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Big Tobacco’s Targeted 
Marketing Module

Module 2:

WHO THEY TARGET

Big Tobacco &
the LGBTQ+ Community

“It seems to me that homosexuals have made enormous progress in changing their image in this country… A few years back they were considered damaging, bad and immoral, but today they have become acceptable members of society… We should research this material and perhaps learn from it.”

- Philip Morris Tobacco Company

The tobacco industry has spent millions of dollars investing in the LGBTQ+ community. Over the decades, companies have made campaign contributions to elected officials, funded AIDS research and organizations, sponsored Pride marches, street fairs, and film festivals. Advertisements often depicted smoking as a normal part of LGBTQ+ life and used phrases that supported LGBTQ+ pride.

Here’s a look at their targeted marketing tactics throughout the decades.

Philip Morris & Women’s Tennis

From the 1970s – 1990s, Philip Morris sponsored numerous women’s tennis tours. By the early 1990s, the brand Virginia Slims had a strong presence in the lesbian press and had advertised with Martina Navratilova.

In 1999, Philip Morris announced that lesbian activist and tennis star Billie Jean King had been elected to its board of directors. King’s relationship with Philip Morris began in 1970 when the company formed the Virginia Slims Tennis Tour. Her election to the board was controversial as King was a role model to many girls and women and the LGBTQ+ community at the time.

Sources for this section include Truth Tobacco Industry Documents, and the Truth Initiative.

African American/Black Community
Asian American & Pacific Islander Community
Hispanic/Latinx Community
LGBTQ + Community
American Indian/Native American Community
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Say What! EST. 2011

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