by: Lori Dorfman and Lucy Martinez Sullivan and Saru Jayaraman
posted on Monday, May 17, 2021
The National Restaurant Association makes taxpayers eat the cost of not paying a living wage. And even some of its largest members are disavowing its stance on raising the minimum wage.
Tags: fight for 15, food industry, minimum wage, national restaurant association, other NRA
by: Katherine Smith
posted on Thursday, November 19, 2015
At the 8th European Public Health Conference in Milan, leading international experts, including BMSG’s Lori Dorfman, explored how corporations are portrayed in public health debates and how public health professionals perceive their role in shaping public policy.
Tags: alcohol, food industry, personal responsibility rhetoric, public health, tobacco
by: Caity Dekker
posted on Thursday, September 17, 2015
With nutrition-related diseases regularly making headlines, food and beverage companies are eager to portray themselves as part of the solution. In this Q&A, BMSG’s Laura Nixon discusses new research on industry messaging and implications for public health.
Tags: beverage industry, food industry, framing, media, obesity, public health
by: Andrew Cheyne
posted on Wednesday, February 20, 2013
To create a favorable political climate and protect their profits, both the food and tobacco industries have devised ways to anticipate — and counter — threats. Their tactics, often hidden from the public, reveal an important lesson: Success happens over the long haul — advocates should plan accordingly.
Tags: Amanda Fallin, food industry, front groups, obesity, public health, Rachel Grana, Tea Party, tobacco industry
by: Pamela Mejia
posted on Thursday, January 24, 2013
As a media researcher, I spend my days analyzing the food industry’s marketing of junk to children, so I’m uniquely aware of their insidious tactics. But now, as my daughter approaches age 2 and the food industry sets its sights on her, I’m not just studying the problem. I’m living it.
Tags: children's health, Dora the Explorer, food industry, junk food marketing, Nickelodeon, public health, target marketing