Public service announcements urge dads, role models
to teach boys that violence is wrong
Men teach boys how to hit a baseball, hit the net, hit the receiver, and much more. But are men taking the time to teach boys that violence against women and girls is wrong?
The Family Violence Prevention Fund (FVPF), the Waitt Institute
and the Advertising Council recently released a new 30-second
public service advertisement (PSA) for television that invites
men to do so. It is the newest component of the Coaching
Boys Into Men campaign, launched in 2002.
"The Coaching Boys Into Men campaign has invited
men to be part of the solution by teaching the next generation
that violence is always wrong," said FVPF President Esta Soler.
"We are enormously grateful to McCann Erickson San Francisco
and the Ad Council for their support, and to the Waitt Institute
for its generosity. This powerful new spot will do even more
to keep women and children safe by helping stop domestic and
sexual violence."
The campaign is changing men's behavior. A study by Millward
Brown, Inc. and RMA, Inc. found a significant increase in the
proportion of men who have taken the action promoted in the
PSAs - speaking to boys about violence. Twenty-nine percent
said they had done so in November of 2001, before Coaching
Boys Into Men launched, and 41 percent had done so in February
of last year.
The spots are especially meaningful to parents, 56 percent of whom have spoken to their sons or other boys about the issue. Fifty-seven percent of fathers said they now speak to boys about violence, compared to 29 percent of men who are not fathers.
McCann Erickson San Francisco created the new English-language
PSA pro bono; it is available for viewing at www.endabuse.org/cbim/.
The PSAs direct audiences to visit www.endabuse.org for tips on how to talk to boys about violence against women
and girls.
New Spanish language radio and web banner PSAs are also
available; they direct audiences to www.nomasabuso.org.
The Ad Council is distributing the PSAs to media outlets
nationwide, to run in time and space donated by media. Since
2002, Coaching Boys Into Men has received tens of millions
of dollars in donated media and four million unique visitors
have come to the campaign website.
Domestic violence agencies can work with local television
stations to put a local "tag" at the end of the PSA. For information
on implementing the Coaching Boys Into Men campaign in your
community, contact Leiana Kinnicutt at the Family Violence Prevention
Fund, 415/252-8900 or leiana@endabuse.org.
--Speaking Up, Volume 12, Issue 4
April 14, 2006
Family Violence Prevention Fund