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Joe Camel

Joe Camel (also called Old Joe) was an advertising mascot used by the R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company (RJR) for their cigarette brand Camel. The character was created in 1974 for a French advertising campaign, and was redesigned for the American market in 1988. He appeared in magazine advertisements, clothing, and billboards among other print media and merchandise.

Joe Camel
1989 magazine ad
First appearance1974 (Europe)
1988 (US)
Last appearance1997
Created byR. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company

In 1991, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) published research indicating that the Joe Camel ad campaign was appealing to children. They found that Joe Camel and the Disney Channel logo were recognized equally among six-year-olds, high school students were more familiar with him than adults, and that Camel's market share among youth smokers had sharply risen. The research led RJR to a lawsuit in California, and a formal complaint from the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) for "unfair practices" by exposing children to smoking. RJR denied the accusations that they were marketing towards children, but voluntarily ended the campaign in 1997 after increased litigation and pressure from American federal agencies.

Description edit

Joe Camel is an anthropomorphic camel who smokes cigarettes.[1] He lacks many typical camelid traits such as a hump, hooves, or tail, appearing as a muscular humanoid with a camel's head.[2] He is often outfitted in masculine wear like tuxedos, T-shirts, and hard hats,[1] and is typically in a "heroic pose", surrounded by women or in a bar.[1]

With television advertisements for cigarettes outlawed in the United States before Joe Camel's debut,[3] the character was often seen on billboards, magazines, clothing, and other promotional displays.[4] Early advertisements often depicted Joe alongside the motto "Smooth character."[1] Camel brand owner, R. J. Reynolds (RJR), also ran promotions in which customers could redeem "Camel Cash" vouchers for Joe Camel gear including clothing, watches, mugs, lighters, and shower curtains.[5]

Some critics wrote that Joe's nose was drawn in a phallic fashion, as to suggest that smoking is a virile pursuit.[1] This was dismissed by its designer.[6][7]

History edit

Background edit

Camel is the oldest cigarette brand in the United States.[8] Camel cigarettes were first released by RJR in 1913 featuring a plain camel drawing, known as "Old Joe", on the package.[1] The camel theme was chosen because the cigarettes used Turkish tobacco, and Americans associated the animal with exotic Asian countries. The original drawing was made by Belgian artist Fred Otto Kleesattel, who had based it on a dromedary named Old Joe in the traveling Barnum & Bailey Circus.[9] For the next 60 years, RJR employed a series of marketing campaigns for the Camel brand; one notable campaign launched in 1946 maintained that doctors smoked Camels more than any other cigarette.[10] Camel was the leading brand in the early 1950s, but had dropped to sixth place by 1985. Philip Morris had also eclipsed RJR's market share by 1985 (35.8 to 31.7%), due primarily to the success of Marlboro.[8]

Character creation edit

 
The original Joe Camel design used in French advertising in the 1970s, before it was Americanized

The character Joe Camel was created in 1974 by British artist Nicholas Price for a French advertising campaign for Camel cigarettes. The new Joe Camel character was subsequently used in advertising in other countries throughout the 1970s.[1] This European iteration of Joe Camel was first seen in the United States in 1988 when Greensboro, North Carolina company Trone Advertising used the character in promotional materials created for the Camel brand's 75th anniversary.[1]

The American version of Joe Camel was created later by art designer Mike Salisbury working on contract for the brand's main agency, McCann-Erickson New York. The intent of the campaign was to compete with Marlboro and its successful Marlboro Man campaign.[6] Salisbury was contacted because of his film advertisements and retro style;[7] McCann wanted his help to depict masculine heroes in old action films, like Humphrey Bogart and Gary Cooper, smoking Camels.[7][6] Early advertisements were not successful because the audience was not familiar with films of that era, even after giving the characters camel heads.[6][7] It wasn't until they gave the camel a look inspired by James Bond and James "Sonny" Crockett that they had a positive test response.[6][7] Salisbury gave Joe expressive eyebrows like Sean Connery (Bond), and hair like Don Johnson (Sonny).[7] The campaign promoted a "hip" lifestyle, which was typical advertising practice for the industry since the 1920s.[1]

