пятница, 27 марта 2015 г.

jikSurvey Says: Shoppers Prefer Cosmetics With Cruelty-Free, All Natural Labelsde

4 4 4 4

When it comes to what we slap on our faces, a new survey says we’ve got more than just beauty on our minds when choosing which cosmetics to buy: Turns out a love for plants, animals and all things natural is the guiding force when shoppers are making decisions in the beauty aisle.

This, according to a survey from Nielsen that asked 1,000 participants of varying ages which beauty brand buzzwords are most important to consumers.


On the top of the list is animal welfare, with “cruelty-free” and “not tested on animals” listed as the most important packaging claim in the survey at 57%, followed by SPF claims (56%) and “all natural” at 53%.


But though the “all natural” claim came in with 53% of participants saying it’s very or moderately important to them, it’s the top contender when it comes to what people are actually willing to pay more for: 46% of people said they’d shell out more dough just to get an all natural product.


Our love of animals only goes so far, it seems — with only 43% of respondents saying they’d be willing to pay more for beauty products that aren’t tested on animals. It was still in the top five however, below all natural, contains SPF, anti-aging/anti-wrinkle and skin firming/lifting and firming.


This means that clearly the sweet spot would be a cheap, all natural, cruelty-free product that contains SPF and keeps you wrinkle-free and looking like you just got out of the Botox salon. Is there such a thing as a Botox salon? Probably, right?


PACKAGE THIS: BEAUTY CONSUMERS FAVOR ‘CRUELTY FREE’ AND ‘NATURAL’ PRODUCT CLAIMS [Nielsen]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikMercedes-Benz Planning To Launch Its First Pickup Truck By 2020de

4 4 4 4

When you think of a Mercedes-Benz, scenes of rugged vehicles hauling heavy loads across rough terrain probably don’t come to mind… yet. That might change with the launch of Daimler’s first Mercedes-Benz pickup truck, which the company is planning to launch by 2020.

After moving into the SUV world in recent years, it seems Mercedes-Benz is ready to take on the rough world of pickup trucks.


“Years ago, SUVs used to be, well, rough,” Volker Mornhinweg, head of Mercedes-Benz Vans, told the Wall Street Journal. “Then they became prettier. Now, we see the same trend in pickup trucks. We see opportunities to enter this market as the first premium brand.”


The midsize truck will be able to carry about 2,200 pounds and comes with four- or six-cylinder engines, and two rows of seats. It’ll also feature many of the interior design elements as other Mercedes-Benz vehicles, with a luxury version including leather interior and chrome furnishings available.


But because Americans are perhaps a bit possessive of the pickup truck, the brand hasn’t yet decided if it will sell the midsize vehicle in the U.S. Instead, the company will be focusing on European, Latin American, Australian and South African markets.


At the very least, a full-size pickup won’t be competing against the big American players anytime soon, says Mornhinweg, not with Ford Motor Co.’s F-150 and General Motors Co.’s Silverado and Chrysler’s Ram on the market.


“The full-size segment is too specific for the U.S. It’s not a global market,” he told the Wall Street Journal. “And it’s dominated by the Big Three. It makes no sense to go there.”


Mercedes-Benz Outlines a Luxury Pickup for Europe, South America [Wall Street Journal]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist

jikWhite House Acknowledges Health Risk Of Antibiotics Overuse; Critics Say It Fails To Fully Address Problemde

4 4 4 4

In a new White House report on antibiotic resistance, the Obama administration acknowledges the serious public health risk posed by the over-prescription and overuse of antibiotics, and details multi-agency plans to combat the problem. However, many critics of the report say that these plans fail to close a loophole that will allow farmers to continue using medically unnecessary antibiotics on farm animals (who consume 80% of all antibiotics sold in the U.S.) primarily for the purpose of growth promotion.

This morning, a White House official claimed that the newly released National Action Plan for Combating Antibotic-Resistant Bacteria [PDF] is the “most aggressive and most transparent” plan yet from the federal government on the issue.


Indeed the plan does not attempt to sugarcoat the problem, directly stating that “the emergence of drug resistance in bacteria is reversing the miracles of the past eighty years, with drug choices for the treatment of many bacterial infections becoming increasingly limited, expensive, and, in some cases, nonexistent.”


