BMSG in the news

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New study shows why it’s so hard to get abortion coverage right

by Tara Murtha | Poynter
Tuesday, October 17, 2017

A new study published in the journal Contraception builds off of BMSG’s research and examines the challenges that reporters face when covering abortion. It addresses issues such as how the perceived need to write “balanced” pieces contributes to the propagation of false information, and the harassment journalists experience while investigating the topic.

Progress is possible: How these funders are tackling gun violence

by David Callahan, Alyssa Ochs | Inside Philanthropy
Monday, October 02, 2017

Eight funders are combining resources to achieve greater impact on preventing gun violence through a new anti-violence effort, the Hope and Heal Fund. BMSG is working with Hope and Heal to research the narrative on gun violence and reshape it to include other forms of violence beyond highly publicized mass shootings.

Nonprofits urge Facebook to release research targeting ‘insecure’ teens

by Queenie Wong | SiliconBeat
Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Berkeley Media Studies Group joined the Center for Digital Democracy and more than two dozen other nonprofits in asking the social media giant to publicly release the research it conducted on teens who feel "worthless" or "insecure." The groups expressed concern that marketers could use such data to exploit young people's vulnerabilities, with implications for their health.

Here’s how we can end abortion stigma

by Lauren Himiak, Steph Herold | BUST
Tuesday, January 31, 2017

A new study from the Berkeley Media Studies Group and Sea Change Program shows how abortion stigma manifests in news coverage and outlines recommendations to help journalists and advocates change how this safe, common part of reproductive health care is portrayed.

Soda industry spent $67 million fighting sugar taxes and health labels since 2009

by Winston Cho | East Bay Express
Friday, September 23, 2016

One of the fronts where the soda war is being fought is Oakland, where companies have already spent $747,268 to oppose measure HH, a penny-per-ounce soda excise tax that will fund health education programs. BMSG's Laura Nixon notes that the soda industry is also creating misleading advertisements and explains that Big Soda tailors its strategy and counter-arguments to each community that proposes a tax.

Letter to the editor: Lost lives

by Lori Dorfman | San Francisco Chronicle
Tuesday, September 06, 2016

BMSG Director Lori Dorfman expands the conversation on gun violence in this letter to the editor for the San Francisco Chronicle. She writes, “Regarding ‘Funding for gun research’ (Editorial, Sept. 3): California has done what Congress is afraid to do: study gun violence. So simple, right? But in your editorial about this terrific news, why did you exclude suicides when you recounted the toll from gun violence? Most gun deaths in the U.S. are from suicides. With Dr. Garen Wintemute leading our new UC Firearm Violence Research Center, facts like that ‰— and what we can do about them ‰— can finally get the attention they deserve.”

The huge problem with U.S. gymnast Simone Biles’ latest commercial spot

by Alex Orlov | Mic.com
Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Mic.com's Alex Orlov uses Olympian Simone Biles' Hershey's commercial to shed light on food companies' unfortunate practice of using star athletes to promote bad nutrition. These endorsements are especially problematic for young children, who develop, as BMSG Media Researcher Laura Nixon explains, positive associations with the brand. The ad, Orlov concludes, "definitely doesn't stick the landing when it comes to helping America stay healthy."

Why do celebrities endorse unhealthy foods?

Hungry Forever
Monday, June 13, 2016

Celebrity spokespeople are attractive to food and beverage companies because they help draw young consumers. As BMSG’s Andrew Cheyne explained to TIME in 2013, “We can’t expect kids to turn off that admiration [for their favorite celebrities] when the same person is selling sugar.”

The one reason why Beyonce needs to stop endorsing Pepsi

by Alex Orlov | Mic
Tuesday, June 07, 2016

According to a recent NYU study, over two-thirds of non-alcoholic beverages promoted by celebrities contain added sugar. By associating unhealthy products with the celebrities most popular among children and teens, endorsements of sugar sweetened beverages are contributing to the childhood epidemic of obesity, explains BMSG's Laura Nixon. Nearly 13 million children and teens in the U.S. are obese, placing them at elevated risk for diabetes and other nutrition-related diseases.

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