Even in a world with increasingly tough and graphic public service announcements on TV about the dangers of such activities as smoking, a recent PSA originating out of Gwent, Wales, breaks new boundaries in the explicit level of its bloody details.
Two teen girls giggle over a text message they are sending while driving along a country road. Distracted, the driver smashes head-on into another car, and while the bloodied girls exchange dazed glances, a third car careens into the passenger side.
The driver finds her friend lying dead next to her. Then the camera switches to another smashed vehicle and shows a young child inside, asking why her parents are not waking up.
Produced by the Gwent Police Department, the PSA sends out a horrible visual to illustrate the dangers of texting while driving. But it currently isn’t being aired on U.S. television. For Americans to even view the ad on YouTube, they must assert they are at least 18.
A South Wales community of 550,000 that many Americans have never even heard of seems an unlikely place for discussion of the dangers of texting-and-driving to be raised, but a visionary Gwent police department was up to the task. Police locked arms with filmmaker Peter Watkins-Hughes to produce the PSA, titled “COW — The Film That Will Stop You Texting and Driving,” named after the character Cassie Cowan, who unleashes the lethal chain of events by texting behind the wheel. Some 300 drama students from throughout Wales auditioned for the movielike short, with local police cars and air ambulance helicopters used to lend an even more vivid reality to the film. Digital special effects were used to give viewers the “you are there” feeling of being inside Cowan’s vehicle as the road carnage ensues. Gwent’s Chief Constable Mick Giannasi said it was the department’s intent for the PSA to cut a wider swath than just Wales. "The messages contained in the film are as relevant to the people of Tennessee as they are to the residents [of Wales],” he said on the department’s Web site. “Texting and driving can have tragic consequences, and the more this film is viewed, the better.”
Appearing on TODAY Tuesday, noted ad executive Donny Deutsch said he believes the ad may be the most powerful ever — and agreed that it needs to be required viewing.
"I will show this to every kid I know, and I salute the police department,” Deutsch told TODAY’s Ann Curry. “I would really implore various local stations: Run this stuff, put this on the air. It will help.”
Recent studies show that texting while driving may be as dangerous and lethal as drunken driving. Up to a quarter of the estimated 40,000 vehicle fatalities in the U.S. annually may be traced back to distracted drivers texting. A recent Virginia Tech study found that texting drivers are 23 times more likely to be involved in a collision than nontexters. And although the AAA reports 95 percent of drivers polled acknowledge texting while driving is dangerous, 21 percent of them have done it recently anyway.
However, Deutsch told Curry, cold, hard data is nothing compared to showing people the human toll texting while driving can exact, up close and in chilling detail.
“It’s one thing if I just say to you, ‘You know what, Ann, you increase your risk 23 times when texting,’ and you go, ‘OK,’ ” he said. “We hear the numbers, we hear of the fatalities, but you never actually see it this graphic.
"It’s one thing to intellectually get it into our brains, but when you see it this graphically ... I tell you, I couldn’t get through this.”
Yet there remains doubt whether the 4-minute PSA will ever see the light of day on U.S. television screens — even when TODAY ran segments of the Welsh police production, it did not show it in its entirety.
Curry asked Deutsch if the PSA will make it past U.S. censors, and he acknowledged, “They’re going to have a problem with that.” But he was staunch in calling for the spot to make it to U.S. air.
“I say start running this thing all over the country,” Deutsch said. “This is a tremendous problem — all you have to do is drive yourself and look around. You see this, you never will do this again.”
Currently, 17 states and the District of Columbia have laws on the books that ban texting while driving, and it appears the issue is soon to get even more government attention. The U.S. Department of Transportation will hold a summit next month examining all forms of distracted driving, with texting being at the top of the list.
“We all know texting while driving is dangerous, and I promise you we are going to do something about it,” U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood said in announcing the summit.
Still, it took years after seat-belt laws were put on the books before the overwhelming majority of Americans began buckling up in earnest. Deutsch told Curry he believes viewers watching the story of a nice teen girl who ultimately kills four people because she texts while she drives could speed up the compliance process exponentially.
“It is a phenomenal piece of tape,” he said. “When you show something this graphic, it stays in people’s heads.”
More than 1 million people have viewed the hard-hitting PSA on YouTube to date.
I embedded the video incase anyone wanted to see it.
Source: MSNBC
Converse
I don't like it. It isn't truly representative of what happens in a head on collision. My boss has pictures of an accident scene where a guy was texting while he was driving in Montanna. The guy was taken out of the car in two pieces. Even though it isn't exactely representative, it's too "far fetched" for those teens to think that it would happen to them. A better solution would be to impliment a day in driver's ed where they take a bumper car, and drive that around while they text, or drive a closed road course while they try to text, and show them how bad they do. It's not easy, and is very dangerous.
1While I wouldn't run it as a random psa, I do think it should be aired. Kids feel invincible but that doesn't mean they're immune to reminders that they aren't. It's important to impress upon them that it's not just the risk they pose to their own life - heck, remind them that if they kill their friends and classmates, they're going to be very unpopular.
