They’re using cab-top and bus stop
displays, sponsoring race cars and events, and encouraging smokers to
‘‘rise from the ashes’’ and take back their freedom in slick TV
commercials featuring celebrities like TV personality Jenny McCarthy.
The Food and Drug Administration
plans to set marketing and product regulations for electronic cigarettes
in the near future. But for now, almost anything goes.
‘‘Right now it’s the wild, wild
west,’’ Mitch Zeller, director of the FDA’s Center for Tobacco Products,
said in a recent interview with The Associated Press.
Electronic cigarettes are
battery-powered devices made of plastic or metal that heat a liquid
nicotine solution, creating vapor that users inhale. Users get their
nicotine without the thousands of chemicals, tar or odor of regular
cigarettes. And they get to hold something shaped like a cigarette,
while puffing and exhaling something that looks like smoke.
So far, there’s not much
scientific evidence showing e-cigarettes help smokers quit or smoke
less, and it’s unclear how safe they are. But the marketing tactics are
raising worries that the devices’ makers could tempt young people to
take up something that could prove addictive.
The industry started by selling
e-cigarettes on the Internet and at shopping-mall kiosks. It has
rocketed from thousands of users in 2006 to several million worldwide
who have more than 200 brands to choose from. Some e-cigarettes are
stocked in prime selling space at the front of convenience-store and
gas-station counters — real estate forbidden to the devices’
old-fashioned cousins.
Analysts estimate sales of
e-cigarettes could reach $2 billion by the end of the year. Some say the
use of e-cigarettes could pass that of traditional cigarettes in the
next decade. Tobacco company executives have even noted that
e-cigarettes are already eating into traditional cigarette sales.
The debate over marketing tactics
is intensifying as the nation’s largest tobacco companies roll out their
own e-cigarettes in a push to diversify beyond their traditional
business. People are smoking fewer cigarettes in the face of tax hikes,
smoking bans, health concerns and social stigma, though higher prices
have helped protect cigarette revenue.
Companies like NJOY and Blu Ecigs
are advertising on TV, forbidden for cigarettes for more than 40 years.
LOGIC has placed mobile billboards on taxis in New York City. Swisher
International Inc., maker of Swisher Sweets cigars, is sponsoring race
cars promoting its e-Swisher electronic cigarettes and cigars and has a
two-year deal to become the official e-cigarette of the World Series of
Poker.
Blu, which was acquired by No. 3
U.S. tobacco company Lorillard Inc. last year, also has sponsored an
Indy car and the 2013 Bonnaroo music festival, and its website features a
cartoon character nicknamed ‘‘Mr. Cool’’ boasting the benefits of its
e-cigarette — evoking the days of Joe Camel.
Decades ago, celebrities like
actor Spencer Tracy, baseball player Joe DiMaggio and even future
President Ronald Reagan shilled for brands like Lucky Strike and
Chesterfield.
Now, NJOY features rocker Courtney
Love in an expletive-laced online ad and counts singer Bruno Mars among
its investors. Actor Stephen Dorff is featured in Blu’s TV commercials.
In Blu’s latest campaign,
McCarthy, who was recently named a host on the talk show ‘‘The View,’’
says she can use the e-cigarette ‘‘without scaring that special someone
away’’ and can avoid kisses that ‘‘taste like an ashtray’’ when she’s
out at her favorite club. The commercials are set to start airing
nationwide next week.
Tobacco marketing has been
increasingly restricted. TV commercials for cigarettes were banned in
1970. Later legal settlements and new regulations took ads off
billboards and banned event sponsorships. Cigarette marketing can’t use
celebrities or cartoons. While they must include health warnings,
companies can still advertise cigarettes and smokeless tobacco in
magazines that don’t have a large youth readership.
The electronic cigarette ads push the same
themes as old cigarette ads: sophistication, freedom, equality and
individualism, said Timothy de Waal Malefyt, a visiting associate
professor at Fordham University’s business school and former advertising
executive.
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