Candy, Cartoons, and TikTok: Inside the Tobacco Industry's War on a New Generation
If you think the fight against Big Tobacco was won in the last century, you’re not alone. Many believe the days of cartoon camels and rugged cowboys are behind us, and that new products like e-cigarettes are a trendy but ultimately harmless phase. The battle-lines, however, have not disappeared—they have simply moved into the shadows and onto our children's screens.
The tobacco industry is not just surviving; it is actively and aggressively targeting a new generation of customers with a sophisticated modern playbook. To replace the millions of people who quit or die each year, the industry needs what it has internally called "replacement smokers." This strategy is succeeding: an estimated 37 million children aged 13–15 years use tobacco globally. This post, drawing from a recent World Health Organization report, uncovers the most shocking tactics being used right now to hook your children.
1. They're Selling a "Safer" Alternative That's Creating a New Wave of Addiction
The industry's most pervasive message is one of "harm reduction," positioning products like e-cigarettes and heated tobacco as safer alternatives for adult smokers. But this narrative masks a darker reality: these products are creating a gateway to addiction for a generation of youth who were never smokers in the first place. A United States study, for example, found that nearly three quarters of e-cigarette users aged 18–24 years had never smoked a combustible cigarette.
The strategy is working with alarming success. According to the WHO, children aged 13–15 are now using e-cigarettes at rates higher than adults in all WHO regions. These are not harmless water vapor devices. E-cigarettes with nicotine are highly addictive, contain toxic substances, and are proven to be harmful to health. Their use can directly affect brain development in young people, potentially leading to learning disabilities and anxiety disorders.
“History is repeating, as the tobacco industry tries to sell the same nicotine to our children in different packaging. These industries are actively targeting schools, children and young people with new products that are essentially a candy-flavoured trap. How can they talk about harm reduction when they are marketing these dangerous, highly addictive products to children?” — Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization
2. They've Turned Your Kid's Phone Into a 24/7 Billboard
While traditional advertising is banned in many countries, the tobacco industry has pivoted to a digital battlefield where regulations are harder to enforce. They have aggressively colonized the platforms where youth spend their time, including Instagram, Facebook, X, TikTok, streaming services, and gaming platforms.
The scale of this effort is staggering. Marketing for just three brands—Vuse, Velo, and IQOS—has been viewed more than 3.4 billion times on social media. The industry pays influencers to promote products—sometimes using influencers who are younger than the company’s own supposed voluntary guidelines—embeds product placement in shows popular with 15- to 24-year-olds (like Stranger Things), and sponsors e-sports tournaments and online music festivals. For example, British American Tobacco’s sponsorship of the McLaren F1 team helps it promote its e-cigarette brand, Vuse, in countries like India, where e-cigarettes are banned. This pervasive, cross-border strategy normalizes their products and makes it nearly impossible for parents and regulators to monitor, let alone stop.
3. Their Products Look and Taste Like Candy
With at least 16,000 unique e-cigarette flavors on the market, the industry has weaponized taste to appeal directly to youth. Flavors like fruit and candy are cited as a primary reason young people try these products, and the numbers bear this out: nearly nine in ten youth e-cigarette users choose a flavored product.
The power of flavors is not just in attraction, but in retention. Research shows that more than 70% of young e-cigarette users would quit if the products were only available in tobacco flavor. Beyond taste, the physical designs are engineered for deception. Products are made to resemble toys, pens, lipsticks, candy, or watches, allowing for discreet use and making them easy to hide from parents and teachers.
4. They're Posing as Socially Responsible Champions
The industry’s use of "corporate social responsibility" (CSR) is a calculated disguise with two strategic goals. First, it aims to resonate with socially and environmentally conscious youth to polish a tarnished reputation. Second, it works to persuade policymakers and the public that the industry has a net positive impact on society, thereby weakening the case for stronger regulation.
Their tactics include:
• Sponsoring youth anti-smoking campaigns that research has proven are ineffective and may even foster more favorable attitudes toward the companies.
• "Greenwashing" their image by publicizing tree-planting efforts, while their cigarette filters remain a leading source of single-use plastic pollution.
• Funding academic scholarships, schools, and youth competitions to build positive brand associations and distract from their deadly business model.
This carefully crafted image stands in stark contrast to the reality: tobacco use causes more than 8 million deaths annually and costs the world US$ 1.4 trillion in economic damage every year.
5. They're Actively Sabotaging Laws Designed to Protect Children
Behind the scenes, the tobacco industry works tirelessly to "pre-empt, obstruct, defeat, weaken and delay government action" that would protect children. This is a deliberate, well-funded war on public health policy, fought through lobbying, front groups, and pseudo-science. In Switzerland, the industry funded a campaign encouraging voters to oppose restrictions on tobacco advertising specifically designed to protect children.
They weaponize the legal system to intimidate policymakers. When governments move to protect youth, the industry fights back with litigation. In both Brazil and Ireland, for example, major tobacco companies have launched legal challenges to block bans on the very "characterizing flavours" that are proven to hook children on their new products. This systematic interference in the political process is a primary reason why so many children and adolescents remain unprotected from these harmful products today.
Rewriting the Ending
The targeting of youth is not a coincidence or a side effect; it is a deliberate, multi-faceted, and global strategy designed to secure future profits by creating a new generation of addicts. From candy-flavored vapes and TikTok influencers to phony environmental campaigns and backroom lobbying, the industry's playbook is designed to ensnare young people before they are old enough to understand the consequences.
Youth advocates, organized under the banner "Global Youth Voices," have delivered a powerful message to governments worldwide, calling on them to protect future generations. Their plea forces a critical question upon the rest of us. Now that the industry's playbook is exposed, what responsibility do we have to ensure this generation isn't just another 'replacement'?
More information at the articles below;
- Exposing lies, protecting lives !
- Are e-cigarettes dangerous ?
- Environmental and health risks of tobacco leaf production
- World No Tobacco Day 2022: Tobacco’s threat to our environment
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