Family groups, women's rights organizations and myriad bloggers have joined members of Nicolas Sarkozy's conservative government in objecting to what the Secretary of State for Family Affairs, Nadine Morano, has termed a "public outrage to decency" and vowed to ban. On Wednesday, the Association of French Families filed an official complaint with the national advertising regulators, accusing the campaign of violating ethics rules. Why all the fuss? The posters by the Non-Smokers' Rights Association (NSR) each feature a man or woman who looks to be in their late teens kneeling before a fully clothed adult male. A cigarette dangles from the youth's mouth, extending downward before seeming to disappear into the man's pants. Below the photo is a caption that reads: "Smoking Means Being a Slave to Tobacco." (See pictures of old cigarette advertisements.)
The idea of remaining a virgin until marriage, as encouraged in some parts of the United States, is a concept that has long disappeared amongst French teens and their parents. You will not see things like promise rings in France.
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So, can Green hold on to his mojo? His is the kind of authenticity among young people that led a headline writer at The New Yorker to dub him the "Teen Whisperer". Green doesn't love that term. "I don't whisper to teens very often. I think whispering to teens would be weird and creepy," he jokes. "I love talking to teenagers. I love making stuff for teenagers and making stuff with them."
Teens on the screen often draw teens into the audience, so filmmakers are spinning out all kinds of youth-oriented pictures, including animated movies. Disney has failed to spark much excitement with recent efforts like "Hercules," but things could change when "Tarzan" swings through the jungle (June 18), with voices including Tony Goldwyn as the young hero and Glenn Close and Rosie O'Donnell as the simians who love him. 2ff7e9595c
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