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TOBACCO

TOBACCO . OBJ: I will analyze the various forms of tobacco and their harmful effects. What do you see?. Bryan Curtis ’ Story.

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TOBACCO

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  1. TOBACCO OBJ: I will analyze the various forms of tobacco and their harmful effects

  2. What do you see?

  3. Bryan Curtis’ Story Bryan started when he was just 13, building up to more than two packs a day. He talked about quitting from time to time, but never seriously tried. Plenty of time for that, he figured. Older people got cancer. Not people in their 30s, not people who worked in construction, as a roofer, as a mechanic. Age: 33 This picture is taken 2 months before he died

  4. His final day His head, bald from chemotherapy, lolls on a pillow. The bones of his cheeks and shoulders protrude under taut skin. His eyes are open, but he can no longer respond to his mother or his wife, Bobbie, who married him in a makeshift ceremony in this room three weeks ago after doctors said there was no hope. In Bryan's emaciated hands, Bobbie has propped a photograph taken just two months ago. It shows a muscular and seemingly healthy Bryan holding his 2-year-old son, Bryan Jr. In the picture, he is 33.

  5. Bryan’s Story

  6. Class Discussion What is your personal opinion about tobacco? Do you have loved ones who are negatively impacted by the use of tobacco? Why would a teenager begin smoking?

  7. Quick Write… at end of class How do tobacco companies lure people into using their products? Write a paper that focuses on advertising and the introduction of different forms of tobacco.

  8. Early Smoking Advertisements (early 1950s)

  9. Early Smoking Advertisements (1960s-1980s)

  10. Smoking Advertisements Today • p

  11. Tobacco Advertising Today • u

  12. What is in cigarette smoke? Formaldehyde: Preserving Dead Organs Mercury: Batteries Nicotine:Pesticide Stearic Acid: Candle Wax Ammonia:Toilet cleaner Acetaldehyde: Perfume Acetone: Nail polish remover Aluminum: Drink cans Arsenic: Rat poison Carbon Monoxide: Tail pipe of car Lead: Pencils Picolines: Horse Urine Skatole: Feces (poop) DDT: Insecticides Copper: Pennies

  13. Forms of Tobacco

  14. Dissolvable Tobacco • Appeals to youth with candy-like appearance • In the form of sticks, pellets, and strips

  15. Dissolvable Tobacco Clip

  16. Snus • Small bag of tobacco placed btw the upper gum and lip • Smokeless and spitless

  17. Snus Commercial

  18. Chewing Tobacco • Placed btw cheek and gum or teeth and chewing • Must be crushed with teeth to release flavor and nicotine

  19. Snuff • Dried snuff is snorted through nose

  20. “New” Cigarettes • New size and new color but same tobacco with same harmful effects • “Reduced carcinogen cigarettes”: unproven • Some of these cigarettes may claim to be safer because the tobacco “heats” instead of “burns”

  21. E-Cigarette • Electronic Cigarette: battery operated cigarette which contains nicotine but not the harmful chemicals in tobacco • The vapors are a mix of water, nicotine, and artificial smoke

  22. Hookahs • Water pipes used for smoking flavored and sweetened blend of tobacco called shisha • There is a false belief that the water filters toxins from the tobacco smoke

  23. Little Cigar, Cigarillos and Cigars • If smoke is not inhaled, nicotine and toxins are absorbed through the lining of the mouth • Longer smoking time results in high exposure to toxins

  24. New cigarette labeling in 2012?

  25. In Canada, smoking has decreased by 20% in the past 11 years. In the year 2000, Canada required all cigarette companies to display these labels. Will it make a difference in the United States?

  26. Anti-smoking Advertisements Today

  27. Anti-smoking Advertisements Today

  28. Anti-Smoking Commercial

  29. Australian Anti-Smoking Commercial

  30. Anti-Tobacco CommercialEverybody Knows Smoking Kills

  31. Quick Write How do tobacco companies lure people into using their products? Write a paper focusing on: • The impact of advertising • The introduction of different forms of tobacco Include at least 3 strong points. Include: Topic sentence Transition words Facts and details Concluding sentence

  32. Format of paper 1. Write a topic sentence. Tobacco companies lure people of all ages into using their products. 2. Use transition words. First, tobacco companies……. 3. Use facts to support argument. For example,….. 4. Write a concluding sentence. In conclusion, tobacco companies continue to lure new users with their use of advertising and variety in products.

  33. Create an anti-tobacco advertisement • Read the Tobacco Facts • With a partner, decide which fact or facts to use on your poster • Plan your advertisement on a piece of paper and get it approved by Ms. McCarley • These posters will be displayed through out the school

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