Partnership to End Addiction, formerly called The Partnership for a Drug Free America, is a non-profit organization aiming to prevent the misuse of illegal drugs. The organization is most widely known for its TV ad This Is Your Brain on Drugs.

Partnership to End Addiction
Formation1985; 39 years ago (1985)
FounderPhillip Joanou
TypeNational Non-Profit
13-3413627
FocusSupport for families struggling with a loved with suffering from a substance use disorder
Headquarters711 Third Avenue 5th Floor, Suite 500
Location
Area served
United States
MethodFamily Support, Substance Use and Addiction Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery
Chief Executive Officer
Creighton Drury
Employees
100
Websitehttps://drugfree.org/
Formerly called
  • Partnership for a Drug-Free America (1985–2010)
  • Partnership at DrugFree.org (2010–2014)
  • Partnership for Drug-Free Kids (2014–2020)

Early public service announcements created by the organization have been called iconic,[1][2] and during their initial release were part of the largest privately run public-service campaign in history.[3] The organization's marketing experience was written up as a 58-page[4] marketing "case study" for study by students at the Harvard Business School.[5][6] An analysis of the Partnership's efforts by Forbes magazine suggested that it had earned "a single-brand advertising clout" during the Reagan era comparable to that of McDonald's.[7]

The Partnership coordinates efforts with government officials, including Andre Hollis, the deputy assistant defense secretary for counternarcotics, in 2002.

History edit

Founding edit

In the mid-1980s, a small group of advertising professionals working with the American Association of Advertising Agencies proposed a marketing campaign to reduce teenage drug use. The group was formed officially in 1985.[8][9] The group saw the merits of focused approach similar to that for a commercial product or service. Public service announcements or PSAs had previously been shown by networks whenever possible, regardless of intended audience. Many PSAs aired late at night, or were used by networks to fill slots lacking other advertisements. Marston urged, instead, a targeted focused anti-drug campaign similar to that for a specific brand of cereal or an automobile, but instead "unselling" drugs[10] or rather selling the benefits of not using drugs.

 
An anti cocaine advertisement the PDFA released in 1987.

Hedrick said that the group knew "next to nothing about illegal drugs and the youthful target audience for their ads".[8] [11] The organization was loosely modeled along the lines of a standard advertising agency, with a creative director post[12] and "account executives" to head specific effort.[10] Further, the agency did continual reassessments of public perception.

Take the decision to buy and use heroin (or pot, or coke or any illegal drug) and treat it like any other purchasing choice. Liken potential addicts to a group of consumers whose buying habits can be manipulated by celebrity endorsements, catchy slogans, and powerful images. Then use those tricks not to sell the product, but to un-sell it. If the approach works, drugs will finally lose their cool.

— Pamela Warrick in the Los Angeles Times[8]

The agency solicited help from copywriters, media planning and placement experts often competed to submit advertising assignments without charge.[8][13] The agency gained free exposure from print media and broadcast networks, including spots during prime time.[8] [14] The group "deliberately designed [advertisements] to disturb and upset."[8] Executives from The New York Times Company and Procter & Gamble[15][16] sat on the Partnership's board of directors.[8] An early grant of $300,000 from the American Association of Advertising Agencies contributed towards rent and other expenses.[8] Later funds were provided by grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, whose founder, Robert Wood Johnson II, left the foundation shares of stock upon his death in 1968.[17] By 1993, it had 30 employees.[4]

This Is Your Brain on Drugs edit

The organization first became more widely known in 1987,[10] with its This Is Your Brain on Drugs broadcast and print public service advertisements (PSAs).[2] This said that if a person's brain is an egg, then using illegal drugs would be like frying it.[2] It was shown repeatedly on broadcast media. Time magazine called it "iconic".[2] It has been recognized as "one of the most influential" ad campaigns in the history of marketing,[10][2] or one of the "most unforgettable images in modern American advertising".[8] TV Guide put it among the "top 100 ads of all time".[10] It became the organization's "calling card."[8]