According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 2 million people fall ill to drug-resistant pathogens every year in the U.S. alone, with some 23,000 of these illnesses resulting in death. Those numbers are only expected to grow if doctors and hospitals continue to over-prescribe antibiotics and if farmers continue to use the drugs in animal feed with the goal of raising larger cows and pigs.


One White House official points out that if we can no longer rely on antibiotics to fight infections, it will reverse a century’s worth of medical advances. No more organ transplants or artificial replacements, as patients would likely fall victim to post-surgery infections that are currently treated with antibiotics.


“Inaction is only going to compound what is already a growing problem,” said the official.


To that end, the plan includes several new stewardship, education, and monitoring programs for the use of antibiotics on human patients at hospitals and in doctors offices. For example, the administration aims, over the next five years, to reduce inappropriate antibiotic use by 50% in outpatient settings and by 20% in inpatient settings.


As a 2014 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed, 70% of U.S. physicians are still prescribing antibiotics for patients with acute bronchitis, an illness that shouldn’t be treated this way.


The White House plan also seeks to establish state-level programs in all 50 states to monitor regionally important multidrug resistant organisms.


But as mentioned above, use of antibiotics on humans only accounts for less than 20% of all antibiotics sold in the U.S. The vast majority of these drugs is sold to farmers for use on livestock.


And while the White House plan acknowledges that something must be done about this overuse of antibiotics in farm animals, the report seems to accept that simply taking “growth promotion” off the label of of acceptable uses for these drugs will do the trick.


In late 2013, the FDA — after decades of doing nothing on the issue — released voluntarily guidance to the pharmaceutical industry asking drug companies to remove growth promotion as an allowable use for their antibiotics and to require that farmers only use these drugs for disease treatment or prevention.


The drug companies weren’t terribly bothered by this guidance, saying at the time that it wouldn’t hurt their bottom line (and it didn’t, as their stock prices continued to rise). And though growth promotion was taken off the label as a use for these drugs, some companies continued to market the fact that you’d get a fatter pig by using their antibiotic over the competition’s.


This is because the farmers are still allowed to use these drugs for the vague purpose of “disease prevention,” meaning that they only needed to change their reason for using the drugs, not the amount of antibiotics being used.


Mae Wu, attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, says the White House “tries to draw a false distinction between growth promotion uses and disease prevention uses – a distinction not recognized by bacteria. Both uses often involve routine, low doses of antibiotics given to large groups of animals for long periods of time – ideal conditions for breeding drug-resistant bacteria.”


Critics also wonder why the White House plan sets specific targets for reducing frivolous uses of antibiotics in humans, but makes no attempt to set a goal for similar reductions in agricultural antibiotic use.


“This means that the only measure of success will be whether or not companies remove growth claims from the labels – even if on-farm antibiotic use continues to rise,” says Steven Roach, senior analyst for Keep Antibiotics Working. “All the other actions in the National Action Plan – including research, outreach to producers and veterinarians, and improved monitoring – will be wasted as long as the target to be reached falls so short of what needs to be done.”


In response to these critics, a White House official said this morning that “We recognize this is an area where we need better data than what we have now.”


He explained that more species-specific data is needed before further determinations can be made.


“We need to have the evidence that will allow us to target the species that are most susceptible,” said the official.


With regard to criticism that the removing growth-promotion as an acceptable use is ineffective, the official pointed out that it would now be illegal for a farmer to then use that drug solely to get fatter animals.


But that’s only if the farmer admits that their sole reason for using the drug is growth-promotion, which none of them will do publicly. Farmers and their associated veterinarians have repeatedly stood by the defense that they need to put these drugs in animal feed for prophylactic reasons to prevent disease. However, as noted above, this sort of frequent, low-dose use of antibiotics only helps to encourage the development of drug-resistant pathogens.




by Chris Morran via Consumerist

jikAmazon Reportedly In Talks To Purchase Luxury Online Retailer Net-A-Porterde

4 4 4 4

Amazon appears to be on the cusp of its largest purchase ever with the potential purchase of luxury online retailer Net-a-Porter.

Citing a person close to the matter, Forbes reports that negotiations for the potential $2.16 billion acquisition are still in the early stages.


A spokespeople for Amazon and Net-a-Porter didn’t return Forbes’ request for comment regarding the rumored purchase.


