The message was simple. "Smart cowboys
don't use tobacco."
That was what radio personality 'Cowboy
Ted' Hallisey told Oakdale children during rodeo week
2005.
Hallisley was in Oakdale to promote
healthy lifestyles and send a strong anti-tobacco message to
students at Fair Oaks, Magnolia, and Cloverland Elementary Schools.
The promotion was both complementary to the Oakdale Rodeo and
counterpoint to one of its sponsors, the smokeless tobacco
company.
Hallisley is the official spokesperson
for the 'Buck Tobacco' campaign, a statewide operation promoted by
county health services agencies to teach the dangers of smokeless,
or 'spit' tobacco. The quoted statement is one of many that he made
to the fourth through sixth grade classes at Fair Oaks elementary
school. "You can finance your college with what people spend on
chew," he told them.
He engaged the children in his
presentation and had their complete and undivided attention. That's
not such an easy task for an assembly full of kids.
He said he's perfected his presentation
style over the years and also uses a 'dummy steer' for roping that
helps him involve the kids directly in his presentation by having
some of them come up in front of the group and rope its
horns.
"I use the cowboy persona to get the
kids' attention, then I ease them into the mainstream healthy
lifestyle concepts."
Background
Hallisey has been involved in rodeo for
more than 20 years. He grew up on a small ranch in Southern
California where his family had livestock and horses. He said he
rode a few bulls, but never competed in an official
capacity.
After a few injuries, he said he found
out he could be involved in rodeo by writing about it for rodeo
publications, announcing at amateur rodeos, and talking about it on
the radio.
He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in
Speech Communication from CSU Fresno and a Master of Education
degree in Health, PE, and Recreation for Utah State
University.
Kids Club
In 1999, Hallisey was working in radio
in Salt Lake City. He was asked by station management to make some
appearances at Red Ribbon Week activities in local
schools.
"I told them, 'I'm not the best
candidate because I chew tobacco.' And they said, 'Why don't you
quit.' So I did," he said.
The reason he said he was able to do it
was because he had chewed one of the lighter, flavored, types of
'spit' tobacco, did it as more of a social thing, and had been
quitting on and off for 15 years.
He said that after quitting, for a while
he tried using the mint snuff, but realized it still left a
tell-tale 'ring' in the hip pocket of his jeans and made it appear
as if he were still using. Being that he was talking to the school
kids, he decided to quit chewing the mint as well. He also got rid
of all his jeans that had the worn ring in the back
pocket.
From there, things kind of snowballed.
He began talking to the kids more frequently in Salt Lake, then in
schools across Utah.
He said schools made suggestions, and
then some principals suggested that he organize a kids club, which
they believed would help give some kids a sense of identity. Cowboy
Ted's Kids Club was born.
"The first year, 5,000 joined. Now,
there's got to be over 20,000," he said. "I totally embrace the
opportunity to be a role model for kids."
The foundation of the Cowboy Ted's Kids
Club is a list of eight healthy lifestyle rules that are symbolic of
an 8-second ride in rodeo.
The eight rules are: Respect Parents,
Lead a Healthy Lifestyle, Work Hard in School, Be Nice to Others, Be
Kind to Animals, No Drugs, Tobacco, or Alcohol, Set Goals For
Yourself, and Do Something Nice For Another Person Every
Day.
The mission statement for the kids club
is 'To introduce young people to a positive Cowboy role model, who
will encourage youngsters to choose a Healthy Lifestyle for
themselves, including the choice to refuse to use tobacco
products.'
After becoming more known in Utah and
some published information on the Internet, he started getting calls
from Wyoming, Montana, and then California.
Rodeo and Tobacco
Hallisey said that he hopes rodeo will
get on the bandwagon with other professional and college sports and
ban the use of tobacco sponsorships, the way that NASCAR and others
have.
The Buck Tobacco program even presented
the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association with a certified letter
to then commissioner Steve Hatchell to ask the association to stop
using the tobacco sponsorship.
Hallisey said the PRCA issued a
statement to Buck Tobacco about wanting to hear what the people had
to say before they renew their USST (U.S. Smokeless Tobacco Company)
sponsorship, but wouldn't force individual rodeos to follow suit
either way.
"Tobacco sponsorship has not always been
a part of rodeo. They came in when they figured out they could make
money.
"A lot of people think that tobacco has
always been involved in rodeo. Tobacco never had a place in rodeo.
They paid money so they could showcase their product.
"If we look back in history, we'll see
that tobacco has only been in rodeo for a short period of
time.
"I think it's a disservice to the
cowboys because they're getting them hooked. A bunch of these guys
think they have to use tobacco to be a cowboy," he said.
Part of the disservice that Hallisey
refers to is that rodeo contestants are frequently given free cans
of tobacco included in contestant bags at rodeos around the
country.
"I don't talk to the adults about it
(not using tobacco), especially in the rodeo world. The cowboys
don't want to hear it from me, so I talk to the kids," he
said.
A Plea For Local Change
The timing of the presentations set up
by the Stanislaus County Health Service Agency were purposefully
meant to take place just before the Oakdale Rodeo, where tobacco
sponsorships provide money and a scoreboard to put on the rodeo that
many consider to be a family event.
"We'd like to encourage the community
and the rodeo not to take tobacco sponsorship anymore," said SCHSA
health educator Ken Fitzgerald.
The SCHSA has complained that a
smokeless (spit) tobacco sampling tent has been located next to
child attractions at the rodeo and have tried, so far
unsuccessfully, to convince Oakdale Saddle Club officials to drop
the tobacco sponsorship.
The OSC has responded by saying that the
sponsorship provides an expensive scoreboard that they otherwise
couldn't afford, but agreed to have the sampling tent placed
elsewhere, away from the kiddie booths. They said they need the
financial benefit of the sponsorship, and that they would need help
finding a replacement sponsor if they were to drop the current
one.
SCHSA representatives state that they
hope to continue to work with the OSC in order to bring a more
health and family oriented major sponsor to the Oakdale
Rodeo.
The Poway Rodeo in San Diego is cited as
a success story. Cowboy Ted was located and contacted via the
Internet by that county's health services agency. He visited the
area and had a booth at the rodeo.
Because of public response, the next
year the rodeo went tobacco free. Poway Rodeo officials made a
one-year commitment for the next rodeo to not use a tobacco sponsor.
Dole Fruits stepped up to the plate and filled the sponsorship
opening. The large attendance and positive write-ups in publications
for the rodeo committee's decision resulted in another year's
commitment.
"Most (rodeo) committees feel that
tobacco companies act fairly responsible, but they're still
promoting the product," said Hallisey. "What about all the kids that
go to the rodeo? I'd like to see the rodeo become a stronger family
event again."
Hallisey is getting ready to make a
presentation in Chicago at the Tobacco Or Health Conference, a
national tobacco education conference, on behalf of California's
Buck Tobacco program. The HSA is hoping to take the campaign
nationwide.
For more information about or a no-cost
membership to Cowboy Ted's Kids Club, interested persons can go to
the website designed for kids to learn about rodeo, reading, and a
healthy lifestyle at www.cowboyted.com. And for more information
about the Buck Tobacco program, they can visit www.
bucktobacco.org.
Leader staff reporter Dawn M. Henley may
be contacted at 847-3021 or dawn@oakdaleleader.net