Pubdate: Thu, 09 Jul 1998 Source: Reuters Author: Arshad Mohammed CLINTON KICKS OFF $2 BILLION ANTI-DRUG MEDIA BLITZ ATLANTA (Reuters) - Seeking to shock children into avoiding illegal drugs, President Clinton Thursday launched a $2 billion media blitz of provocative radio, television, newspaper and Internet ads. The money, half from the government and half to be raised from the private sector, will be spent over the next five years, beginning with simultaneous anti-drug advertisements on the major U.S. television networks Thursday night. The ads are designed to be jarring, with one showing a girl screaming and smashing things with a frying pan while telling the audience this is what drugs will do to their lives. Another shows a child recounting her mother's warnings about talking to strangers and playing with matches. Asked what her mother had said about drugs, the girl is silent. Officials said the Clinton administration is trying to use the most sophisticated techniques of television and Hollywood to shake children and their parents out of complacency about the effects of illegal drugs. Critics, however, say there is scant evidence that such ad campaigns work and that the $1 billion that is to come from the government, along with an equal amount in free air time and advertising space from media groups, could be better spent. Speaking in Atlanta, Clinton recalled his half-brother Roger's drug habit and said the ads were aimed at everyone: children, their parents and siblings. "My brother nearly died from a cocaine habit and I've asked myself a thousand times: what kind of fool was I that I did not know that this was going on?" he said. "How did this happen that I didn't see this coming and didn't stop it?" "Nobody in America is free of this: not the president, not any community, any school, any church, any neighborhood," he added. "These ads are designed to knock America up side the head and get America's attention." Clinton launched the campaign in a rare appearance with Republican House of Representatives Speaker Newt Gingrich, who said Congress, which provided $195 million for the program's first year, would come up with the rest of the money. "We are all trying to reach out to every young American and say: don't do it," Gingrich said. The campaign, crafted by Clinton's Office of National Drug Control Policy and the Partnership for a Drug-free America as well as other nonprofit groups, is not without critics. "For the past 10 years, our nation's kids have been bombarded with anti-drug messages, and it is these same kids who are experimenting with more drugs," said Ethan Nadelmann, of the Lindesmith Center. The center is a drug policy group funded by investor George Soros, who advocates decriminalizing some drugs and emphasizing treatment instead of punishment. "While these ads are well intended, this money could be better spent on programs that are proven effective in reducing drug use, such as after-school programs and treatment on demand," Nadelmann added. After presenting the ads, Clinton was to attend an Atlanta lunch to raise $500,000 for Michael Coles, a Democrat seeking to unseat Georgia Republican Sen. Paul Coverdell. In 1996, Coles had sought to oust Gingrich from his House seat. Clinton then flies to Daytona Beach to meet with victims of the wildfires that have swept Florida in recent weeks and then on to Miami for a fund-raising dinner to drum up $800,000 for fellow Democrats at the home of actor Sylvester Stallone. - --- Checked-by: Melodi Cornett