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We, the Undersigned, endorse the following petition:

Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies!

Target: Members of the, Motion Picture Association of America
Sponsor: Smokefree Movies Action Network, Smokefree Movies Action Network
  • Signatures: 3,109
  • Goal: 10,000
  • Deadline: Ongoing...
Hollywood movies with smoking are recruiting new young smokers - enough to replace every American smoker who dies each year.

Exported worldwide, these toxic films are spreading tobacco addiction, disease and death to the largest generation in history. If current trends continue, tobacco will kill 450 million people around the world by 2050.

The single simplest, most effective anti-tobacco action you can take?

Young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals know that major U.S. studios could keep smoking out of future youth-rated movies (G, PG, PG-13) using their own voluntary rating system - no government intervention required. This policy solution is endorsed by the World Health Organization and leading U.S. health organizations.

So far, the film industry's trade association - the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) - has point-blank refused. Join thousands of people worldwide in signing this global petition. Tell Hollywood: The whole world is watching.

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Number Date Prefix Name Country Why I'm signing
3,113 9:19 am PST, Nov 20 Mrs. Silvia Hall United States  
3,112 6:56 am PST, Nov 20 Mr. Edward Carey United States  
3,111 1:11 am PST, Nov 20   Diane Cooper United Kingdom Smoking is a disgusting habit which should be discouraged at all costs. It destroys people's health and the environment.
3,110 9:00 pm PST, Nov 19 Ms. Sue Seery United States  
3,109 8:19 pm PST, Nov 19 Mr. jean rinaldo United States One of my kids started smoking around age 14/15.... He is over 50 and still smokes....
3,108 4:06 pm PST, Nov 19   Lisa Macdonald United States  
3,107 3:05 pm PST, Nov 19 Dr. Howard Feder United States It is difficult for me to understand why young people take up smoking when they know it will damage their lungs and lead to an early death. It just seems insane to me to see all people that smoke inhaling something they must know will cause lung problems and a painful death.
3,106 2:42 pm PST, Nov 19   Kathryn Schubert United States Monkey see, monkey do. Same with people.
3,105 1:27 pm PST, Nov 19   Derek Spragg Canada I finally quit after 20+ years including a 3 year no-smoking period. I'm now 73 and still play ice hockey which I wouldn't be doing if I hadn't stopped over 35 years ago. Kindest thing I ever did to myself.
3,104 1:18 pm PST, Nov 19 Ms. Mary T. Ferraro United States  
3,103 12:57 pm PST, Nov 19 Ms. Susan Nierenberg United States to try to prevent teens from starting to smoke, thereby making their lives longer and healthier
3,102 12:25 pm PST, Nov 19   Karin Ralph United States  
3,101 11:10 am PST, Nov 19 Mrs. L Goldner United States I'm disheartened and disgusted seeing smoking glamorized in movies.
3,100 9:57 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Anonymous United States I have family members who smoke and all of them have stated that they were influenced by smokers in movies. What a terrible result of my letting them go to the movies for recreation. Indirectly movies are killing my kids!
3,099 9:53 am PST, Nov 19 Mrs. Kristi Cooke United States  
3,098 9:52 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. John Beaven Canada I quite 46 years ago because, when I was applying to increase my Life Insurance coverage my agent pointed out that if I quit smoking my premiums would cost considerably less. I was, and still am, convinced that the Insurance Companies are the world most successful gamblers and if they were convinced that if I stopped smoking they would make more money who was I to argue the fact. So I stopped smoking!
3,097 9:41 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Helga Skjelbreia Norway  
3,096 9:29 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. sara beckham United States  
3,095 9:01 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. John Viacrucis United States  
3,094 8:37 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. James Wirzman United States  
3,093 8:36 am PST, Nov 19   Paul jj Alix United States  
3,092 8:09 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Frances Duvall United States There is no excuse for portraying tabacco use as socially acceptable. I do not attend movies that have smoking in them. It should never be portrayed unless a historical necessity, and rarely then.
3,091 7:56 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. William McHenry United States  
3,090 7:50 am PST, Nov 19 Mrs. Elizabeth Butler United States  
3,089 7:44 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Amanda Montanaro United States  
3,088 7:44 am PST, Nov 19   Suzanne Rogers United States  
3,087 7:37 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Thomas Dadant United States I have already watched one family member die of smoking related emphysema and my wife and I are now watching her aunt slowly die of smoking related emphysema. If you think smoking is sexy or glamorous or cool, go sit with someone slowly drowning from the effects of emphysema. Flat out, smoking kills people - in horrible, agonizing ways. Why should we allow our children to be marketed to subliminally by the Tobacco industry?