The success of the campaign made the character a key part of Camel's advertising.[1] The New York Times wrote that Joe Camel was successful in changing the public's perception of a brand quickly, a typically difficult feat. They also wrote that the campaign helped protect Camel from the 5-8% annual decrease that full-price cigarette brand sales were feeling at the time as cheaper brands grew. Furthermore, the campaign had continued despite RJR changing advertisement agencies from McCann, to Young & Rubicam, and finally to Mezzina/Brown Inc..[1]

JAMA studies and Mangini lawsuit edit

In December 1991, the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) published a study in which young children were asked to match brand logos with products. The study showed that among children age six, 91.3% matched Joe Camel with cigarettes, nearly the same amount who matched the Disney Channel logo with Mickey Mouse. The researchers concluded that RJR (at the time operating as RJR Nabisco) was just as effective at reaching children as the Disney Channel.[4] In the same JAMA volume, another study was published comparing how well Joe Camel was recognized among high school students versus adults over age 21. The study concluded that high school students were more likely to recognize Joe Camel (97.7% vs 72.2%), understand the product being advertised (97.5% vs. 67%), and identity the Camel brand (93.6% vs 57.7%). The study concluded that the Joe Camel campaign was far more successful at advertising to children than adults. The authors also wrote that Camel's share of smokers under 18 had risen from 0.5% to 32.8% during the campaign's three years at that point.[11]

Among those who read the JAMA papers was San Francisco-based family law attorney Janet Mangini.[12][13] In 1992, she sued RJR as a private citizen,[13] challenging the company for targeting minors with the campaign.[12] In her complaint, Mangini alleged that Camel sales to teenagers increased from $6 million to $476 million over the four years since the campaign began.[13] RJR attempted to dismiss the lawsuit, saying that only the federal government could regulate its advertising, but a California state court reviewed the case, and in 1994 permitted Mangini to proceed with the lawsuit.[13][14] RJR attempted to appeal to the United States Supreme Court to have the case thrown out, but their request was turned away.[12][15]

The JAMA studies did have their critics. The Journal of Advertising published a study in September 1994 in which five university professors, who specialized in marketing and advertising, criticized the ethical standards of the studies. By evaluating the papers against academic research standards, the reviewers identified major flaws with regards to reliability and validity, and accused the DiFranza study of using pre-determined results.[16] The designer of Joe Camel, Mike Salisbury, said there was never any intent to attract children.[6] He explained that RJR rejected some designs on the grounds they would appeal too much to children, and that there was a conscious effort to make him look like a 30-year old.[6]

Federal Trade Commission complaint edit

In response to the JAMA studies, the American Heart Association, American Lung Association, and American Cancer Society wrote a joint letter in 1991 to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) asking them to force RJR to end the Joe Camel campaign.[17] The FTC investigated the case for two years,[18] but in 1994 decided not to act after three of five commissioners could not find sufficient evidence that RJR violated federal law.[19][20] After President Bill Clinton appointed new FTC chairman, Robert Pitofsky, and member Christine Varney,[21] the FTC announced in February 1997 they would re-examine the case.[20]

On May 28, 1997, the FTC concluded that the Joe Camel campaign was targeted to youth and requested a court order to end the campaign.[22][23] In the complaint, the FTC alleged that RJR was exploring ways to appeal to younger smokers and "first usual brand" smokers as early as 1984. They concluded that the health injuries to children from smoking were not "reasonably avoidable" given children's inability to understand the consequences of smoking. They concluded that the campaign violated federal law as an "unfair practice" under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act, which prohibits ‘‘unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce.’’[24]