The ad had varying impacts on viewers. One student felt the "brain on drugs" commercial was not accurate, since she saw fellow students smoking marijuana but with brains that were clearly not frying. She claimed that the ad "stirred her curiosity" and called the ad more of a "dare" tactic.[10] Another student said "the fried egg commercial really scared me when I was in high school. I remember picturing that egg in the frying pan and thinking that it wasn't worth it."[10]

Following This Is Your Brain on Drugs, the agency was able to solicit donations of free advertising time with an estimated worth of "$1 million worth of advertising every day" for more than a decade, totaling more than $2 billion in free space and time.[8]

The "frying pan" ad was described as a "relic" in one report, although New York Sun reporter Amanda Gordon noted that the organization gives gold-plated frying pan awards (mounted under glass) at fundraisers.[18]

The 1990s edit

In 1989, Johnson & Johnson chief executive James E. Burke took over leadership of the organization.[19] In 1992, the Partnership switched focus to targeting inner-city youth, where the drug problem had been more severe, and ran a campaign led by Ginna Marston.[20] Research suggested most children felt "nearly alone in their hostility toward drugs."[20] In one television commercial, a camera zooms in and out on two adolescents, one of whom is trying to get the other to try marijuana. The tagline then reads: "A friend who offers you drugs is not your friend."[20] It was a "strikingly different tack" from the milder Just Say No campaign championed by previous first lady Nancy Reagan.[9] The ads were often "infused with menace and melodrama."[9] Some spots by a Goodby, Berlin & Silverstein copy team hinted that the earlier Just Say No had been simplistic.[14] Marston explained the utility of depicting young people "resisting drugs in real situations":[20]

The new campaign addresses kids' feelings and their sense of emotional isolation on this issue. ... The problem is not drugs, but an attitude of hopelessness ... They start to feel they don't count, they don't matter. They feel bad about themselves and give up on themselves; those are the ones who get into drugs ... It's not to kill time, as happens in the general market ... but to kill pain.

— Ginna Marston, 1992, PDFA campaign director.[14][20]

The organization used real stories about the effects of drug use. A 28-year-old former drug user met for lunch with the Partnership's Doria Steedman, and at one point "pulled out her [false] teeth" to show the ravages of the drug use; this idea was used in a subsequent commercial.[8]

In 1994, an independent assessment from the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine suggested that the anti-drug campaign was having a measurable "deterrence effect" on American adolescents:

No one presumes advertising is going to stop all drug abuse in America ... Using the idea that attitudes change behavior and using the best ad minds to denormalize drug use, they have sent a very strong message over the years, and their work is a very important component in the national effort to reduce drug use."

— Chris Policano, spokesman for Phoenix House, in 1994[8]

In 1996, research efforts suggested a link between getting preteens and teenagers to wait longer before using drugs for the first time, and the decreasing likelihood of becoming a regular drug user.[8] A new campaign was announced, aimed at "getting parents involved in the war against drugs.[21]

Marston and other executives adjusted their media strategy accordingly as fast-moving trends made one drug "hot" while others fell out of favor.[8] The campaign was primarily oriented towards television and print media.[22]

 
General Barry McCaffrey in 1994

The Partnership coordinated efforts with Barry McCaffrey, the director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, in targeting efforts against heroin. McCaffrey endorsed the Partnership's campaigns and spoke at their news conferences.[8] Later, it worked with state alliance programs.[14]

PDFA was the subject of criticism when it was revealed by Cynthia Cotts of The Village Voice that their federal tax returns showed that they had received several million dollars worth of funding from major pharmaceutical, tobacco and alcohol corporations including American Brands (Jim Beam whiskey), Philip Morris (Marlboro and Virginia Slims cigarettes, Miller beer), Anheuser Busch (Budweiser, Michelob, Busch beer), R.J. Reynolds (Camel, Salem, Winston cigarettes), as well as pharmaceutical firms Bristol Meyers-Squibb, Merck & Company and Procter & Gamble. In 1997, it discontinued any direct fiscal association with tobacco and alcohol suppliers, although it still receives donations from pharmaceutical and opioid companies.[23][24]

