![In one of the print ads in Children's Healthcare of Atlanta's Strong4Life campaign, a young girl says she doesn't like going to school, because]()
Enlarge Courtesy of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta
In one of the print ads in Children's Healthcare of Atlanta's Strong4Life campaign, a young girl says she doesn't like going to school, because "all the other kids pick on me. It hurts my feelings."
![In one of the print ads in Children's Healthcare of Atlanta's Strong4Life campaign, a young girl says she doesn't like going to school, because]()
Courtesy of Children's Healthcare of Atlanta In one of the print ads in Children's Healthcare of Atlanta's Strong4Life campaign, a young girl says she doesn't like going to school, because "all the other kids pick on me. It hurts my feelings."
Stark billboards and television commercials that feature overweight kids are part of a controversial anti-obesity campaign in Atlanta. The goal of the "Stop Sugarcoating It, Georgia" ads is to shock families into recognizing that obesity is a problem.
The campaign is making an impact, but the tactics are raising questions.
One of the ads features a little boy and his mom entering a room with two folding chairs. They're both clearly overweight. They sit and look at each other.
"Mom, why am I fat?" the boy asks her.
The mother bows her head, and the tag line appears. It reads: "75 percent of Georgia parents with overweight kids don't recognize the problem." Georgia has the second highest number of obese kids in the country, behind Mississippi.
In another spot, a young girl speaks directly to the camera about a disease she says she has.
"My doctor says I have something called hypertension," she says. "I'm really scared."
The ads are modeled after anti-smoking and anti-methamphetamine campaigns intended to shock the audience.
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