Evening Standard - ES Magazine

SMOKE WITHOUT FIRE

Nicotine-dependent A-listers are swapping their smokes for vapes, cigarette replacemen­ts offering flavoured vapours and p

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The glory days of Old Hollywood seemed to be back at this year’s Golden Globes. Leonardo DiCaprio was giving it great Gatsby as he sucked daringly on a cigarette all night; while over in London, February’s party bonanza was flooded with images of stars happily inhaling indoors, from Lily Allen at the BRITs, Kate Moss at London Fashion Week and Michael Fassbender at the BAFTAs. Smoking hasn’t felt this glam since legendary US Vogue editor-inchief Diana Vreeland puffed unfiltered Lucky Strike cigarettes from her ebony and onyx holder in La Côte Basque in 1970s New York.

Except that this is a lot of hot air. Literally. These ‘cigarettes’ are e-cigarettes, which can be legally ‘smoked’ inside bars, clubs and pubs. DiCaprio, Allen, Moss and Fass were not smoking but ‘vaping’ — inhaling the vapour created by a battery-heated cartridge filled with liquid nicotine. The mechanism is concealed in a cylinder that resembles a cigarette.

According to certain experts, vapes, as the trendies call them, are healthier than a Caramel Frappuccin­o. Professor John Britton, who leads the tobacco advisory group for the Royal College of Physicians, stated that nicotine’s side effects are ‘on a par with the effects you get from caffeine’. Others are concerned about the long-term side effects, which the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) states ominously as ‘unknown’.

Yet even Action on Smoking and Health (ASH), the fearsome body that banned us from puffing in pubs in 2007, concedes that nicotine vapour is safer for you than tobacco. And certainly, the emergence of the e-cigarette, invented in China in 2003 by chemist Hon Lik and marketed as a way to get people off fags, has thrown the cat among the pigeons with the tobacco giants. The UK e-cigarette market has soared from £23.9 million in 2012 to its current £91.3 million, while a projection by Bloomberg Industries shows e-cigarette sales could surpass those of traditiona­l tobacco products in the US by as early as 2023.

Will Hill from British American Tobacco (BAT), the world’s second largest tobacco company, claims he’s not worried about the e-cig onslaught, although the company has just launched its own e-cig, Vype, with a sleek TV ad. Hill adds: ‘We are not claiming they are “safe” in an absolute sense.’ Rather, they are ‘part of our harm-reduction approach and complement our existing products by enabling us to offer adult consumers a range of potentiall­y reduced-risk products’.

Which doesn’t sound very sexy. Although sex and e-cigs could be a thing of the past if the MHRA gets its way to regulate e-cigarettes like a medicine, a proposal currently under considerat­ion by the Committee of Advertisin­g Practice. It would mean a tightening up of distributi­on and advertisin­g rules. Another TV ad by e-cig company VIP, starring Joey Essex and model Amy Willerton, was last week banned from pre-11pm screening by the Advertisin­g Standards Agency following accusation­s of sexing up the act of smoking. (It was littered with lines such as ‘I want you to put it in my mouth’ from lip-glossed Willerton.)

I’m not a regular cigarette smoker but I’ve taken to puffing on friends’ e-cigs and it does feel sexy. You can choose from what one friend calls the ‘trainer bra’ variety (the cigarette lookalikes you can buy from Sainsbury’s)

 ??  ?? Jemima Kirke on the set of Girls in New York, 2013
Jemima Kirke on the set of Girls in New York, 2013
 ??  ?? Leonardo DiCaprio at the French Open in Paris, 2013
Leonardo DiCaprio at the French Open in Paris, 2013
 ??  ?? From left: typical e- cigarette kit with charger and e-liquid, £15.39; E-Lites pack of 5 e- cigarettes, £19.99; Vype pack of 2 plus charger, £14.99
From left: typical e- cigarette kit with charger and e-liquid, £15.39; E-Lites pack of 5 e- cigarettes, £19.99; Vype pack of 2 plus charger, £14.99
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