with new apps such as YouTube Kids hosting videos aimed at children, the same rules aren’t being applied, opening up children to more advertisin­g than ever, according to children’s advocacy and public interest groups.

In a complaint filed this week with the Federal Trade Commission, the groups alleged that YouTube Kids, owned by Google, contains a host of videos created by McDonald’s, Fisher-Price, American Greetings and other companies.

On the American Greetings’ Strawberry Shortcake channel, for instance, a 37-second video features the red-haired doll describing the company’s “Food Fair” app, in which characters pick ingredient­s for recipes. At the end, a banner appears showing that the app can be downloaded on iTunes.

McDonald’s has a video dispelling myths about the contents of Chicken McNuggets. On another video, a deep- voiced announcer warns, “All vegetarian­s, foodies and gastronaut­s, kindly avert your eyes,” with a slow-cam close-up of a juicy Big Mac. “You can’t get juiciness like this from soy or quinoa.”

YouTube Kids is targeted at families looking for convenient, free children’s programmes. Launched in February, the service, YouTube explained, would have extra protection­s for families by filtering out mature content that can easily find its way into a search on the regular site. YouTube also explained it would not permit the advertisin­g of food products or apps.

“When developing YouTube Kids we consulted with numerous partners and child advocacy and privacy groups,” the company said in a statement. “We are always open to feedback on ways to improve the app.”

McDonald’s and other companies label their sponsorshi­p of videos, but child-developmen­t experts and consumer advocacy groups say young children often can’t tell the difference between videos that are presented as entertainm­ent or educationa­l and advertisem­ents.

“In today’s digital era, children deserve effective safeguards that will protect them, regardless of the screen they use,” said Jeff Chester, executive director of the Centre for Digital Democracy, one of several groups filing a complaint to the Federal Trade Commission that the app violates children’s advertisin­g rules. Other groups include the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood and the American Academy.

In the 1970s, federal regulators created rules to curb the amount of advertisin­g during children’s programmes. The rules restricted shows from promoting products within their programmes and prohibited advertiser­s from creating entire shows out of their products. On YouTube Kids, dozens of videos are created by Lego, along with many user-generated videos.

“YouTube Kids is the most hypercomme­rcialised media environmen­t for children I have ever seen,” said Dale Kunkel, professor of communicat­ion at the University of Arizona. “Many of these advertisin­g tactics are considered illegal on television.” – Washington Post

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