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New Jersey Looks For New State Slogan
WKMG TV NEWS & AP ^ | 11-14-2005

Posted on 11/14/2005 5:50:52 PM PST by Cagey

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. -- Make us a slogan we can't refuse, the state of New Jersey said. We got your slogan right here, the people replied.

A push to come up with a new slogan for the Garden State has become an excuse to crack New Jersey jokes. Among the not-so-serious entries:

"New Jersey: You Got a Problem With That?"

"NJ: How You Doin'?!"

"Most of Our Elected Officials Have Not Been Indicted."

The search yielded more than 4,000 possibilities in all, many of them attempts to sum up the land of Bruce Springsteen, "The Sopranos" and smelly interstates in one pithy phrase. The deadline for submissions was Monday.

The program began last month after acting Gov. Richard J. Codey rejected a consultant's recommendation -- "New Jersey: We'll Win You Over" -- as too negative. That slogan, developed as part of a $260,000 contract by global image consultants Lippincott Mercer, was shelved a day before it was to be unveiled.

Instead, the state opened the process to the public, establishing a Web site and telephone hot line to receive suggestions, which included the lyrical ("The Ocean, The Motion, The Magic") along with the satirical.

New Jersey, which once used "New Jersey and You: Perfect Together," has not had a new marketing slogan in four years. "Get Away, Without Going Far Away" has been used in the interim, but tourism officials say it does not resonate with out-of-staters.

"We have the opportunity to craft a new message for our tourist literature to reflect the pride we have in our many parks, open spaces, farmlands, quaint villages, boardwalks and beaches and our exciting cities," Codey implored would-be slogan writers on the Web site.

The governor and the state Commerce, Economic Growth and Tourism Commission will "pare down the suggestions and go from there," said Karen Wolfe, a commission spokeswoman.

The state's musical legacy -- Frank Sinatra called New Jersey home, Springsteen still does -- led one person to suggest "From Ol' Blue Eyes to the Boss: Jersey Is Singing Your Song." Another entry: "Born to Fun."

Others found New Jersey's reputation for mobsters, toxic waste sites and lowbrow taste fair game. "Bada Bing! Choose New Jersey" was one suggestion.

The campaign was run by the state, but newspaper columnists, talk radio and "Saturday Night Live" got into the spirit, too. "New Jersey: It Always Smells Like This," one Philadelphia Inquirer reader suggested. "New Jersey: Come Glow With Us," another said.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; US: New Jersey
KEYWORDS: joisey; sopranostan
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To: Cagey

New Jersey:


201 posted on 11/15/2005 8:52:49 AM PST by Revolting cat! ("in the end, nothing explains anything.")
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To: Cagey
New Jersey: You Have to Pay to Leave the State.

(check the toll roads ... you pay to get out of NJ)

202 posted on 11/15/2005 8:56:27 AM PST by Tanniker Smith (By defiintion, we cannot have Consensus until you agree with me.)
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To: Cagey

New Jersey: What exit?
New Jersey: Where the men wear mustaches to look more like their mothers.
New Jersey: Your land is our land.


203 posted on 11/15/2005 9:17:23 AM PST by JSepielli
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To: RegulatorCountry

New Jersey: Ten thousand murder victims can't be wrong!

Born and raised Paterson in the 5o's


204 posted on 11/15/2005 11:25:28 AM PST by Always Independent
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To: Jersey Republican Biker Chick

New Jersey madness ping


205 posted on 12/28/2005 2:33:41 PM PST by Chanticleer (A free society is a place where it's safe to be unpopular. -- Adlai Stevenson)
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To: thackney
True, but how many state songs have words like ribber, ebber and darkeys in them?

Old Folks at Home was written by Stephen Foster, who never came to Florida nor visited the Suwannee River. (It just fit the meter and sounded better than the Pedee River!)

I can appreciate the contribution Stephen Foster made to the music of his day, and the contribution his song made to early tourism in Florida, but man! Can't we come up with something a little better than this for today? Keep the museum, keep the song in the history books, but give us something we can sing without shame! (And, although I love Jimmy Buffet, I mean something that doesn't refer to alcohol abuse and loose morals!)

206 posted on 12/28/2005 2:46:54 PM PST by Chanticleer (A free society is a place where it's safe to be unpopular. -- Adlai Stevenson)
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