3,086 7:24 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Donna D'Ottavio United States Smoking is a filthy habit, much easier to never begin than to break the addiction afterwards. DON'T glamorize it.
3,085 7:03 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Wayne Truax United States There is nothing good about tobacco. It only benefits those who sell it. We need to do all we can to prevent our youth from starting to smoke or use smokeless tobacco.
3,084 6:54 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. larry cook United States Smoking is most obnoxious, unhealthty habit there is. It is offensive to those who smoke as well as everyone around them.
3,083 6:53 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Madiha Hussaini United States  
3,082 6:44 am PST, Nov 19 Dr. J David Gillanders United States There are absolutely no beneficial effects from the use of tobacco products, but there are a great many bad effects. The only people who benefit from tobacco are the people who sell it.
3,081 6:37 am PST, Nov 19   james macdonald Dominican Republic to save the workers and children.
3,080 6:36 am PST, Nov 19   Valori Kruse United States  
3,079 6:12 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. VIRGINIA GROFF United States  
3,078 5:54 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. martha leahy United States  
3,077 5:37 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Carolyn Griffin United Kingdom  
3,076 5:17 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. bob coleman United States Young people are VERY impressionable and going through drastic changes as they grow. Anything the encourages them to participate in self-destructive behavior is unacceptable. Movies, TV and video games mesmerize the watcher and anything, like smoking, registers deep in the mind of the viewer. This puts the responsibility on those creating these entertainments to encourage healthy, not destructive behavior.
3,075 5:02 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. John Hill Canada  
3,074 5:00 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Tony Shephard United Kingdom  
3,073 4:59 am PST, Nov 19 Dr. sue cannon United States Smoking is a bad trade off. Old white men (JR Reynolds) get rich and we get dead.
3,072 4:48 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Gunnar Bjursell France Besides the health effects I think that the environmental aspects are even more important as this affects people all over the world in a more direct way, both concerning health aspects but also concerning the pure survival of all living things, men, animals and nature. I've neither smoked nor been a fundamentalistic non-smoking 'preacher'. However this appeal is very important for many good reasons.
3,071 4:37 am PST, Nov 19 Ms. Sandy Hildebrandt New Zealand  
3,070 4:18 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Lorne Vaasjo Canada  
3,069 4:06 am PST, Nov 19   Anonymous Macedonia, Republic Of  
3,068 12:19 am PST, Nov 19 Mr. Ancil Smith United States  
3,067 10:50 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. Bill Piggott Canada  
3,066 9:47 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. dan hoeschele United States  
3,065 7:54 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. Michael W Evans United States  
3,064 5:34 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. Kaviraj Ramgoolam Trinidad And Tobago Secondhand smoke is dangerous, and to much land is being used to grow something that ends up as smoke.
3,063 5:29 pm PST, Nov 18 Ms. Shelby Rodriguez United States  
3,062 5:16 pm PST, Nov 18 Ms. sharon woller United States It's a poison-why do you want to poison kids? You have kids-do you need the money that badly?
3,061 4:37 pm PST, Nov 18 Mrs. Jessica Rachel Carlisle United States I have three kids, 7, 7, and 8, and I do NOT want them thinking that smoking is cool, because a movie start or celebrity does it in a movie or on TV!!
3,060 4:28 pm PST, Nov 18   Paula J. McKinney United States My father died at age 69 from tobacco-related illness. He never lived to see his grandson (my son) because his life was cut short by tobacco. I want a different world for my son, one in which tobacco use is not promoted through movies.
3,059 2:29 pm PST, Nov 18 Ms. Agnieszka Gomó³ka Poland It's a great source of money for the holders of tobacco business. They make money on people's illness and death. Instead of advertising untrue "stylish "picture of tobacco business among youngsters, there should be more effort put to educate the society about the effects of using tobacco in any form.
3,058 2:28 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. Bob Bousquet United States From a purely logical & reasoned stand point, it is just a terribly bad & evil thing to do to yourself, then polluting the air of your family & friends surrounding you, & the terrible debilitation that you bring on to yourself that your loved ones, family & friends must watch & endure till your quite & very possible suffering end....
3,057 2:16 pm PST, Nov 18 Ms. Jessica Main Canada  
3,056 1:00 pm PST, Nov 18 Ms. Françoise Bonté France  
3,055 12:49 pm PST, Nov 18 Mr. MJ Mathisen United States  
3,054 11:01 am PST, Nov 18 Mr. Roger Stanbrook United Kingdom This product should not even be legal to grow and use except for genuine medicinal purposes.
3,053 10:48 am PST, Nov 18 Ms. Linda Layne United States  
3,052 10:38 am PST, Nov 18 Ms. Jennifer Lay Canada  
3,051 10:32 am PST, Nov 18 Mr. Anonymous United Kingdom  

Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies!



Eighty percent of U.S. movies released in the past five years have included smoking. The World Health Organization and U.S. health authorities agree that exposure to smoking in movies influences adolescents powerfully. Recent large-scale research studies indicate that this exposure recruits more than half of all new young smokers in the United States � 390,000 adolescents annually � of whom about one-third will eventually die from tobacco-related disease.

On a global scale, Hollywood's contribution to tobacco addiction threatens a death toll surpassing other major causes combined. Tobacco is the #2 killer worldwide. Both the U.S. film industry and the U.S. tobacco industry are aggressively expanding into the emerging markets of Asia, Africa, Latin America and Eastern Europe. Global tobacco deaths, now five million each year, will double in two decades, with most of the disability and mortality in poorer nations. Between now and 2050, total deaths from tobacco-related cancer and from cardiovascular and lung diseases will reach 450 million.

The U.S. film industry has a documented history of taking money to display tobacco products and smoking. Paid tobacco product placement is now prohibited by legal agreement between the major tobacco companies and top law enforcement officials, yet highly-advertised U.S. cigarette brands still appear in movies worldwide; smoking in U.S. films has returned to the level of 1950; and the balance of smoking incidents continues to shift from R-rated (over 17) to PG-13 (youth-rated) motion pictures.

A reasonable solution, respecting freedom of expression, is available. Updating its own rating system, administered by the Motion Picture Association of America, the U.S. film industry could easily keep smoking out of future movies marketed to adolescents, cutting their exposure � and consequent injury � by at least half. Violence, strong language and sexual content are already voluntarily calibrated to achieve a coveted PG-13 rating. The toxic effect of smoking on screen should be treated at least as seriously as offensive language.

The U.S. film industry knows that smoking on screen kills in real life. It is incumbent upon the studios and the media conglomerates that own them to take meaningful action as swiftly as possible. I join young people, parents, community leaders and health professionals around the world petitioning Motion Picture Association of America members to adopt a smokefree policy for youth-rated films. The largest generation of young people in world history deserves no less.

Note: This Keep smoking out of youth-rated movies! petition was submitted by Smokefree Movies Action Network. ThePetitionSite.com is a free service provided to help concerned citizens rally support for issues they believe in. The opinions expressed by this petition do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of ThePetitionSite.com or Care2.com. There is no express or implied endorsement of this petition nor any newsletter offers (except those from Care2.com) by Care2.com, Inc, ThePetitionSite.com, or our sponsors. If you believe this system is being abused, please contact customer support.

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