-Caveat Lector-

(Guess they should have put the "Happy Muslims" in Blackface and
had them tap dancing.)
flw

WALL STREET JOURNAL
Thursday, January 16, 2003

U.S. Suspends TV Ad Campaign
Aimed at Winning Over Muslims

By VANESSA O'CONNELL
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

The U.S. government is abandoning a high-profile television campaign,
backed by President Bush and aimed at winning the hearts and minds of the
world's Muslim and Arab populations, after meeting stiff resistance from
some crucial allied nations.

The much-ballyhooed advertising drive, known as "Shared Values," was
developed by Charlotte Beers, a Madison Avenue veteran who is now a State
Department official, and was the most controversial element of an effort to
promote a positive image of the U.S. in parts of the globe where American
interests and culture are frequently under attack.

The initial series of television spots had its debut in October and was
broadcast for five weeks in several countries, including Indonesia, the
world's largest Muslim nation. They feature five Muslims who live in the
U.S.: a baker, a journalism student, a schoolteacher, a paramedic and a
public official. In documentary-style footage created by McCann-Erickson
Worldgroup, a unit of Interpublic Group, each describes a social tolerance
of his or her background and faith. "I have co-workers who are Jewish, who
are Christian, Catholic, Hindu even," says Farooq Muhammad, clad in his New
York paramedic uniform, in one spot. "I have never gotten disrespect
because I am a Muslim."

 SELLING A NATION



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09/02/02

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Young Arabs
11/27/01

. U.S. Publicity Efforts in Terror War Fall on Deaf Ears in Muslim Nations
11/07/01




The effort immediately sparked controversy. Egypt informally warned U.S.
officials that it wouldn't put messages from other governments on its
airwaves. Cairo's ambassador didn't return calls seeking comment Wednesday.
The Lebanese ambassador to the U.S., Farid Abboud, said, "We shouldn't run
messages on behalf of other governments." A spokesman for the Jordanian
embassy said the spots didn't run in Jordan, which has three channels, all
government-owned.

The U.S. also focused on getting play for the ads on private and government
media in other nations, such as Pakistan, Malaysia and Kuwait, and via
pan-Arab broadcasters such as the Middle East Broadcasting Centre, an
Arabic satellite-TV station based in Dubai. The spots went on the air
starting Oct. 28 in most countries and ran through Dec. 10, to coincide
with Ramadan, a Muslim holy period.

Explaining the decision to suspend the ads, State Department officials said
the U.S. recently decided to emphasize public relations rather than TV and
print ads in Muslim countries with substantial anti-American sentiment.
"The television, print and radio spots are down right now," one official
said. "We are looking at where we are going next with the effort."

Calls to Ms. Beers's office were referred to the State Department press
office.

The U.S. budgeted about $15 million for the entire effort, spearheaded by
Ms. Beers, who is currently undersecretary for Public Diplomacy and Public
Affairs. Thus far, the U.S. has spent about $7.5 million. About $5 million
of that sum was used to buy media time for the "Shared Values" spots. The
commercials were one and two minutes long.

The State Department tied the initial batch of ads to Ramadan in the hopes
of striking a chord with the people in the Arab nations it hoped to reach.
The U.S. hasn't specified an end date for its overall effort and continues
to work with the McCann-Erickson agency, though there currently aren't any
new spots in the works.

State Department officials noted that the campaign can in theory continue
until the funds run out. But department officials are currently working
with McCann-Erickson to determine what impact -- if any -- the campaign may
have had and to figure out what form the future efforts will take. One idea
is to begin moving the ads into other countries where there are large
numbers of Muslims, including the Philippines, Morocco and some of the
former Soviet republics. Already, some elements of the initial campaign
have appeared outside of the target market, airing in some African nations
and in certain parts of Europe.

In addition to the criticism leveled by some Muslim nations, the spots were
faulted at home, too. "The ads were extremely poor," says Youssef Ibrahim,
a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, a think tank based in
New York. "It was like this was the 1930s and the government was running
commercials showing happy blacks in America. It is the policy itself we
have to explain. You have to grab the bull by the horn, and the bull is
'Hey, here's our policy and there are good reasons for it,' instead of
saying, 'Gee, there are a lot of happy Muslim people here.' "

"The real question on the 'Shared Values' campaign is whether it does more
good than harm," says Steve Hayden, vice chairman of Ogilvy & Mather, a
McCann rival and unit of WPP Group PLC. "My premise was that any effort to
address ordinary people that have been ignored too long is worthy. But
Islamic opinion is influenced more by what the U.S. does than anything it
can say."

Those involved with the ads respond that the idea behind them was simply to
show there isn't an anti-Muslim movement by the American public. "These ads
were intended to reach the masses and go to everyday people," a State
Department official said.

Officials at the department originally floated the idea of buying time on
al-Jazeera, the Qatar-based Arabic satellite news channel, but ultimately
decided it was too expensive. The network sells a one-minute commercial
during prime time for about $10,000. That's considerably less than the rate
charged by U.S. TV networks, where one 30-second commercial on a popular
program such as "Friends," on General Electric Co.'s NBC, costs about
$400,000.

Abdul-Raouf Hammuda, a Toledo, Ohio, bakery owner, who appeared in some
spots, said he was paid for his role in the campaign. Cameramen followed
him and his family for 10 days to come up with the footage for the TV
spots. More recently, he and his wife visited Lebanon on a four-day
speaking tour at U.S. expense. "The reaction varied from those who were
supportive to the idea of building this campaign to others who were
suspicious and skeptical that life for Muslims in America was really all
that good," said Mr. Hammuda, who is 45 years old.

Officials at the State Department say that while they are rethinking the
television strategy, they will continue to use the Internet to reach
Muslims overseas through opendialogue.org (www.opendialogue.org), a site
created by the U.S. to support the effort. Thus far, visitors to the site
have ordered 5,000 copies of "Muslim Life in America," a marketing booklet
created for the "Shared Values" effort, according to a spokeswoman for the
State Department.

"You try to develop a multidimensional approach to this, and TV is one part
of that," Philip Reeker, the deputy spokesman of the State Department said.
"This particular phase started in a certain group of countries. The paid
run is now over."

The move to get the U.S. messages on television airwaves in the Muslim and
Arab world comes just as Arab nations are gearing up their own spin. Though
none have yet broadcast high-profile political commercials on U.S.
television, information ministers of several Arab nations are working to
launch an English-language channel that could be seen in the U.S.

In Indonesia, the U.S. television spots ran for five weeks on five leading
private stations, according to a U.S. embassy spokesperson in Jakarta.
Complementary radio commercials aired on 50 stations nationwide, and a
print advertising campaign ran in both mainstream and Islam-oriented
magazines. "Indonesia is a moderate, open society and there's a thirst for
information," says Ralph Boyce, the U.S. ambassador to Indonesia, who
helped to launch the campaign. He adds that Indonesians were particularly
interested in a television commercial that featured an Indonesian
journalism student at the University of Missouri.

-- Sadanand Dhume contributed to this article.

Updated January 16, 2003

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