End of the campaign edit

By March 1997, Joe Camel was already absent from Camel advertisements as a temporary measure by RJR while federal litigation was in progress.[25] RJR officially ended the Joe Camel campaign on July 10, 1997.[26] The move came just weeks after the FTC complaint in May, and shortly after RJR and other tobacco companies agreed to pay a $368.5 billion settlement to states seeking to recover costs due to tobacco-related illnesses.[5] Additionally, the tobacco industry and 40 state attorneys general had just settled on a ban on the use of cartoon figures in cigarette ads, though the settlement had yet to be ratified by Congress or seen support from President Clinton.[27]

Joe Camel was phased out of point-of-purchase advertising, followed soon by billboards and print ads.[5] The campaign closure increased interest in Joe Camel memorabilia.[28] The campaign was replaced with the ''What you're looking for" campaign which used the original plain camel from the pack design.[26] In September, RJR agreed to pay $10 million to San Francisco and the other California cities and counties who intervened in the Mangini litigation. The money was earmarked primarily to fund anti-smoking efforts targeted at youth.[27]

Legacy edit

The Joe Camel campaign has been suspected of inspiring similar ad campaigns. In late 1991, Brown & Williamson ran marketing tests for a revival of their penguin mascot, Willie, for their Kool cigarette brand. The character had appeared in Kool advertisements from 1933 to 1960. The New York Times noted that the campaign was likely influenced by Joe Camel. Anti-smoking groups criticized the test campaign.[1] Also, anti-drinking groups accused Anheuser-Busch of similar practices in 2004 for their "Bud-weis-er" frogs, and groups fighting childhood obesity criticized Ronald McDonald and other characters for promoting unhealthy foods. Litigation proceedings used the precedence of the Joe Camel to further their case.[8] In 1996, Adbusters magazine published a subvertisement called "Joe Chemo", featuring a bedridden and dying Joe Camel.[29][30] The parody was developed in collaboration with psychology professor Scott Plous, who initially proposed the concept.[31] The character was shared in the advertisement trade magazine Adweek.[32]

