Public service announcement

CDC public service announcement
A PSA from the CDC regarding H1N1 prevention.

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A public service announcement (PSA) or public service ad, is a message in the public interest disseminated by the media without charge, with the objective of raising awareness, changing public attitudes and behavior towards a social issue. In the UK, they are generally called public information films (PIFs); in Hong Kong, they are known as announcements in the public interest (APIs).

History

The earliest public service announcements were made before and during the Second World War years in both the UK and the US.

In the UK, amateur actor Richard Massingham set up Public Relationship Films Ltd in 1938 as a specialist agency for producing short educational films for the public. In the films, he typically played a bumbling character who was slightly stupider than average, and often explained the message of the film through demonstrating the risks if it was ignored. Films' topics included how to cross the road, how to prevent the spread of diseases, how to swim and how to drive without causing the road to be unsafe for other users. During the war, he was commissioned by the Ministry of Information to produce films for the war effort.[1] Massingham began to produce longer films, for both private companies and the Government, after the War.

In the US, the Ad Council (initially called the War Advertising Council) was set up in 1941, when America entered World War II.[2] It began implementing on a massive scale the idea of using advertising to influence American society on a range of fronts. Their first campaigns focused on the country's needs during World War II, such as encouraging the American public to invest their savings in government bonds.

After the War, PSAs were used to educate the public on a broader range of important issues. In the UK, they were produced for the Central Office of Information (COI), and again by private contractors, which were usually small film companies, such as Richard Taylor Cartoons. They were supplied to broadcasters free of charge for them to use whenever they wished. Their usefulness as a cost-free means to fill the gaps in fixed-duration commercial breaks left by unsold advertising airtime led to their being used regularly and extensively in the 60s, 70s and much of the 80s, and consequently, within both the COI and broadcasting companies they were typically known as "fillers". They are still being produced, although the vastly reduced need for broadcasters to turn to third-party filler material to deal with unused airtime during breaks or junctions means they are now only seen rarely.

In the US, the Ad Council expanded its focus to address issues such as forest fires, blood donations and highway safety.[3][4]

Characteristics

USA

The most common topics of PSAs are health and safety, such as the multimedia Emergency Preparedness & Safety Tips On Air and Online (talk radio/blog) campaign.[5][6][7][8] A typical PSA is part of a public awareness campaign to inform or educate the public about an issue such as obesity or compulsive gambling. The range of possible topics has expanded over time.

From time to time a charitable organization enlists the support of a celebrity for a PSA; examples include actress Kathryn Erbe telling people to be green and Crips gang leader Stanley Williams speaking from prison to urge youth not to join gangs. Some PSAs tell people to adopt animals instead of buying them. Protecting our Earth, also known as being green, is another example of a current PSA topic.

Some television shows featuring very special episodes made PSAs after the episodes. For example, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit talked about child abduction in one episode, so it had a PSA about child abduction. Another example is when the original Law & Order did an episode about drunk driving, which had a PSA about drunk driving.

One of the earliest television public service announcements came in the form of Smokey Bear.[9]

During the 1980s, a large number of American cartoon shows contained PSA's at the end of their shows. These may or may not have been relevant to the episode itself. Three of the most widely known are the closing moral segments at the end of He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, the "Knowing is Half the Battle" epilogues in G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero and the "Sonic Sez" segments from Adventures of Sonic the Hedgehog.

Some television PSAs have topics such as on not watching so much television, or not taking fictional shows literally; or about television, movie, or video game ratings. Public service advertising has become a significant force in changing public attitudes on topics such as drinking and driving, crime abatement and various health/safety issues. While stations have never been mandated by the FCC to use a prescribed number of PSAs, they are required to prove they broadcast in the public interest and PSAs are one of the ways they meet that requirement as part of serving as a "public trustee."[10] Many television affiliates and cable networks employ PSA directors who review all the PSAs provided by nonprofit organizations and choose which ones to schedule.[11]

UK

Further information: Public information film

Public Information Films produced by the Britain's COI covered a wide range of subjects, most related to safety, but also on other subjects, including animal cruelty, environment, crime prevention and voting.

Advertisements produced by companies and private groups, such as the NSPCC's Cartoon Boy, and British Gas's commercials about gas leaks are considered by fans as a form of non-Governmental PIFs.

In other countries

China's first PSAs in 1978 were about saving water and was broadcast on Guiyang television. In Hong Kong, terrestrial television networks have been required since National Day, 2004, to preface their main evening news broadcasts with a minute-long announcement in the public interest which plays the Chinese National Anthem in Mandarin over various patriotic montages.[12][13]

Festivals and contests

IAA Responsibility Awards is an annual international festival of public service announcements, held by the International Advertising Association since 2008.[17]

See also

References

  1. "A Warning to Travellers".
  2. Museum of Broadcast Communications
  3. Matters of Choice: Advertising in the Public Interest
  4. Goodrum, Charles & Helen Dalrymple (1990). Advertising in America :the first 200 years. Harry N. Abrams. ISBN 978-0-8109-1187-1. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  5. "National Safety Month". Nsc.org. Retrieved 2010-04-09.
  6. "Flavor Flav Celebrates National Safety Month". Blogcritics. Archived from the original on 2012-07-14.
  7. "Lisa Tolliver show notes". Emergency Preparedness and Safety Tips On Air and Online.
  8. "Lisa Tolliver's Show Notes". Lisa Tolliver On Air and Online.
  9. http://www.psaresearch.com/bib9830.html
  10. Public Service Announcements, Broadcasters, and the Public Interest: Regulatory Background and the Digital Future
  11. NonProfit PSA Campaigns
  12. Vickers, Edward. "Learning to Love the Motherland: 'National Education' in Post-Retrocession Hong Kong" in Designing History in East Asian Textbooks: Identity Politics and Transnational Aspirations, p. 94. Routledge (Abingdon), 2011. ISBN 9780415602525.
  13. Examples from 2008,[14] 2009,[15] and 2012.[16]
  14. "中国国歌 Chinese National Anthem". Hosted at YouTube, 10 August 2008. Accessed 25 January 2015.
  15. TVB News. 6點半新聞報道 [Liù Diǎn Bàn Xīnwén Bàodào, News at 6:30], 28 June 2009 (better version). Hosted on YouTube, 10 July 2009. Accessed 25 January 2015. (Chinese) & (Cantonese)
  16. "Chinese National Anthem". YouTube, 9 May 2012.
  17. IAA Responsibility Awards
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