Some countries have already taken action to limit the number of junk food ads young people see. In the South American nation of Chile, for example, ads for unhealthy foods and drinks are banned from appearing on TV before 10 p.m. Kid-friendly cartoon mascots, such as Cheetos’ Chester Cheetah, are prohibited as well.
But no such laws exist in the U.S. Many Americans believe that banning junk food ads denies people the opportunity to make their own choices. Walter Olson of the Cato Institute, a libertarian organization in Washington, D.C., says bans on ads are “a form of censorship.”
Ultimately, many experts say, we’re our own best defense against marketing. Christopher Bryan, a behavioral science professor at the University of Chicago in Illinois, says teens should be aware that these ads are trying to manipulate them.
“When you see an ad and you recognize that clearly this is portraying something you know isn’t healthy as really appealing,” he says, “remember that the people making the ads have that goal.”