The success and effect of the Joe Camel campaign has been assessed by academics in retrospect. A paper in the International Journal of Advertising in 2010 found that campaign brought consumer attention to the brand and may have helped in the short term, but that the eventual negative publicity may have reinforced negative attitudes towards smoking. They noted that Joe Camel campaign was not as successful as the Marlboro Man, and Newport had no comparable mascot or spokesperson, yet achieved a similar market share and as young a demographic as Camel.[8]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Elliott, Stuart. The Media Business: Advertising - Camel's Success and Controversy, December 12, 1991, The New York Times.
  2. ^ "Contemporary heroic camel mascot"
  3. ^ Whiteside, Thomas (December 11, 1970). "The Fight to Ban Smoking Ads". The New Yorker. ISSN 0028-792X. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  4. ^ a b Paul M. Fischer, MD; Meyer P. Schwartz, MD; John W. Richards Jr, MD; Adam O. Goldstein, MD; Tina H. Rojas Brand Logo Recognition by Children Aged 3 to 6 Years, December 11, 1991, Journal of the American Medical Association.
  5. ^ a b c Cross, Mary (2002). A Century of American Icons: 100 Products and Slogans from the 20th-Century Consumer Culture. Greenwood Press. pp. 204–206. ISBN 978-0313314810. Retrieved September 4, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Dubin, Zan (October 1, 1996). "Joe Camel an Adults-Only Party Animal, Creator Says". Los Angeles Times. from the original on October 2, 2022. Retrieved October 2, 2022.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Dooley, Michael (July 1996). "Defending Joe Camel, sort of". Print. 50 (4).
  8. ^ a b c d Weinberger, Marc G.; Spotts, Harlan E.; Markos, Ereni (2010). "Joe Camel: Post-mortem of a brand spokesperson". International Journal of Advertising. 29 (3): 401–430. doi:10.2501/S0265048710201245. ISSN 0265-0487. S2CID 167322396.
  9. ^ Bhat, Harish (March 7, 2021). "The Curious Marketer. Where have all the camels gone?". BusinessLine. Retrieved August 11, 2023.
  10. ^ Gardner, Martha N.; Brandt, Allan M. (February 2006). "'The Doctors' Choice Is America's Choice'". American Journal of Public Health. 96 (2): 222–232. doi:10.2105/ajph.2005.066654. ISSN 0090-0036. PMC 1470496. PMID 16434689.
  11. ^ DiFranza JR, Richards JW, Paulman PM, Wolf-Gillespie N, Fletcher C, Jaffe RD, Murray D. RJR Nabisco's cartoon camel promotes camel cigarettes to children. JAMA. 1991 Dec 11;266(22):3149-53. PMID 1956102
  12. ^ a b c "Supreme Court -- Cigarette Maker Loses Ruling On Joe Camel Ads | The Seattle Times". archive.seattletimes.com. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  13. ^ a b c d Warren, Jenifer (July 1, 1994). "State High Court Clears Way for Suit Over Joe Camel Ads : Smoking: Plaintiff claims R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. uses the popular cartoon mascot to sell cigarettes to minors. In a separate case, jurists agree to consider reinstating campaign donation limits". Los Angeles Times. from the original on November 11, 2020. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
  14. ^ 7 Cal. 4th 1057, 1073-74 (1994). R. J. Reynolds. Mangini v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co.
  15. ^ "R.J. Reynolds Tobacco fumes over Joe Camel court case". Chicago Tribune. November 28, 1994. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
  16. ^ Martin, Claude R. (1994). "Ethical Advertising Research Standards: Three Case Studies". Journal of Advertising. 23 (3): 17–29. doi:10.1080/00913367.1994.10673447. ISSN 0091-3367. JSTOR 4188935.
  17. ^ Brown, David (December 11, 1991). "OLD JOE AND MICKEY NOSE TO NOSE". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved October 2, 2022.
  18. ^ "FTC to decide whether to sue RJR Tobacco for Old Joe ad". Marketing News. 27 (10): 6. May 10, 1993.
  19. ^ Preston, Ivan L. (1995). "Unfairness Developments in FTC Advertising Cases". Journal of Public Policy & Marketing. 14 (2): 318–321. doi:10.1177/074391569501400213. ISSN 0743-9156. JSTOR 30000139. S2CID 158600816.
  20. ^ a b Yang, Catherine (February 17, 1997). "BUSTING JOE CAMEL'S HUMP". BusinessWeek (3514): 6.
  21. ^ Teinowitz, Ira, Ira (March 31, 1997). "Joe Camel in FTC's sights again". Advertising Age. 68 (13).
  22. ^ "FTC seeks to ban Joe Camel in ads". Washington Post. Vol. 120, no. 175. May 29, 1997.
  23. ^ "Joe Camel ads illegally target kids, FTC says". Wall Street Journal. 229 (104). May 29, 1997.
  24. ^ "Joe Camel Advertising Campaign Violates Federal Law, FTC Says". Federal Trade Commission. May 28, 1997. Retrieved October 2, 2022.
  25. ^ "Where's Joe?". Advertising Age. 68 (11): 24. March 17, 1997.
  26. ^ a b Elliott, Stuart (July 11, 1997). "Joe Camel, a Giant in Tobacco Marketing, Is Dead at 23". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. from the original on November 18, 2018. Retrieved September 28, 2022.
  27. ^ a b Lee, Jean H. (September 9, 1997). "R.J. Reynolds agrees to pay $10 million in Joe Camel lawsuit". AP News. Retrieved October 3, 2022.
  28. ^ Burger, Katrina; Munk, Nina (August 11, 1997). "Joe cashes in". Forbes. 160 (3): 39.
  29. ^ Walker, Rob (January 29, 2006). "Tribute Brand". The New York Times. from the original on October 22, 2016.
  30. ^ Sommer, J. (December 22, 2012). "The War Against Too Much of Everything". The New York Times.
  31. ^ "Meet a professor of the year". GradPSYCH Magazine. American Psychological Association. 2007.
  32. ^ Edwards, J. (August 18, 1997). "Notes from the underground". Adweek. pp. 23–26.