In 1999, filmmaker Robert Zemeckis made a documentary entitled The Pursuit of Happiness: Smoking, Drinking and Drugging in the 20th Century which made an in-depth examination of the problem of drug use, covering 100 years and interviewing professionals and historians.[25] Zemeckis included Marston in the film.[26]

The 2000s edit

In 2002, Burke retired as chairman, and was replaced by Roy J. Bostock.[19] The Partnership had been tracking ecstasy use since 1996, and in 2002 found that 52% of students were aware of the dangers associated with its use as compared to 46% from the year before.[27]

In 2002, the White House director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, John P. Walters, questioned whether the Partnership's campaigns were lessening the use of illegal drugs.[19] He stated, "The resulting campaign is far too complex, calling as it does for the lockstep shuttling in and out, at 6 to 8 week intervals, of TV, radio, print, outdoor and interactive messages in multiple languages against 36 different strategies aimed at eleven different targets.[28] He raised concerns of improper interpretations of survey data as well as the federal government shifting $50 million away from other media purchases. Partnership chairman James E. Burke argued before a Senate subcommittee for better targeting of funds for media purchases.[28]

In 2010, it collaborated with the Drug Enforcement Administration on a public relations event titled "National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day".[29] The event involved 4,000 "drop spots" to discard unused prescription drugs as a way to lessen opportunities for misuse.[29] In the mid-2000s, the Partnership gradually shifted away from de-emphasizing the risks of marijuana and focused more on targets such as prescription drugs, possibly responding to a shift of emphasis by the U.S. government.[30] Reporter Elizabeth Sprague of CBS News noticed that the Partnership had not produced a single anti-marijuana PSA since 2005.[30] By 2007, the agency had produced over 3,000 spots from 1985 to 2007.[18]

In 2010, the organization changed its name from Partnership for a Drug-Free America to Partnership at Drugfree.org.[31]

A 2013 article by the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice describes The Partnership as "...always felt free to lie — blatantly, openly, stupidly — about drugs. In fact, lying to obscure the realities of drug abuse in order to protect powerful interests and constituencies is the reason the Partnership exists. The Partnership is the latest in America's long history of phony lobbies — the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) is the White House branch — that revel in misinformation and misdirected policies that perpetuate the social crises they claim to be attacking because they tacitly profit from making them worse."[32] Some studies suggest its PSAs have had "little proven effect on drug use."[26]

In 2013, the Montana Meth Project joined The Partnership To End Addiction.[33]

Current approaches edit

The Partnership holds a special position under law within the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.[34][35] It cooperates with government agencies in initiatives to help reduce drug use. While the organization has focused drug prevention advertising on broadcast media such as television, it has recently shifted media support to digital technology.[36] Currently, it aims to assist parents in prevention efforts. The organization informs and offers resources for parents and teenagers on its website.[37] The Partnership shifted focus towards teenagers' misuse of prescription drugs.[38] The group was part of a campaign known as National Prescription Drug Take Back Day which encouraged residents to dispose of their old prescription drugs to nearby city halls or police departments.[38] Partnership executive Sean Clarkin suggests that parents sit down with their teens and ask "what's going on" as a possible beginning for a conversation about drug use.[39] The Partnership has reduced its commitment to broadcast media and shifted towards reaching out to parents[40] via the Internet, which increased from 10% of its budget to 31% for 2010.[13] It has focused on web efforts such as the site "Time to Talk" (timetotalk.org), The drugfree.org website attracts a million visitors each month.[13] The agency is making a $55 million three-year commitment with cable operator Comcast including its "Time to Talk" campaign.[13]

