Posters and billboards began popping up in major American cities last week proclaiming that “Hipsters Deserve to Die.” Sort of shocking to say the least.
Also named as “deserving to die” are: the tattooed, cat lovers, the genetically privileged, crazy old aunts and various other niche groups. Each poster uses a photo portrait to demonstrate the labeled persona. Click through the tabs above to see the work.
This has been upsetting some people in cities like Chicago where people tore down the posters in anger. ”I think that’s very offensive to people who are animal lovers,” Shelli Williams told the Chicago CBS station when first shown the cat lovers version of the poster. These types of reactions have prompted news coverage already. People seem to be a bit confused as to why anyone would post these types of messages.
That is precisely the point though. One quick click at the campaign’s website URL reveals that NoOneDeservesToDie’s goal is to raise awareness for a deadly disease that “doesn’t discriminate.” The point seems to be that whatever you might be labeled by society-at-large – that none of us deserve to die. [The site reports that 158,000+ people died of lung cancer in 2008.]
The campaign was designed by Wisconsin agency Laughlin Constable and the Lung Cancer Alliance “We knew that one would be polarizing,” Laughlin Constable strategy VP Denise Kohnke told a Milwaukee TV station.
What do you think? Does it work?
It works. Love cat lady btw, great work.
So provocative! Very effective way of getting a discussion going.
It got people talking about it, annoyed by it, curious, mad, disgusted,outraged, turned off by it, but did it really do much? I”m pretty sure most people are “aware” of lung cancer. Not many will do anything about it. Probably spent more on the ad campaign than they raised…
Impressive…and if I hadn’t seen Ryan Holiday on your LIVE shoot, I would have missed the point…but the media has got it and it’s spreading the word…it works.
I totally agree with Nicole – taking a negative approach towards eliciting positive change does not work, and although these ads will get a lot of attention, they won’t end up successful.