oikonomia

management of the household (community, society, humanity & biosphere) so as to increase its value to all members over the long run
oikos: household; and nomos: rules

Economics, social science concerned with the production, distribution, exchange, and consumption
of goods and services. Economists focus on the way in which individuals, groups, business enterprises,
and governments seek to achieve efficiently any economic objective they select. Other fields of study
also contribute to this knowledge: Psychology and ethics try to explain how objectives are formed;
history records changes in human objectives; sociology interprets human behavior in social contexts.
-Encarta

T12
Eeyore ponders a new career.
"Actually," Eeyore continued, "I'm thinking about a new career myself - personal growth and whatnot, and et ceteras, you know. I'm considering becoming an economist. Actually I didn't think of that myself. Owl suggested that I might be suited for it. He said someone called Thomas Carlyle said economics was the Dismal Science. That sounds most interesting."
-Winnie-the-Pooh On Success by Roger E. Allen & Stephen D. Allen

Saturday, August 19

Blame US obesity on...

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14415766/

But TV is just the beginning.

Linn: Pepsi and Coke, they both say that they do not market to children, I think under the age of 12. And there is a Pepsi car for kids as young as four.

Stone Phillips, Dateline anchor: Yeah, age four and up. (reading toy box)

Food is turned into toys — or attached to toys — or just squirts out like a toy like the latest ketchup bottles.

Phillips: The food plate and the toy shelf are starting to look a lot alike?

Linn: It's a merger, yes.

And then there's the Internet.

A growing number of popular online gaming sites are owned or sponsored by the food industry.

Lauren, panelist: The Nabisco site. My little brother's 13 and could live on that Web site. Like you just play. And it's like all the different snack foods are all fun games.

Children spend hours on these sites, exposed to what critics slam as stealth advertising, slipping past parents to reach the kids.

Linn: And, you know, what the industry does that is so distressing is that they really prey on parents' best intentions.

Like encouraging kids to read, or learn math.

Linn: (Holding up a Cheerios book) And if you look at the cover, the cover looks just like a box of cereal. The M&Ms book looks just like a box of M&Ms.

Companies say it helps kids learn. And there’s nothing wrong with that. But critics argue companies actually make a concerted effort not to help parents, but pit kids against parents.

Linn: In 1998, this company called Western Media International did a study on nagging. It was not a study to help parents cope with nagging. It was a study to help corporations help children nag more effectively.

Phillips: How many of you have heard the term nag factor? Or pester power? These are actual marketing terms, for targeting children with advertising.

Ken Robinson, father: Now I will break down quicker than my wife. So what happens, they’d rather ride or hang with me.

Kenbria Robinson: Yeah.

Ken Robinson: I'm guilty.

And many parents say the ultimate battleground is point-of-sale. Beware: the gauntlet of the cereal aisle!

There are a lot of familiar faces on cereal boxes: Shrek, Nemo, Batman, Dora, Woody from Toy Story, Barbie, SpongeBob Square Pants.

Madison Avenue calls them spokescharacters. Their licensing has become an enormous business.

...
Linn: It's easy to blame parents. It's not a level playing field. I mean how can one family take on, a ten to 12 billion dollar industry that's food marketing to kids? How can they do it?

The Picking Game: Kids & Brand Recognition

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