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Main Forums => AIDS Activism => Topic started by: edfu on February 08, 2011, 10:42:55 pm

Title: ADAP Advocacy Assoc. Produces PSA's
Post by: edfu on February 08, 2011, 10:42:55 pm
The ADAP Advocacy Association has produced two public-service announcements on ADAP which will begin airing later this month.  This is the first time that PSAs have addressed ADAPs.  One is 1 minute, and one is 5 minutes.

http://www.youtube.com/adapadvocacy#p/a/u/1/gagV7r9lG_I


 
Title: Re: ADAP Advocacy Assoc. Produces PSA's
Post by: emeraldize on February 09, 2011, 07:42:18 am
Thanks for posting this. I'd like to know why the association opted to use a British voiceover for a very American problem. It doesn't fit in this setting.
Title: Re: ADAP Advocacy Assoc. Produces PSA's
Post by: edfu on February 09, 2011, 08:05:35 am
I thought the exact same thing.   ???
Title: Re: ADAP Advocacy Assoc. Produces PSA's
Post by: edfu on February 10, 2011, 11:00:18 pm
I e-mailed Brandon Macsata, the executive director of the ADAP Advocacy Assoc., to report that I and others thought the plummy British accent used for the voice-overs in the PSA's was particularly inappropriate for such a particularly U.S. problem, and he responded:

==========
Ed - Thanks for your feedback.  Actually, you're the first person who has provided such feedback about the voice-over.  The "plummy" British accent, as you put it, was selected on purpose because media research demonstrates that a British accent carries with it a higher degree of credibility and trust.  The PSA is not geared necessarily toward the "choir" (aka HIV/AIDS activists), but rather the "general" public who know little or nothing about HIV/AIDS, or ADAPs.  Rest assured that there were very valid reasons behind the voice-over, as well as all other aspects of the PSA.  Nonetheless, thanks again for your feedback.
Regards,
Brandon

==========

I'm as big an Anglophile as any, but I must admit that I really don't agree with this reasoning.   



Title: Re: ADAP Advocacy Assoc. Produces PSA's
Post by: Miss Philicia on February 11, 2011, 08:27:17 am
The "plummy" British accent, as you put it, was selected on purpose because media research demonstrates that a British accent carries with it a higher degree of credibility and trust. 

How odd.  British accents just conjure up images of binge drinkers vomiting on the street outside of a pub and people with really bad teeth.