Any teenager could explain why. For them, a cigarette is not a delivery system for nicotine. It’s a delivery system for rebellion. Kids take up smoking to be cool, to impress their friends with their recklessness and defiance of adults. Teenagers don’t care about lung cancer – they’re immortal. They know that smoking is dangerous. In fact, they overestimate the chances of getting lung cancer. Danger is part of a cigarette’s appeal.
One idea? To make cigarettes less cool. Sure, there are those who believe the simple act of smoking itself — the inhale, the swirls of smoke, the slow exhale — is sexy, alluring, chic. But teens are into brands and branding, and, as Rosenberg reports, a study finds: “Teenagers see plain packs as less attractive, and believe their cigarettes don’t taste as good. Teenagers label smokers of plain-pack cigarettes as less stylish and social.”
Plus:
Plain packaging also reduces a cigarette’s value as a social cue with peers. Every time a teenage girl takes a pack out of her purse to get a cigarette, she is flashing all those brand associations at her friends as well. In short, plain packaging erases the cool factor that comes from smoking a specific brand.
[NY Times]
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