MTV thinks about life, not just dollars

Despite their success, I have always had a problem with the popular Soca artists and leading radio stations whose audience is the youth market. Why? Because I personally think that they do not care about their followers who are at an impressionable age. The bottom line is about making money. Responsibility is not in the equation.

The average Soca number is of a sexual nature. In recent years, they have become less poetic and more raw, with outfits and stage presentations to match. Casual sex is it! Do it! Enjoy it! Forget about consequences! – is the message meted out to our youth. When I look at the statistics I become troubled.

From website Social Venture Challenge, I read the following: According to the Trinidad and Tobago Central Statistical Office (CSO) Population and Vital Statistics Report, of the 2,629 babies born to mothers in the 15 to 19 age group in 2001: • 2,173 babies were first born • 404 were second births • 44 were their mother’s third child • Six babies were to mothers who already had four children • One baby was its mother’s sixth child The CSO also found that: • 25 babies born, were to 14-year-old mothers • Four were to 13-year-old girls • And one baby was born to a mother under the age of 13 These figures, however, do not include teenagers whose pregnancies ended in stillbirths or abortions. Births to teenage mothers between the years 2000 and 2001 amounted to 15% of the total babies born and the numbers have been steadily climbing.

Teenage pregnancy is not my only concern. The prevalence of HIV/AIDS is another. As of 2009, there were 15,000 people living with HIV/AIDS in Trinidad and Tobago. A great amount of youths fall within that number. Also, more than 4000 children had been orphaned by the disease. With this in mind, if I were a Soca artiste, I would not feel comfortable singing about casual sex to this vulnerable group.

So what does this have to do with advertising? I came across a campaign done by MTV addressing the STD crisis among the young. They recognise that they are the leaders in their market and some of the material that they present is sexual and they felt that they had a responsibility to educate their population and not just entertain them. They thus came up with the MTV Staying Alive Campaign.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-RKe9ooO38

I wish that our movers and shakers who dominate the youth market will take a page out of MTV’s book and think of responsibility along with the profit.

 

N.B. If interested in reading more from the Social Venture Challenge site, please click on the following link: socialventurechallenge.com

6 Comments
  • Dennis Ramdeen

    23 June, 2011, 1:57 pm

    Eric, not so sure that MTV is acting responsibly here.  What they are doing is saying  “go ahead and speed but get yourself a speed trap detector” because there is a cop down the road  who will give you a ticket.  MTV promotes promiscuity.  They can’t sanitize that with a corporate social responsibility campaign.  Their product is positioned around unbridled freedom.  For example, I went on mtv.ca site…home page has 10 movies to watch; here are the titles: Teen Mom, 16 and pregnant, 1 girl 5 gays and in the News section “Justin Bieber sets fire to his underwear”.  No Eric, sorry, you can’t put MTV and responsible in the same sentence unless the sentence goes like this: MTV is responsible to its shareholders who get dividends when lots and lots of young people watch MTV which attracts advertisers who spend tons of $ to reach them.  And there is nothing wrong with that.

  • Eric Barry

    25 June, 2011, 4:06 pm

    There are people who say that alcohol is a toxin, it is responsible for many fatal accidents and inappropriate social behaviour. So then, that line, “Drink Responsibly” that we put in on the alcohol ads makes no sense.

    • Dennis Ramdeen

      29 June, 2011, 8:48 am

      Yes Eric, some people think “Drink Responsibly” is an oxymoron, like common sense.  Ultimately it’s up to consumers to decide what they consume and in what quantities. I have a friend who does not have a TV.  So for that family MTV is not an issue. Sometimes our elected leaders decide what we consume.  So in Canada for example, there is no liquor advertising, while there is still beer advertising I think. 

      But getting back to your original post, I remain unconvinced that MTV thinks about life.  That’s not there reason for being.  They will start thinking about life when that’s becomes important to their market share.  And there is nothing wrong with that.

  • Dennis Ramdeen

    29 June, 2011, 8:52 am

    That’s not THEIR reason for being.

    • Eric Barry

      29 June, 2011, 10:52 pm

      All in all, they sent out a message to those at risk and if that message reaches one person and has a positive effect, that is great, whereas the local folks that I mentioned do nothing of the sort. And that’s my point.