External links edit

  • Joe Camel at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on October 8, 2016.
  • A gallery of Joe Camel advertisements.
  • Joe Chemo, an anti-smoking website based on an Adbusters character

camel, also, called, advertising, mascot, used, reynolds, tobacco, company, their, cigarette, brand, camel, character, created, 1974, french, advertising, campaign, redesigned, american, market, 1988, appeared, magazine, advertisements, clothing, billboards, a. Joe Camel also called Old Joe was an advertising mascot used by the R J Reynolds Tobacco Company RJR for their cigarette brand Camel The character was created in 1974 for a French advertising campaign and was redesigned for the American market in 1988 He appeared in magazine advertisements clothing and billboards among other print media and merchandise Joe Camel1989 magazine adFirst appearance1974 Europe 1988 US Last appearance1997Created byR J Reynolds Tobacco Company In 1991 the Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA published research indicating that the Joe Camel ad campaign was appealing to children They found that Joe Camel and the Disney Channel logo were recognized equally among six year olds high school students were more familiar with him than adults and that Camel s market share among youth smokers had sharply risen The research led RJR to a lawsuit in California and a formal complaint from the Federal Trade Commission FTC for unfair practices by exposing children to smoking RJR denied the accusations that they were marketing towards children but voluntarily ended the campaign in 1997 after increased litigation and pressure from American federal agencies Contents 1 Description 2 History 2 1 Background 2 2 Character creation 2 3 JAMA studies and Mangini lawsuit 2 4 Federal Trade Commission complaint 2 5 End of the campaign 3 Legacy 4 References 5 External linksDescription editJoe Camel is an anthropomorphic camel who smokes cigarettes 1 He lacks many typical camelid traits such as a hump hooves or tail appearing as a muscular humanoid with a camel s head 2 He is often outfitted in masculine wear like tuxedos T shirts and hard hats 1 and is typically in a heroic pose surrounded by women or in a bar 1 With television advertisements for cigarettes outlawed in the United States before Joe Camel s debut 3 the character was often seen on billboards magazines clothing and other promotional displays 4 Early advertisements often depicted Joe alongside the motto Smooth character 1 Camel brand owner R J Reynolds RJR also ran promotions in which customers could redeem Camel Cash vouchers for Joe Camel gear including clothing watches mugs lighters and shower curtains 5 Some critics wrote that Joe s nose was drawn in a phallic fashion as to suggest that smoking is a virile pursuit 1 This was dismissed by its designer 6 7 History editBackground edit Camel is the oldest cigarette brand in the United States 8 Camel cigarettes were first released by RJR in 1913 featuring a plain camel drawing known as Old Joe on the package 1 The camel theme was chosen because the cigarettes used Turkish tobacco and Americans associated the animal with exotic Asian countries The original drawing was made by Belgian artist Fred Otto Kleesattel who had based it on a dromedary named Old Joe in the traveling Barnum amp Bailey Circus 9 For the next 60 years RJR employed a series of marketing campaigns for the Camel brand one notable campaign launched in 1946 maintained that doctors smoked Camels more than any other cigarette 10 Camel was the leading brand in the early 1950s but had dropped to sixth place by 1985 Philip Morris had also eclipsed RJR s market share by 1985 35 8 to 31 7 due primarily to the success of Marlboro 8 Character creation edit nbsp The original Joe Camel design used in French advertising in the 1970s before it was Americanized The character Joe Camel was created in 1974 by British artist Nicholas Price for a French advertising campaign for Camel cigarettes The new Joe Camel character was subsequently used in advertising in other countries throughout the 1970s 1 This European iteration of Joe Camel was first seen in the United States in 1988 when Greensboro North Carolina company Trone Advertising used the character in promotional