News

Nestle shares more than 250 of her favorite cartoons and comics in her new book, Eat, Drink, Vote: An Illustrated Guide to Food Politics, (Rodale Books, $18.99) created in collaboration with The ...
Asda will remove cartoon characters from own-brand sweets treats including ice-cream and flavoured milk in its fight against child obesity. Pressure from health campaigners has seen Asda and Lidl ...
Labor targets cartoons in obesity crackdown Share Posted Mon 30 Jul 2007 at 9:34pm Monday 30 Jul 2007 at 9:34pm Mon 30 Jul 2007 at 9:34pm , updated Tue 31 Jul 2007 at 12:34am Tuesday 31 Jul 2007 ...
Children’s cereals contain 40 per cent more sugar than those marketed at adults. Isn’t that the real problem?
Cartoons in spotlight in plan to tackle child obesity. Timothy McDonald. Posted 31 Jul 2007 31 Jul 2007 Tue 31 Jul 2007 at 3:55am, updated 31 Jul 2007 31 Jul 2007 Tue 31 Jul 2007 at 3:55am, updated ...
Cartoon ­characters on Asda’s own label cereal boxes are being axed in a bid to make them less attractive to kids and reduce pester power during the weekly shopping trip. The move is part of ...
Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Cartoon characters such as Shrek could disappear from junk food packaging as part of a plan to fight childhood obesity under a ...
Cereal killer OUR politicians are losing their minds over obesity. Tony the Frosties Tiger has been around since 1952, the Honey Monster since 1976. Why weren’t kids obese back then? Because ...
Lidl has said it will remove cartoon characters from its own-brand cereals to help parents buy healthy products. It hopes that the rebranded packaging, to be introduced in the spring, will ...