The Food and Drug Administration will try to adapt the sounds, style and attitudes of hip-hop into a multi-million dollar anti-smoking campaign to discourage young African-Americans, Hispanics and other groups from using tobacco.
The federal agency said Tuesday it will spend $128 million on advertising, events and local outreach as part of the āFresh Empireā campaign, which aims to curb the use of cigarettes and other tobacco products among minority teenagers.
FDA officials say research shows young people who identify with hip-hop are more likely to smoke than their peers.
To be sure, hip-hopās origins as an anti-establishment urban movement would seem to conflict with the federal governmentās buttoned-down image. But FDA officials say they can convincingly pitch their message to hip-hop fans.
āWe know from our research that remaining in control is an important pillar of hip-hop culture. But smoking represents a loss of control, so tobacco use is actually in conflict with that priority,ā said Mitch Zeller, director of the FDAās Center for Tobacco Products.
Zeller, who oversaw the anti-tobacco āTruthā campaign while working at the nonprofit American Legacy Foundation in the early 2000s, said the new campaign is aimed at āempowering this at-risk peer crowd to live tobacco free.ā
The campaign will roll out next week in 36 markets throughout the U.S. and continue for at least two years. The launch is timed to coincide with the BET Hip-Hop Awards, which air Oct. 13. It plans to run ads on that program.
āFresh Empireā is the second in a series of FDA media campaigns designed to educate the public about the dangers of tobacco use.
Tobacco companies are footing the bill for the campaigns through fees charged by the FDA under a 2009 law that gave the agency authority over certain aspects of the tobacco industry.