materials created for the Camel brand s 75th anniversary 1 The American version of Joe Camel was created later by art designer Mike Salisbury working on contract for the brand s main agency McCann Erickson New York The intent of the campaign was to compete with Marlboro and its successful Marlboro Man campaign 6 Salisbury was contacted because of his film advertisements and retro style 7 McCann wanted his help to depict masculine heroes in old action films like Humphrey Bogart and Gary Cooper smoking Camels 7 6 Early advertisements were not successful because the audience was not familiar with films of that era even after giving the characters camel heads 6 7 It wasn t until they gave the camel a look inspired by James Bond and James Sonny Crockett that they had a positive test response 6 7 Salisbury gave Joe expressive eyebrows like Sean Connery Bond and hair like Don Johnson Sonny 7 The campaign promoted a hip lifestyle which was typical advertising practice for the industry since the 1920s 1 The success of the campaign made the character a key part of Camel s advertising 1 The New York Times wrote that Joe Camel was successful in changing the public s perception of a brand quickly a typically difficult feat They also wrote that the campaign helped protect Camel from the 5 8 annual decrease that full price cigarette brand sales were feeling at the time as cheaper brands grew Furthermore the campaign had continued despite RJR changing advertisement agencies from McCann to Young amp Rubicam and finally to Mezzina Brown Inc 1 JAMA studies and Mangini lawsuit edit In December 1991 the Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA published a study in which young children were asked to match brand logos with products The study showed that among children age six 91 3 matched Joe Camel with cigarettes nearly the same amount who matched the Disney Channel logo with Mickey Mouse The researchers concluded that RJR at the time operating as RJR Nabisco was just as effective at reaching children as the Disney Channel 4 In the same JAMA volume another study was published comparing how well Joe Camel was recognized among high school students versus adults over age 21 The study concluded that high school students were more likely to recognize Joe Camel 97 7 vs 72 2 understand the product being advertised 97 5 vs 67 and identity the Camel brand 93 6 vs 57 7 The study concluded that the Joe Camel campaign was far more successful at advertising to children than adults The authors also wrote that Camel s share of smokers under 18 had risen from 0 5 to 32 8 during the campaign s three years at that point 11 Among those who read the JAMA papers was San Francisco based family law attorney Janet Mangini 12 13 In 1992 she sued RJR as a private citizen 13 challenging the company for targeting minors with the campaign 12 In her complaint Mangini alleged that Camel sales to teenagers increased from 6 million to 476 million over the four years since the campaign began 13 RJR attempted to dismiss the lawsuit saying that only the federal government could regulate its advertising but a California state court reviewed the case and in 1994 permitted Mangini to proceed with the lawsuit 13 14 RJR attempted to appeal to the United States Supreme Court to have the case thrown out but their request was turned away 12 15 The JAMA studies did have their critics The Journal of Advertising published a study in September 1994 in which five university professors who specialized in marketing and advertising criticized the ethical standards of the studies By evaluating the papers against academic research standards the reviewers identified major flaws with regards to reliability and validity and accused the DiFranza study of using pre determined results 16 The designer of Joe Camel Mike Salisbury said there was never any intent to attract children 6 He explained that RJR rejected some designs on the grounds they would appeal too much to children and that there was a conscious effort to make him look like a 30 year old 6 Federal Trade Commission complaint edit In response to the JAMA studies the American Heart Association American Lung Association and American Cancer Society wrote a joint letter in 1991 to the Federal Trade Commission FTC asking them to force