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Heavy drinking has been normalized for women, and it’s killing them in record numbers

White women especially are drinking dangerously — and dying — as U.S. advertisers increasingly pitch edgy visions of women chugging wine, whiskey or vodka for fun, to cope with stress or to keep up with the men.

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Women sample and drink wine at a festival in Raleigh, N.C. Women consume the majority of wine in the U.S. Women in America are drinking far more, and far more frequently, than their mothers or grandmothers did.


WASHINGTON—The ads started popping up about a decade ago on social media. Instead of selling alcohol with sex and romance, these ads had an edgier theme: Harried mothers chugging wine to cope with everyday stress. Women embracing quart-sized bottles of whiskey, and bellying up to bars to knock back vodka shots with men.

In this new strain of advertising, women’s liberation equalled heavy drinking, and alcohol researchers say it both heralded and promoted a profound cultural shift: Women in the U.S. are drinking far more, and far more frequently, than their mothers or grandmothers did, and alcohol consumption is killing them in record numbers.

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A woman samples a bottle of wine at a festival in Raleigh, N.C. Companies are gearing promotions to target women, with much of the edgiest marketing appearing on social media.

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