See also edit

Sources edit

  1. ^ Gershon, Livia (2022-10-19). "The Story Behind "This is Your Brain on Drugs"". JSTOR Daily. Retrieved 2024-01-06.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Top 10 Public-Service Announcements: There Goes My Appetite". Time. 2011. Archived from the original on September 8, 2009. Retrieved 2011-12-24. Produced in 1987 by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, this iconic PSA makes use of everyday household items — namely, an egg and a frying pan — to illustrate how narcotics affect the body. (Fresh egg = your brain; fried egg = your brain on drugs.)
  3. ^ Moreau, Joseph (2016). ""I Learned it by Watching YOU!" The Partnership for a Drug-Free America and the Attack on "Responsible Use" Education in the 1980s". Journal of Social History. 49 (3): 710–737. ISSN 0022-4529.
  4. ^ a b "(cases)". tzhealth.com. September 13, 1993. Archived from the original on 2012-04-26. Retrieved 2011-12-24. 9-594-028 Title: Partnership for a Drug-Free America (A)
  5. ^ V. Kasturi Rangan (1993). "Faculty & Research: HBS Course Materials". Harvard Business School. Retrieved 2011-12-24. Rangan, V. Kasturi, Diana Chapman Walsh, Barbara Moeykens, and Rima E. Rudd. "Partnership for a Drug-Free America (A)." Harvard Business School Case 594-028. ... Rangan, V. Kasturi, Diana Chapman Walsh, Barbara Moeykens, and Rima E. Rudd. "Partnership for a Drug-Free America (B)." Harvard Business School Supplement 594-029.
  6. ^ Matthew W. Finkin (1996). "*221 Employee Privacy, American Values, and the Law". Chicago-Kent Law Review. Retrieved 2011-12-24. (cited this case study:) See Partnership For a Drug-Free America: Overview (Partnership for a Drug Free Am., New York, N.Y.), May 1, 1996, at 1. It claims that a drop in drug usage is attributable to its efforts. See Diana Chapman Walsh et al., The Partnership for a Drug-Free America (A) 26 tbl. 5D (Harvard Bus. Sch. No. N9- 594-028, 1993).
  7. ^ Pamela Warrick (August 30, 1996). "Can You Just Say No?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Pamela Warrick (August 30, 1996). "Can You Just Say No?". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  9. ^ a b c Elliott, Stuart (October 1, 1993). "The Media Business: Advertising — The Partnership for a Drug-Free America accentuates the positive in a new campaign". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Famous fried eggs: Erika Alexander (December 6, 2000). "Students debate effectiveness, accuracy of well-known anti-drug commercial". CNN. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  11. ^ Oliver, Myrna (July 16, 2004). "Carole Fields-Arnold, 59; Talent Agent Co-Founded Drug, Alcohol Program". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  12. ^ "Rebecca Shaw, Michael Kelly". The New York Times. February 26, 2010. Retrieved 2011-12-24. Rebecca Blackwood Shaw ... The bride, 38, plans to take her husband's name. She is the director of creative development for the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, a nonprofit organization in New York, where she oversees the production of public service announcements.
  13. ^ a b c d Stuart Elliott (September 27, 2007). "Advertising; Public Service Groups Follow the Audience". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  14. ^ a b c d Stuart Elliott (October 1, 1993). "The Media Business: Advertising — The Partnership for a Drug-Free America accentuates the positive in a new campaign". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  15. ^ Flint, Joe (October 27, 2011). "Daniel Burke dies at 82; former president of Capital Cities/ABC". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  16. ^ Neuman, William (October 26, 2011). "Daniel B. Burke, Leading Media Executive, Dies at 82". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  17. ^ Strom, Stephanie (April 4, 2007). "$500 Million Pledged to Fight Childhood Obesity". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-27. Robert Wood Johnson, who built Johnson & Johnson into one of the world's largest health and medical care products companies, established his foundation at his death in 1968 ...
  18. ^ a b Amanda Gordon (November 28, 2007). "Parents and Tennagers Rock for 'Drug-Free America'". New York Sun. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  19. ^ a b c Courtney Kane (October 23, 2002). "The Media Business: Advertising — Addenda — A Succession At Anti-Drug Group". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24. James E. Burke will soon step down after 13 years as chairman of the Partnership for a Drug-Free America in New York ...
