$1,000 Top Prize in FreeTheBowl.com Youth Video Contest
 

Alcohol Justice

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size

donate-button-red

takeaction-button-purple

formerly Marin Institute

Home -> Press Room -> Press Releases -> $1,000 Top Prize in FreeTheBowl.com Youth Video Contest

$1,000 Top Prize in FreeTheBowl.com Youth Video Contest

E-mail Print
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 
Spanish                                                          
Contact:  Michael Scippa 415 548-0492
Jorge Castillo  213 840-3336

$1,000 Top Prize in FreeTheBowl.com Youth Video Contest

Call for Music, Dance, and Spoken Word Counter-Beer-Ads

SAN FRANCISCO, CA (December 9, 2010) – There is a $1,000 top prize in Marin Institute’s third annual Free The Bowlä anti-alcohol-advertising video contest for youth. This year’s theme - “Free the Bowl from Beer Ads” - seeks original, 30-60 seconds long, “performance art” counter-beer-ads from young people ages 10-20.

“The Free The BowlÔ contest is a fun way for youth to protest excessive alcohol ads shown during TV sporting events, stated Michael Scippa, Marin Institute’s public affairs director. “Inappropriate Big Alcohol beer ads create an environment that promotes unhealthy consumption among vulnerable youth and adults.”

Research has shown that the more alcohol ads kids see, the more likely they are to drink, drink to excess and drink more often. In 2009, the Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Prevent and Reduce Underage Drinking reported that 5,000 people under the age of 21 die annually from injuries caused by alcohol. Hundreds of thousands more suffer alcohol-fueled sexual assaults, serious injuries, diseases and academic failure.

Over the past two years the Free The Bowlä competition has attracted nearly 100 entries from 30 different states.  This year, young filmmakers are being challenged to create performance-based original music, dance, rap or spoken word videos that carry the contest’s core message – Free The Bowl From Beer Ads.

“Foreign-based alcohol corporations spend half a billion dollars annually advertising during TV sports programs,” said Scippa. “And the holy grail of beer ad venues and revenues is the Super Bowl, where Anheuser-Busch InBev burns beer brands into the developing brains of an estimated 30 million underage football fans.” Scippa added, “Free The BowlÔ allows youth to say to Budweiser, CBS-TV and the NFL, STOP EXPLOITING US WITH YOUR BEER ADS!”

The deadline for video entries is January 24, 2011. Contest winners will be announced during the Free The BowlÔ 2011 World Premiere, February 3, 2011, at the Smith Rafael Film Center in San Rafael, California. To view past years’ winning videos, this year’s promotional videos, and for more information on contest rules, entry details and prizes,

visit FreeTheBowl.com. For background information on the effects of alcohol advertising

on youth go to MarinInstitute.org.

###