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Steve Ella

Bigfella

Coach
Messages
10,102
Somebody more tech savvy could perhaps post a link to or the extract of Steve's brilliant article about alcohol advertising in the Herald online?
 
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19,724
Free blue VB cans are a new low for the State of Origin's partnership with alcohol

Steve Ella
Published: May 23, 2016 - 2:00PM

Since my days proudly representing NSW in the State of Origin I have become increasingly dismayed as the Blues have become ever more saturated with alcohol sponsorship.

Sadly, it has become increasingly difficult to know where the game ends and alcohol advertising begins.

Today, the game I love is awash with alcohol promotion and on Saturday the line got blurred even further.

In their combined infinite wisdom the National Rugby League, The Daily Telegraph, Carton United Breweries, Woolworths BWS and my beloved Blues saw fit to produce a limited-edition commemorative blue Victoria Bitter can, based on the NSW Blues' team jersey, and then proceeded to give them away for free, via a token in Saturday's Daily Telegraph.

Thanks to alcohol logos emblazoned on team jerseys, our players were already walking-talking beer billboards. Now, with those same Blue jerseys front and centre on the VB can, beer and the Blues are ever more intertwined.

And that's a problem.

A problem because of the false connection such promotion attempts to establish between alcohol, sport and success.

And a problem because of the serious consequences it has on young people and sports fans of all ages.

On this particular issue I have a front row seat.

I played in the Blues for four consecutive years – 1983, 1984, 1985 and 1986. But since then, I have worked on the frontline in the alcohol and other drugs sector for more than 19 years.

I've witnessed first-hand the harm from alcohol.

Every day in NSW alone, alcohol is responsible for 32 emergency department presentations, 149 hospitalisations and four deaths. The harm go deeper still. Beyond the drinker, others suffer violence, abuse, maltreatment and neglect.

The impact of alcohol is particularly evident among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people where the burden of injury, chronic disease, disability and death is high.

Young people, too, are also disproportionately affected by alcohol in sport.

People should be looking to sports like the NRL for role models, not unwelcome booze advertisements.

All the evidence tells us that exposure to alcohol advertising is associated with young people starting to drink earlier in life and encourages those already drinking to consume even more.

On Friday I wrote to Todd Greenberg, chief executive of the NRL, to express my concerns.

It's fair to say the NRL finds itself increasingly out of step with community expectations.

Recent polling by the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education found that 60 per cent of Australians think alcohol sponsorship should be banned from sport, while 70 per cent of Australians believe alcohol advertising should be banned on TV before 8.30pm.

Yet inexplicably, the NRL seems hell bent on doubling down on alcohol marketing.

This promotion is not only irresponsible, it is also in breach of NSW liquor laws.

FARE has lodged a formal complaint against the free VB NSW Blues can promotion with the Director-General of the NSW Department of Justice, Andrew Cappie-Wood, on the grounds that the promotion breaches three separate sections of the NSW Liquor Act 2007.

FARE argues that the release of limited-edition blue VB cans based on the NSW Blues team jersey are likely to have special appeal to minors, particularly young Blues' supporters and as such breaches section 102(2)(a) of the Act.

That in allowing for the provision of up to 260,000 cans of free beer, the promotion also breaches section 102(2)(d) of the Act by giving away free alcohol.

And thirdly, that by promoting alcohol in relation to a high-profile family sporting event and in a newspaper read by families across NSW, the promotion also breaches section 102(2)(f) of the Act which states promotions can be prohibited if found to be "otherwise in the public interest".

If our liquor laws cannot stop a giveaway of more than 250,000 cans of free beer, emblazoned with the Blues branding that would appeal to young people, then we need to question whether they are fit for purpose.

Certainly, it is important for the NSW Department of Justice to exercise its authority to prevent these types of promotions.

Ultimately however, it is incumbent on the NRL to rethink its toxic association with alcohol and get on with playing the game that we love.

Steve Ella played State of Origin in the mid 1980s. He is director of the Foundation for Alcohol Research and Education.

http://www.canberratimes.com.au/comment/free-blue-vb-cans-are-a-new-low-for-the-state-of-origins-partnership-with-alcohol-20160523-gp1erx.html
 

Chipmunk

Coach
Messages
18,117
The article says they're giving away 250,000 cans for Free. Does anyone know if that is accurate? Who is CUB giving away 250,000 beers to?
 
Messages
42,876
I was with him right up until he mentioned the connection between alcohol, sport and success... I mean, they are sponsoring blues, right?
 

84 Baby

Immortal
Messages
31,074
Nrl ahead of the game still. Deadset how isn't ZupZup employed by NRL to educate players
 

Suitman

Post Whore
Messages
56,864
Well said Zip Zip.....but the powers in charge dont care. They need the beer and gambling money

Bullshit the NRL need the money.
They've managed to survive without tobacco money.

Ella is on the money here.
The double standards are appalling.
Just another nail in the coffin for the NRL.
 

strider

Post Whore
Messages
79,165
The beer and gambling money is the EASY money ... so cant entirely blame em for taking it ... but be nice if they got their fingers out and went after something other than the easy money
 

Last Week

Bench
Messages
3,833
Bullshit the NRL need the money.
They've managed to survive without tobacco money.

Yeah but that was forced by legislation if I'm not mistaken.

Unless all the games stakeholders are on board with it, it's not exactly easy to just turn down the amount of cash that alcohol sponsorship offers.
 
Messages
19,724
I agree with Ella (cockney rhyming slang for Bigfella, or vice versa?)

The unfortunate reality is that the providers of products that have their traditional advertising/marketing limited in some way are generally prepared to pay more for deals like this.....and add to this the nature of the product and this is even more the case. I have no problem with some (incidental) alcohol advertising in sport, but the current situation is ridiculous.
 

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