Posted on 08/09/2002 10:37:09 AM PDT by Lockbox
Not Getting Any
- So, in New York in 2002, the intersection of HIV-AIDS advocacy, racial outreach, and sex education has come to this: the city is spending $1 million of taxpayers money to plaster the city with advertisements, including one with two cuddling scantily clad African-Americans and the message:
He calls you sweet baby
And sweet sugar plum.
If he wont wear a ______
He aint getting none.
The New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene actually announced this campaign with a press release in which the citys health and mental hygiene commissioner, Thomas Frieden, proclaimed that the ad campaign targets demographic groups with the greatest risk for HIV, including sexually active women of color between the ages of 16 and 30.
Well, the idea of targeting people of color with a city-funded ad that uses the phrase aint getting none strikes us as it aint none too good. Its bad enough that the citys public schools are failing to teach students, many of them minorities, proper English. But for the city to reinforce the improper English with advertising based on the assumption that people of color speak using double negatives and aint it boggles the mind.
Were hardly the guardians of political correctness on racial or for that matter any other matters, so we called around to test our own reaction with some of the citys civil rights leaders. The interim CEO of the New York Urban League, Adrian Lewis, made clear that she was speaking on her own behalf and not that of the league. But she said, Any time you blanket an entire group of people with one form of language or colloquialism, it is unfortunate.
The executive director of the New York Civil Rights Coalition, Michael Meyers, called the ad offensive. Its insulting to resort to stereotypes when standard English can communicate your point, he said. Why cant the Health Department speak plainly to black people without using the vernacular? Black people and Hispanic people can speak and read standard English.
The national spokesman for the Congress of Racial Equality, Niger Innis, called the ad very unfortunate. It sounds like it is promoting a negative stereotype of African Americans, Mr. Innis said. We get enough of it through rap videos. We dont need the city of New York to become part of one problem while trying to solve another problem.
The director of health, media and marketing for the department of health and mental hygiene, Jeffrey Escoffier, defends the ad, saying no one has complained to the department about the ads grammar. Were trying to save lives Were trying to reach people, he said. Those little poems have a sense of humor to them. Mayor Bloombergs name appears at the bottom of the ad. A spokesman for Mr. Bloomberg, Jordan Barowitz, responded to our inquiry about the matter by asking, Are you [expletive] kidding? and then demanding to know what editor at The New York Sun had put the reporter up to asking about the matter.
Our own view is that if the mayor is going to be spending a million dollars of taxpayer money on condom ads with his name at the bottom, his spokesman ought to be willing to at least entertain questions about the matter without breaking out into vulgarity. The mayor and his aides might find the ads an example of humor. But theres nothing funny about being condescended to.
How come I didn't laugh?
Why don't they target queers?
Shalom.
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Why don't they target queers?
Shalom.
He calls you sweet babyThey did.
And sweet sugar plum.
If he wont wear a ______
He aint getting none.
If they really wanted to reduce the incidence of HIV they would run the following: (ahem, ahem)
He calls you sweet baby
Or sweet sugar plum.
If you ain't a she
He ain't gettin' none.
Shalom.
careful how yo pronounce muh name, whitey!
Speaking of bad grammar.
He calls you sweet baby
And sweet sugar plum.
If he wont wear a ______
He is getting some.
"Book him."
Hmmmm. Transitive admitted to Webster's II and III, but with a scarlet dial.
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