Dec. 8, 2009 It’s Tuesday, time for our weekly “Packaging Boyhood” focus, so what better time than the holiday season to sound the 'red' siren on the 'green' brand that tween and teen boys are sucking up to...Monster energy drink. With everything from motocross and macho madness to the thumping, screaming, ‘over the top’ rebel yell, Monster ‘packs a vicious punch’ by … [Read more...]
Turning Boys Into Monsters: Energy Drink Leaves A Foul Taste (Again)
Filed Under: Advertising, Branding & Consumerism, Consumerism, Damaging Drek, Emerging trends & STEM, Growing up too soon, Interactive Games, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Misogyny & Racism, Mobile Media, Apps & Gaming, Nutrition & Wellness, Product Placement, Sexualization & Body Image, Stereotypes & Diversity, Vapid Values Tagged With: alcohol, alcopops, behavior, BJ-Fogg, boys, Burger King, caffeine, Camel Orbs, cardiac, childrens health, cocktail, energy fiend, energy shots, energy-drinks, jolt and crash, kids nutrition, Lyn Mikel-Brown, macho, manhood, Mark Tappan, market confusion, marketing, masculinity, monster, monster hitman, objectification, Packaging-Boyhood, Packaging-Girlhood, paid to party, persuasion, pink cigarettes, preteen-health, Red Bull, RockStar, Sharon Lamb, shooters, sodium, squarebutts, sugary sodas, taurine, teens, thinspiration, toxic cues, toxic cues to kids, violence, wellness, Xtreme