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A different group of children, whose broad range of skin tones reflect the diversity of the Caribbean Islands, appear in the ads aimed at immigrants from that region. They surround a model that focus groups identified as convincingly West Indian. African-Americans, meanwhile, were targeted using a TV spot with characters whose voices are muted until they mail their census forms. Those last ads resonated with African-Americans because they played to perceptions among blacks that they're not listened to by the members of the broader culture, said Damien Reid, vice president of GlobalHue, the firm that produced the ads. Not all demographic groups got the same deep-bore approach. The American Indian population was divided into four geographic zones -- instead of the more than 500 federally recognized tribal divisions
-- with familiar-type landscapes featured in ads for target areas. And among Arabic-speaking residents, the shared experience of feeling under suspicion in post-9/11 America was stronger than any cultural differences in their backgrounds, said Jalal Sayed, an account manager with Allied Media Corp., which produced ads for those groups. In one Arabic-language ad, the central image is of the main character joining a multicultural cast in mailing his census form. The purpose was to show that Arab residents weren't being singled out for surveillance by the census agency, Sayed said. "It's a tough sell in my community frankly because this is the first census since Sept. 11 and there are all these fears and concerns about racial profiling that have gone on over the last nine years," said Helen Hatab Samhan, executive director of the Arab American Institute Foundation and a member of a committee that is advising the census on its ads targeting minority communities. Samhan and other advocacy group leaders gave the census bureau high marks in its efforts to reach minority communities, but said there were still gaps in the communications strategy that they had to fill. One particularly glaring omission, she said, was the lack of advertisements targeting the native-English speaking Arab community. Her group, along with organizations representing the Hispanic and Asian communities, have independently produced English-language public service advertisements for their respective communities. Urban League president and chief executive Marc Morial, who also sits on the advisory committee, said the census campaigns effectively stressed that communities need to be fully counted in order to receive their entire allotments of political clout and economic resources. But he said the paid advertisements are no replacement for personal interactions with trusted community members. "Sometimes it's not only the message, it's the messenger," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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