Pubdate: Mon, 05 Feb 2001 Source: Newsweek (US) Copyright: 2001 Newsweek, Inc. Contact: 251 West 57th Street, New York, N.Y. 10019 Website: http://www.msnbc.com/news/NW-front_Front.asp Author: Devin Gordon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) ADS: THE WAR ON DRUGS GOES TO THE AIR Know Who Makes All Those Anti-drug Spots? Doesn't Matter: They Work Feb. 12 issue - Anybody who's turned on a television in the past 14 years has seen the work of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America. Remember these? A girl jackknifes off a diving board into an empty pool. Another bashes a kitchen to smithereens with a cast-iron pan. And, of course, a man fries an egg on a stove and explains-all together now-that this is your brain on drugs. AND YET, if you ask parents and kids just who exactly the Partnership is, most of them say... nothing. "The usual response is 'Don't know'," says executive vice president Steve Dnistrian, smiling. "That's intentional. We don't bother with brand identity. The message is our brand." The message is also hitting its mark. A report released last week by the National Institute on Drug Abuse found that anti-marijuana advertising has helped cut teen use by 26.7 percent. Earlier studies by the University of Michigan, New York University and Johns Hopkins each concluded that anti-drug messages have significantly reduced usage among children in every age group. The partnership does have its naysayers-new Attorney General John Ashcroft, for one, believes the campaign is a waste of federal money-but the research doesn't help their case. Says Lloyd Johnston of Michigan's Institute for Social Research: "The kids we studied were actually willing to admit that something had influenced them. I was amazed." UNSELLING A PRODUCT The partnership isn't so surprised. Launched in 1986 by a handful of the advertising industry's finest minds, the nonprofit is in the midst of a five-year, $1 billion joint venture with the Office of National Drug Control Policy. "And I've been ferocious in guarding those dollars," says outgoing drug czar Gen. Barry McCaffrey. The ads-created pro bono by a roster of 200 firms-reach every child in America approximately eight times a week. "The underlying theory is, 'If we can sell a product, why can't we unsell one?' " says founding member Allen Rosenshine, director of ad-industry titan BBDO Worldwide and chair of the partnership's star-studded creative-review board. The key, he says, is to maintain credibility: don't mislead, don't exaggerate, or kids will tune you out. That'll be critical as the partnership tackles its next challenge: ecstasy. Dnistrian admits that the party drug's sudden rise caught the group by surprise; now it's racing to come up with a response. To get there, the partnership's 35-member permanent staff will lean heavily on its review board, which makes all creative decisions. "The crown jewel of our operation," Dnistrian calls it. "You can't buy this kind of talent. If you were IBM or Ford, you'd kill for it." Others would kill to get in front of it. For rising stars, pitching to the partnership is the ultimate job interview. Says Stanley Becker of Saatchi & Saatchi: "When I see a piece of work that's really brilliant, I make a mental note of who did it." Kids, meanwhile, make a mental note of what it's saying. With Ana Figueroa in Los Angeles and Julie Scelfo in New York - --- MAP posted-by: GD