Amazon has a long history of high-dollar purchases. Last year, the company shelled out $1.1 billion for video game streaming company Twitch. Before that, in 2009, the e-retailer purchases online shoe retailer Zappos for $1.2 billion.


Forbes reports that Amazon’s previous pushes into the high-end retail world have largely fell flat, because consumer generally associate the online retailer with discounts and non-luxury brands.


Back in 2006, the company acquired Shopbop and retooled the site to focus on more designer brands. Then, in 2012, Amazon executives made a push for what they deemed a significant investment in luxury brands.


Amazon’s Purchase Of Luxury Retailer Net-a-Porter Far From Certain, But Talks On-Going [Forbes]




by Ashlee Kieler via Consumerist

jikConsumerist Friday Flickr Findsde

4 4 4 4

Here are eight of the best photos that readers added to the Consumerist Flickr Pool in the last week, picked for usability in a Consumerist post or for just plain neatness.










Want to see your pictures on our site? Our Flickr Pool is the place where Consumerist readers upload photos for possible use in future Consumerist posts. Just be a registered Flickr user, go here, and click “Join Group?” up on the top right. Choose your best photos, then click “send to group” on the individual images you want to add to the pool.




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

четверг, 26 марта 2015 г.

jikAmericans Losing Taste For Artificial Sweeteners, Pepsi Retakes #2 Sales Spotde

4 4 4 4

Recently released data about the beverage industry tells us some interesting things. Plain old high fructose corn syrup-laden Coke is the top-selling soda in the United States, but its calorie-free cousin has to give up its silver medal: Regular Pepsi is now the #2 seller out of all fizzy non-alcoholic drinks, following an overall trend against diet sodas.

The beverage industry is trying to disprove health concerns that consumers have about calorie-free sweeteners, funding research assuring the public that everything is cool and that the drinks can even help with weight loss. Consumers aren’t buying the evidence, though, and are buying less diet soda than they used to. Consumers are either turning to other types of beverages or sugar-laden soda. When they switch to soda, they drink less of it in general.


The problem could be with NutraSweet, which is why beverage companies are so desperate to find a better sweetener for diet drinks, or to shave a few calories off regular ones.


The news is good for makers of energy drinks and bottled water, though: sales of those products are up overall. Wise soda-makers will direct more of their resources to marketing their products in those categories.


Both Coke and Pepsi are pushing mini-cans on soda fans as well, trying to boost revenue per-ounce while pretending to care about consumers’ health.


Diet Coke Loses Position as No. 2 Soda in U.S. to Pepsi-Cola [Wall Street Journal]

Diet sodas fall in US; Pepsi takes back No. 2 spot [AP]




by Laura Northrup via Consumerist

jikFlorida Hotel Wakes Up Spring Breakers By Blasting ‘Lion King’ Theme Every Morningde

4 4 4 4

There’s more than one way to wake a slumbering college student after a night spent drinking Jell-O shots and vigorously grinding all up on each other in the sweaty ritual booze mess that is known as Spring Break, but blasting loud music from an animated Disney movie is much nicer than getting a firehose involved, I suppose.

A Holiday Inn Resort in Panama City Beach, FL has become famous for its daily sounding of “The Circle of Life” from The Lion King at 11 a.m. each morning, reports WJHG.com. That way no one’s sleeping through checkout time, that’s for darn sure.


Everyone comes out onto their balconies to greet the day and impending afternoon, singing and cheering like only the young can do after a night carousing.


The hotel’s marketing director said the tradition started in 2012 when the DJ decided to spice things up.


“It was a song that worked real well as a wake up call because of the loud beat in it and it also works real well because of the message of the song. It fits with the kids and the mood and what they’re going through right now,” he said, ostensibly referencing how tough it is to have basically no responsibilities for days on end other than winning beer pong and successfully washing huge black X’s off your hands to get into the clurb underage.


While it doesn’t seem that anyone holds up an adorable baby lion, the ritual is a hit with the kids.


“I think it’s awesome. I cried the first day because I was so happy I thought it was so cool,” said one spring break guest who in 15 years or so will be crying when the alarm clock is shrieking at 7 a.m. and hangovers aren’t so fun anymore.


Holiday Inn Resort Gives Spring Breakers A Wake Up Call They’ll Never Forget [WJHG.com]




by Mary Beth Quirk via Consumerist