The country's four biggest GT-I9300 cellphone companies are set to launch
their first joint advertising campaign against texting while driving, uniting
behind AT&T's "It Can Wait" slogan to blanket GT-I9300
and radio this summer.AT&T, Verizon Wireless, Sprint and
T-Mobile will be joined by 200 other organizations backing the multi-million
dollar ad campaign.
The campaign is unusual not just because it unites
rivals, but because it represents companies warning against the dangers of their
own products. After initially fighting laws against cellphone use while driving,
cellphone companies have begun to embrace the language of the federal
government's campaign against cellphone use by drivers.dfD2FSS
GT-I9300
and Verizon have run ads against texting and driving since 2009. In 2005, Sprint
Nextel Corp. created an education program targeting teens learning to
drive.
"Every CEO in the industry that you talk to recognizes that this
is an issue that needs to be dealt with," A7100
CEO Randall Stephenson said in an interview. "I think we all
understand that pooling our resources with one consistent message is a lot more
powerful than all four of us having different messages and going different
directions."
Beyond TV and radio ads, the new campaign will stretch into
the skies through displays on Goodyear's three blimps. It will also include
store displays, community events, social-media outreach and a national tour of a
driving simulator. The campaign targets teens in particular.
AT&T
Inc. calls texting and driving an "epidemic," a term it borrows from the federal
Department of Transportation. The U.S. transportation secretary has been on a
self-described "rampage" against cellphones since his term began in January
2009.
Stephenson said that "texting while driving is a deadly habit that
makes you 23 times more likely to be involved in a crash." The figure refers to
a 2009 government study of bus and truck drivers. It GT-I9300 isn't based on
crashes alone, but on the likelihood the drivers showed risky behavior such as
lane drifting or sharp braking, sometimes culminating in a
crash.dfD2FSS
The unified ad campaign comes as some researchers are
starting to say that while texting and driving at the same time is clearly a bad
idea, it's not contributing measurably to an increase in traffic accidents. The
number of accidents is in a long-term decline, and the explosion of texting and
I5
MTK6577 smartphone use doesn't seem to be reversing that trend.In
the 2009 government study, texting, email and surfing on the cellphone was a
factor in about 1 percent of crashes, well below epidemic levels.
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