Questions the validity of the KGOY dictum, ie that kids are getting older younger; this has been the driving force behind much dialogue about marketing to children over recent years. Explores the presumptions behind this trend: children are brand aware at earlier ages, they are more technologically aware and “graduate“ from dolls and action figures earlier, and puberty itself is earlier in girls; other issues like obesity, school violence, child abduction and terrorism demonstrate the involvement of children’s issues with the adult world. Reports a KGOY recalibration exercise by KidShop, however, which finds that children, while being aware of issues, are in fact quite satisfied with their status as children, rather than wanting to be older than they are.
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1 March 2004
This article was originally published in
International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children
Conceptual Paper|
March 01 2004
KGOY reconsidered: kids just want to be kids Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2396-9156
Print ISSN: 1464-6676
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children (2004) 5 (2): 29–33.
Citation
Kurnit P (2004), "KGOY reconsidered: kids just want to be kids". International Journal of Advertising and Marketing to Children, Vol. 5 No. 2 pp. 29–33, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/17473610410814139
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