RJR to end the Joe Camel campaign 17 The FTC investigated the case for two years 18 but in 1994 decided not to act after three of five commissioners could not find sufficient evidence that RJR violated federal law 19 20 After President Bill Clinton appointed new FTC chairman Robert Pitofsky and member Christine Varney 21 the FTC announced in February 1997 they would re examine the case 20 On May 28 1997 the FTC concluded that the Joe Camel campaign was targeted to youth and requested a court order to end the campaign 22 23 In the complaint the FTC alleged that RJR was exploring ways to appeal to younger smokers and first usual brand smokers as early as 1984 They concluded that the health injuries to children from smoking were not reasonably avoidable given children s inability to understand the consequences of smoking They concluded that the campaign violated federal law as an unfair practice under Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act which prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce 24 End of the campaign edit By March 1997 Joe Camel was already absent from Camel advertisements as a temporary measure by RJR while federal litigation was in progress 25 RJR officially ended the Joe Camel campaign on July 10 1997 26 The move came just weeks after the FTC complaint in May and shortly after RJR and other tobacco companies agreed to pay a 368 5 billion settlement to states seeking to recover costs due to tobacco related illnesses 5 Additionally the tobacco industry and 40 state attorneys general had just settled on a ban on the use of cartoon figures in cigarette ads though the settlement had yet to be ratified by Congress or seen support from President Clinton 27 Joe Camel was phased out of point of purchase advertising followed soon by billboards and print ads 5 The campaign closure increased interest in Joe Camel memorabilia 28 The campaign was replaced with the What you re looking for campaign which used the original plain camel from the pack design 26 In September RJR agreed to pay 10 million to San Francisco and the other California cities and counties who intervened in the Mangini litigation The money was earmarked primarily to fund anti smoking efforts targeted at youth 27 Legacy editThe Joe Camel campaign has been suspected of inspiring similar ad campaigns In late 1991 Brown amp Williamson ran marketing tests for a revival of their penguin mascot Willie for their Kool cigarette brand The character had appeared in Kool advertisements from 1933 to 1960 The New York Times noted that the campaign was likely influenced by Joe Camel Anti smoking groups criticized the test campaign 1 Also anti drinking groups accused Anheuser Busch of similar practices in 2004 for their Bud weis er frogs and groups fighting childhood obesity criticized Ronald McDonald and other characters for promoting unhealthy foods Litigation proceedings used the precedence of the Joe Camel to further their case 8 In 1996 Adbusters magazine published a subvertisement called Joe Chemo featuring a bedridden and dying Joe Camel 29 30 The parody was developed in collaboration with psychology professor Scott Plous who initially proposed the concept 31 The character was shared in the advertisement trade magazine Adweek 32 The success and effect of the Joe Camel campaign has been assessed by academics in retrospect A paper in the International Journal of Advertising in 2010 found that campaign brought consumer attention to the brand and may have helped in the short term but that the eventual negative publicity may have reinforced negative attitudes towards smoking They noted that Joe Camel campaign was not as successful as the Marlboro Man and Newport had no comparable mascot or spokesperson yet achieved a similar market share and as young a demographic as Camel 8 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Elliott Stuart The Media Business Advertising Camel s Success and Controversy December 12 1991 The New York Times Contemporary heroic camel mascot Whiteside Thomas December 11 1970 The Fight to Ban Smoking Ads The New Yorker ISSN 0028 792X Retrieved August 9 2023 a b Paul M Fischer MD Meyer P Schwartz MD John W Richards Jr MD Adam O Goldstein MD Tina H Rojas Brand Logo Recognition by Children Aged 3 to 6 Years December 