Philip Morris Companies, the tobacco giant behind Marlboro, owned Lunchables for 23 years and used cigarette research strategies to shape the brand.

  • Internal documents show Philip Morris shared scientists, technology, and product development methods across its tobacco, food, and alcohol divisions, with Lunchables serving as a model example of that strategy.
  • Lunchables was engineered to appeal to kids’ desire for autonomy and to ease mothers’ guilt, using the same consumer psychology approach Philip Morris developed for cigarettes.
  • Researchers say tobacco-style regulations, including warning labels, taxes, and restrictions on child-focused marketing, may be worth applying to ultraprocessed foods like Lunchables.
  • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    They could have used all that research and knowledge to make something of good quality that would ease a mothers busy work day,and be healthy and nice for kids

    But of course we just went with the “fuck the kids, we found a way to earn a few more cents by feeding those critters some toxic shit”