Big Tobacco

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Tobacco is the nickname that is often applied to the "big three" tobacco corporations in the United States. The phrase is often used in TheTruth.com, the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, and other anti-smoking ad campaigns funded by the Master Settlement Agreement. The term usually refers to tobacco companies R. J. Reynolds, Philip Morris, and British American Tobacco, but can also include other companies with a major stake in tobacco consumption, such as Lorillard or Brown & Williamson.

One of the villains in the comic movie Mystery Men, the cigar-chomping leader of a business-themed gang, uses the pseudonym 'Big Tobacco'.

In addition, Big Tobacco is featured in the movie Thank You for Smoking. Nick Naylor (Aaron Eckhart) plays a lobbyist for Big Tobacco.

"Big Tobacco didn't spend billions of dollars making it impossible to quit smoking so that anyone with a hammer, an ice pick, and good aim could make it any easier." Stephen Colbert


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