11 1991 Journal of the American Medical Association a b c Cross Mary 2002 A Century of American Icons 100 Products and Slogans from the 20th Century Consumer Culture Greenwood Press pp 204 206 ISBN 978 0313314810 Retrieved September 4 2020 a b c d e f g Dubin Zan October 1 1996 Joe Camel an Adults Only Party Animal Creator Says Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on October 2 2022 Retrieved October 2 2022 a b c d e f Dooley Michael July 1996 Defending Joe Camel sort of Print 50 4 a b c d Weinberger Marc G Spotts Harlan E Markos Ereni 2010 Joe Camel Post mortem of a brand spokesperson International Journal of Advertising 29 3 401 430 doi 10 2501 S0265048710201245 ISSN 0265 0487 S2CID 167322396 Bhat Harish March 7 2021 The Curious Marketer Where have all the camels gone BusinessLine Retrieved August 11 2023 Gardner Martha N Brandt Allan M February 2006 The Doctors Choice Is America s Choice American Journal of Public Health 96 2 222 232 doi 10 2105 ajph 2005 066654 ISSN 0090 0036 PMC 1470496 PMID 16434689 DiFranza JR Richards JW Paulman PM Wolf Gillespie N Fletcher C Jaffe RD Murray D RJR Nabisco s cartoon camel promotes camel cigarettes to children JAMA 1991 Dec 11 266 22 3149 53 PMID 1956102 a b c Supreme Court Cigarette Maker Loses Ruling On Joe Camel Ads The Seattle Times archive seattletimes com Retrieved September 28 2022 a b c d Warren Jenifer July 1 1994 State High Court Clears Way for Suit Over Joe Camel Ads Smoking Plaintiff claims R J Reynolds Tobacco Co uses the popular cartoon mascot to sell cigarettes to minors In a separate case jurists agree to consider reinstating campaign donation limits Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on November 11 2020 Retrieved October 3 2022 7 Cal 4th 1057 1073 74 1994 R J Reynolds Mangini v R J Reynolds Tobacco Co R J Reynolds Tobacco fumes over Joe Camel court case Chicago Tribune November 28 1994 Retrieved October 3 2022 Martin Claude R 1994 Ethical Advertising Research Standards Three Case Studies Journal of Advertising 23 3 17 29 doi 10 1080 00913367 1994 10673447 ISSN 0091 3367 JSTOR 4188935 Brown David December 11 1991 OLD JOE AND MICKEY NOSE TO NOSE Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 2 2022 FTC to decide whether to sue RJR Tobacco for Old Joe ad Marketing News 27 10 6 May 10 1993 Preston Ivan L 1995 Unfairness Developments in FTC Advertising Cases Journal of Public Policy amp Marketing 14 2 318 321 doi 10 1177 074391569501400213 ISSN 0743 9156 JSTOR 30000139 S2CID 158600816 a b Yang Catherine February 17 1997 BUSTING JOE CAMEL S HUMP BusinessWeek 3514 6 Teinowitz Ira Ira March 31 1997 Joe Camel in FTC s sights again Advertising Age 68 13 FTC seeks to ban Joe Camel in ads Washington Post Vol 120 no 175 May 29 1997 Joe Camel ads illegally target kids FTC says Wall Street Journal 229 104 May 29 1997 Joe Camel Advertising Campaign Violates Federal Law FTC Says Federal Trade Commission May 28 1997 Retrieved October 2 2022 Where s Joe Advertising Age 68 11 24 March 17 1997 a b Elliott Stuart July 11 1997 Joe Camel a Giant in Tobacco Marketing Is Dead at 23 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on November 18 2018 Retrieved September 28 2022 a b Lee Jean H September 9 1997 R J Reynolds agrees to pay 10 million in Joe Camel lawsuit AP News Retrieved October 3 2022 Burger Katrina Munk Nina August 11 1997 Joe cashes in Forbes 160 3 39 Walker Rob January 29 2006 Tribute Brand The New York Times Archived from the original on October 22 2016 Sommer J December 22 2012 The War Against Too Much of Everything The New York Times Meet a professor of the year GradPSYCH Magazine American Psychological Association 2007 Edwards J August 18 1997 Notes from the underground Adweek pp 23 26 External links edit nbsp 1980s portal nbsp 1990s portal Joe Camel at Don Markstein s Toonopedia Archived from the original on October 8 2016 A gallery of Joe Camel advertisements Joe Chemo an anti smoking website based on an Adbusters character Internal documents produced in the Mangini vs RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company trial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joe Camel amp oldid 1223263156, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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