Celebrities Ask for Help in One Campaign

A cadre of celebrities have appeared in a new campaign for One: The Campaign to Make Poverty History. The television commercial, which debuted on MTV and ABC April 10, features Bono, Cameron Diaz, Penelope Cruz, Brad Pitt and Al Pacino pointing out global poverty and other epidemics. The ad, which closes with the tagline “We’re not asking for your money. We’re asking for your voice,: directs viewers to One’s website, a clearing hose for a collection of organizations headed by Bono’s Debt Aids Trade Africa. Claiming the campaign is not about money is a bit of a misnomer given this statement on the One website which reads, “We believe that allocating an additional ONE percent of the U.S. budget toward providing basic needs like health, education, clean water and food, would transform the futures and hopes of an entire generation of the poorest countries.” OK, so it’s the government’s money but you know whose pocket that comes from.

while there’s no question action is needed to fend off poverty and other worldly ailments but these celebrity focused ads just rub the wrong way. Viewing these commercials makes one want to scream, “Dude, just hand over 90 percent of your salary to those who need it and stop preaching!” Granted, no one should be penalized for making a lot of money and it’s been proved celebrities are effective at shining the light on the world’s problems but it still doesn’t feel right.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

TRENDING AROUND THE WEB

Psychology says the most dangerous narcissists aren’t the loud, grandiose ones — they’re the quiet martyrs who weaponize their suffering so skillfully that you end up apologizing for things they did to you

Psychology says the most dangerous narcissists aren’t the loud, grandiose ones — they’re the quiet martyrs who weaponize their suffering so skillfully that you end up apologizing for things they did to you

Global English Editing

I thought retirement would mean freedom, but at 66 I’ve discovered it actually means waking up every day knowing that nobody’s schedule depends on you anymore — and that the invisibility of not being needed is its own particular kind of grief

I thought retirement would mean freedom, but at 66 I’ve discovered it actually means waking up every day knowing that nobody’s schedule depends on you anymore — and that the invisibility of not being needed is its own particular kind of grief

Global English Editing

Research suggests that the most intellectually confident people in most rooms are often the quietest — not because they have nothing to say but because they learned early that speaking without thinking is a currency that devalues itself every time it’s spent

Research suggests that the most intellectually confident people in most rooms are often the quietest — not because they have nothing to say but because they learned early that speaking without thinking is a currency that devalues itself every time it’s spent

Global English Editing

Psychology says the people most likely to end up alone in old age aren’t the difficult ones — they’re the ones who were so easy to take for granted that nobody noticed they were slipping away until the slipping was already done

Psychology says the people most likely to end up alone in old age aren’t the difficult ones — they’re the ones who were so easy to take for granted that nobody noticed they were slipping away until the slipping was already done

Global English Editing

Psychology says the kindest people are sometimes the loneliest not despite their kindness but because of it — because kindness extended to everyone equally is kindness that belongs to no one specifically, and intimacy has always required specificity

Psychology says the kindest people are sometimes the loneliest not despite their kindness but because of it — because kindness extended to everyone equally is kindness that belongs to no one specifically, and intimacy has always required specificity

Global English Editing

Psychology says people who don’t feel the need to dye their grey hair aren’t letting themselves go — they reached a specific kind of self-acceptance that most people spend decades performing without ever actually arriving at

Psychology says people who don’t feel the need to dye their grey hair aren’t letting themselves go — they reached a specific kind of self-acceptance that most people spend decades performing without ever actually arriving at

Global English Editing