2although not the most realistic crash ever, i like the idea of the ad. something like this could happen to them. it's not pretty. i don't think they'd really get the point in a simulator. i do think this video is too long though. i got bored half way through
3I have mixed feelings about it. I think Teens should be educated in the grim fact that texting while driving is deadly but I am not convinced this is how to do it. WHen i was in high school, right before spring break (I live in florida) they showed all of us grisly drunk driving accident pictures, fatalities, kids our age dead and we watched with horror and then went to daytona and drank ourselves silly.
4Is it too graphic? IMO not at all. We watch way worse than this for entertainment so it tickles me that we would be concerned that it's too graphic.
In Los Angeles and I'm sure in some other places as well youth who at cited for drunk driving and other related crimes are given the opportunity to enter a program where they are introduced to their peers who were not so lucky, in the county morg. I think it's quite effective and I support it and this PSA
5*who are....
6the more I think about it, the more I feel like teens should not be driving until they're, like, 18.
Growing up in South Dakota, kids were getting their learners permits at the ripe old age of 14! And they could subsequently get their restricted permit and drive from dawn until dusk unsupervised. Then they could get the real deal at age 16. Totally freaks me out.
7I always thought that the drinking age should be 18 and the driving age should be 21.
By that time the novelty of drinking has probably worn off...
8That's an interesting point, Haus. I haven't ever really thought about reversing the two, but it kinda makes sense!
9But I agree with Hypno, kids watch way worse in movies, so yeah, scare em'!
10This question can't be answered except on an aesthetic basis. Let's imagine that it was 100% effective for the rest of a texter's life. Which cold hearted soul wouldn't become a bit nauseated to save lives?
But the greater question is whether any shock value is ever effective...and the answer is that very little of it ever has any long lasting effects at all. Just like the horrors we had to see in driver's education, it had its effect and then it waned. Six months later, we were in one of our father's cars with the top down and the stereo playing our songs without a care in the world. Why we never died was just the luck of the draw, but it makes me shudder.
Hs this worth the short term effects? How long does it take someone to start making fun of all the scary things that adults show them?
The real problem is that there are two entirely different issues here: the first is about saving lives and the other is about having fun with one's friends. To a certain degree, being young is part of being invulnerable. No one I ever rode with ever stopped something foolish because he or she thought suddenly that what he or she was doing was unsafe. if anything, we said "WTF?" and made it worse.
11I admit that I don't understand texting, but then I hate cell phones too. Talking on a cell phone while driving is more dangerous than driving drunk. Let me know when that video comes out.
The other day in church, I sat behind a male teen of about twenty who was obsessed with texting throughout the sermon. He was sitting next to his girlfriend so that was another issue: what was that old phrase? "Love the one you're with!" Why do you want to talk to someone else?
After church my other half complimented me on my restraint. When I looked at him puzzled, he said, "I know you were tempted to smack the boy in front of you who was texting."
I had to grin sheepishly, because it was true. I wanted to whack the back of his head really hard and tell him to pay attention. Then again, it was only because I thought he had more to lose.
Though the wounds weren't 100% percent realistic (the head is often not so intact ) it is better than no PSA at all. Talking & texting on a cell while driving has become a severe epidemic and it does not help that many people tend to brush off the warnings, thinking "well, it can't happen to me..." Bullsh*t, an accident can happen to absolutely anyone. These ignorant morons are risking not only their life however the life of innocent beings on the road. This ad is not too grisly and should be aired.
(IMO, it should be even darker, more real (Ex: with the type of impact upon the girl(s) in the silver car, it would be normal for brain matter to be visible. Not just cuts/blood.)
I was taught early on the rules of driving and do/don't's. You must have respect for a car and the rules of the road. I have always viewed driving with the knowledge of it's strength, it bugs the h*ll out of me when others are reckless, lacking any & all care. How they managed to get and continue to hold a license boggles my mind.
12the more I think about it, the more I feel like teens should not be driving until they're, like, 18.
Growing up in South Dakota, kids were getting their learners permits at the ripe old age of 14! And they could subsequently get their restricted permit and drive from dawn until dusk unsupervised. Then they could get the real deal at age 16. Totally freaks me out.
You are right on Amy
13I hate the idea of texting while driving. I don't even like the idea of talking on the phone while driving and at least then you can watch the road
14I used to text while driving a lot when I had my regular phone...I knew exactly how many times to hit each button to get the letter I wanted.
But then I got a Palm and it has a real keyboard. I don't even attempt to text anymore. It really requires both of my hands and that would leave no hand for the steering wheel!
I did see a girl one time texting on her phone...with her arms sticking straight through the steering wheel. So she was essentially steering with her arms.
15Oh, I meant to say....that when I texted while driving I didn't need to look at the phone at all...since I knew how many times I needed to hit each button.
16I have to admit I've done it a few times when I was using a rental car or a friends car but the only difference is I know my key pad like a type writer so I never have to look at it. Still not a good idea but at least my eyes were on the road.
17Thanks Grandpa.
18I think both privileges (drinking and driving) should come when you graduate high school.
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