  20. ^ a b c d e Joseph B. Treaster (October 2, 1992). "The Media Business — Television Ads Are Directed At Urban Youths and Drugs". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  21. ^ Times Staff & Wire Reports (March 5, 1997). "Preteen 'Pot' Use Doubles, Study Says". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24. Marijuana use among U.S. preteens doubled in 1996, ...
  22. ^ Jerry Crowe (July 14, 1996). "Heroin Deaths Fuel Music Industry's Soul-Searching". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  23. ^ Males, Mike (July 1997). "Pot Boiler: Why Are Media Enlisting in the Government's Crusade Against Marijuana?". Extra!. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  24. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". Partnership to End Addiction. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  25. ^ "Robert Zemeckis on Smoking, Drinking and Drugging in the 20th Century: In Pursuit of Happiness". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2000. Archived from the original on 2013-01-30. Retrieved 2011-12-24. ... A feature-length documentary on smoking, drinking and drugging in the 20th century. Through interviews with historians and professionals in the drug treatment field interspersed with film clips ...
  26. ^ a b Andy Meisler (August 29, 1999). "Television/Radio; Getting Down to What Makes America High". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  27. ^ Kathleen Fackelmann (December 16, 2002). "Survey: Teen drug use on decline". USA Today. Retrieved 2011-12-24. For the first time, use of the club drug Ecstasy dropped among teens in the United States, and use of cigarettes and alcohol continued to decline, according to a just-released survey. This year's annual Monitoring the Future survey tracked substance use among 44,000 eighth-, 10th- and 12th-grade students. The survey has been tracking teens' drug use since 1975.
  28. ^ a b Burke, James E. (June 19, 2002). "Senate Hearing 107–600: Effectiveness of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign". U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  29. ^ a b Shafer, Jack (Sep 24, 2010). "Bogus Drug Coverage of the Week". Slate Magazine. Retrieved 2011-12-24. ... a public-relations event staged by the Drug Enforcement Administration called the "National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day." Allied with medical boards, police chiefs, district attorneys, boards of pharmacy, and the Partnership for a Drug-Free America, ...
  30. ^ a b Elizabeth Sprague (November 9, 2009). "Pot No Longer Focus of Anti-Drug Campaigns". CBS News. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  31. ^ "Accounts and People of Note in the Ad Industry". The New York Times. December 13, 2010. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  32. ^ Males, Mike (Oct 2013). "Partnership for a Drug Wrecked America". Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  33. ^ "Meth Project Joins The Partnership at Drugfree.org". Partnership to End Addiction. Retrieved 2023-12-30.
  34. ^ Finkin, Matthew W. (Jan 7, 2011). "U.S. Code – Title 21 > Chapter 22 > § 1708: National youth anti-drug media campaign". Cornell University Law School. Retrieved 2011-12-24. ... (C) Evaluation of effectiveness of media campaign In using amounts for the evaluation of the effectiveness of the national media campaign under paragraph (1)(E), the Director shall— ... the Attitude Tracking Study published by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America;
  35. ^ Office of National Drug Control Policy Reauthorization Act of 2006, Pub. L.Tooltip Public Law (United States) 109–469 (text) (PDF), 120 Stat. 3501, enacted December 29, 2006, codified at 21 U.S.C. § 1708
  36. ^ Stuart Elliott (September 27, 2007). "Advertising; Public Service Groups Follow the Audience". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  37. ^ "Hannah Michelle Weeks on preventing teen substance abuse". Lock the Cabinet. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  38. ^ a b "Prescription Drug Take Back Day to be held Saturday". Los Angeles Times. October 27, 2011. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  39. ^ Sabriya Rice (July 22, 2010). "Want to keep your child drug-free? Here are five signs of possible trouble". CNN. Retrieved 2011-12-24.
  40. ^ "About Us". The Partnership at DrugFree.org. 2011-12-26. Retrieved 2011-12-26. (from the webpage) The Partnership at Drugfree.org is here for parents, ...