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AP
(1-8-03)
New
TV commercials link gas-guzzling SUVs to terrorism funding;
By
NADA EL SAWY, Associated Press Writer
A group
opposed to U.S. reliance on foreign oil on Wednesday debuted two
television ads that try to link gas-guzzling sport utility vehicles
to terrorist funding, mimicking spots that connect drug money to
"terrible things."
One
commercial features a child's voiceover connecting the dots between
a man filling his gas tank and terrorist training footage. The closing
statement: "Oil money supports some terrible things. What kind
of mileage does your SUV get?" The other ad features talking
heads commenting about their SUVs. One person says, "My kids
think it's cool." Another says, "I helped blow up a nightclub."
The
30-second ads were created for The Detroit Project, a nonprofit
launched by syndicated columnist Arianna Huffington. They will began
airing Jan. 12 in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco,
Washington and Detroit.
The
ads were written and directed by Scott Burns, who was part of the
creative team responsible for "Got Milk." They are intended
to be humorous parodies, said Burns.
A few
TV stations refused to run the commercials. Huffington said the
stations found them "controversial." The ads will air
on "Face the Nation" and "Meet the Press" on
Sunday.
"This
campaign is not designed to demonize SUV owners," Huffington
said. "We want to encourage customers to connect the dots and
make socially responsible consumer choices."
The
Detroit Project was created by Americans for Fuel Efficient Cars,
a group co-founded by Huffington, film producer Lawrence Bender,
environmental activist Laurie David, and movie and TV agent Ari
Emanuel.
In
a November column, "Support Our Troops, Dump That SUV,"
Huffington wrote that Energy Secretary Spencer Abraham had warned
that "reducing our nation's dependence on imported oil is crucial
to our national energy security."
Huffington
said she received more than 5,000 supportive letters and e-mails
in response to her columns. The $50,000 cost of creating the ads
was covered by thousands of individual small contributions. Major
donors contributed the $175,000 to buy air time.
Opponents
criticized the campaign's approach. Sam Kazman, general counsel
of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, called it "elitist
nonsense." The institute is a business lobby that favors a
nongovernment approach to regulatory issues.
"(Huffington's)
agenda basically is one of anti-mobility," Kazman said. "This
is becoming a very common car that a lot of people are buying and
some of them have perfectly valid reasons."
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