Culture – the way of life of a group of people passed down from one generation to the next through learning
Enculturation – learning our native culture(s) in childhood
Acculturation – adapting to another culture
Culture shock – the stress associated with acculturation

Friday, August 8, 2008

Thirsty Black Boy

Another quick hit, via Racialicious:

I recently came across the above campaign, produced by Mortierbrigade Brussel, an ad agency in Belgium.

MediaBistro notes:

To attract attention for the cause, a young boy dressed in shorts and a tank top could be seen running into prime time TV shows (live programs, with hosts) only to drink the water that sat in front of the hosts, or their guests. The boy chugged the water and ran off.

In three days, the boy had been on enough programs that a stir was created. In just six days, people donated the equivalent of $5.24 million dollars. Considering the relatively small size of Belgium, that’s no small feat.

The viral piece was meant to highlight the disparaging situation for the 1.1 billion people that don’t have clean water, and the fact a child dies every 15 seconds from a lack of clean water. The agency’s client ‘Music for Life’ and their partner, The Red Cross, did more for clean water in a week than anyone could have imagined.

(It is also interesting to note that Media Bistro took the word “Black” out of the title when reporting the piece.)



Take a look, tell us what you think. I, much like Latoya, find it interesting that MediaBistro took the word "black" out of the piece.

1 comment:

Nathalie said...

I've been looking for commentary on this in the Francophone blogosphere (I don't read Flemish or Dutch) but am not finding anything. As far as I can tell the kid in question is referred to as "Black Boy" in the English-language ad copy, but as "jeune garcon" (young boy) in French-language news articles. I'm not sure why the ad agency made this choice, but I'm thinking it probably has something to do with alliteration and the fact that to a Belgian audience, being black is a more distinguishing characteristic than being young. I don't have a problem with the agency choosing a black kid over a differently hued one - in fact, I would have found it pretty offensive if they'd used a blonde to draw attention to an overwhelmingly non-white issue. If anything, why a boy and not a girl? Did they even consider a girl? I'm guessing not, seeing as male is overwhelmingly seen as the "default" model of humanity.