Are they smoking or are they gay commercial
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The soccer players passed on the message: if you want to play sports, and you want to succeed, don't smoke. No, that's not true: The video is from a fake story created more than a decade ago by the satire news site The Onion, and the CDC told Lead Stories the agency had never produced or endorsed such a campaign.
The claim appeared in a December 31, 2022, video on Facebook under the title "This was a real ad 🤦🏽♂️." It shows video of what appear to be teenage boys meeting in a school hallway and exchanging a whispered message before ducking into a bathroom.
Onscreen text says:
Smoking? It then showed a camera pointed at a screen that played the "It's gay to smoke" clip.
In the purported PSA, two teenage boys smile at each other in a school hallway. It has been viewed nearly 2.9 million times. No one is seen smoking in the video although a pack of cigarettes is seen poking out of one boy's pants pocket.
The video was created by the satire site The Onion as a fake news story about anti-smoking public service announcements for its YouTube-based program "today NOW!"
The made-up "today NOW!" story first aired on October 5, 2009.
Or gay? They appeared in tobacco control advertisements, and spoke to youngsters about the importance of staying smoke-free. The two then walk into the bathroom.
"Are they smoking, or are they gay?" asks the voice-over.
The end of the TikTok video.
The words "It's gay to smoke" are followed by the mention of the CDC.
The Original YouTube Video
This was not a genuine public service announcement (PSA) from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
The TikTok user pointed a camera at a screen to show the clip.
It's gay to smoke.
Here's how the post appeared at the time of writing:
(Source: Facebook screenshot taken Tues Jan 3 at 20:44:35 2022 UTC)
The post shows the boys walking toward each other, standing with their faces and hands nearly touching and looking around suspiciously as if making sure no one will see them enter the bathroom.
The Facebook post's video is one of several clips in the story about a fake CDC campaign that tries to scare young people away from smoking and drinking by falsely linking such activities to sexual orientation. She no longer serves in that capacity now.
The decision by Ms. King, a role model to many girls and women, stood in stark contrast to the US Women's Soccer Team.
This logo wasn't shown in the TikTok video because someone had pointed a camera close to a screen to record it.
In sum, the purported CDC PSA that claimed "it's gay to smoke" originated as satire from The Onion.
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With their hands close to one another, the boy who whispered pulls cigarettes out of his pocket.They had taken an active role in persuading young women, and young men, from taking up smoking. King's relationship with Philip Morris began in 1970 when the company formed the Virginia Slims Tennis Tour. The story's title, "CDC Unveils New Anti-Smoking Ads" and a full tagline stating the campaign was "Brought to you by the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention" appears later in the video.
(Source: 'today Now!' screenshot taken Wed Jan 4 at 14:24:05 2023 UTC)
The video clips are peppered throughout an interview by "today NOW!" hostswith a purported CDC doctor who is said to be in charge of the PSAs.
A screenshot of the clip from the "today NOW!" story shows it matches the clip used in the Facebook video post.
(Source: today NOW!
screenshot taken Tues Jan 3 at 21:36:28 2023 UTC)
A partial view of a graphic tagline on the Facebook video reads, "u by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control a," which suggests the video was made by the CDC.
In a January 4, 2023 email response to a Lead Stories request for comment, a CDC spokesman called the ad satire and said the agency "had no involvement in its development and has never produced or endorsed such a campaign."
The CDC's website includes multiple public resources that detail the health risks associated with smoking, anti-smoking data and tips for quitting.
The false claims from The Onion's "today NOW!" interview have been repeatedly shared on social media sites over the past decade including on Facebook, YouTube and Instagram -- even though the online program appears to have ended in 2015.
Updated with response from CDC.