MELBOURNE METRO TRAINS SAFETY
CAMPAIGN TURNS INTERNET SENSATION
www.iol.co.za -
A catchy tune, some cute animated figures and a giggle at blood on the
train tracks has delivered almost 12 million YouTube hits for an
Australian passenger safety message called Dumb Ways to Die. “It's
distracting. It's wonderful. We're thrilled. It's been a huge hit for
us,” Melbourne's Metro Trains spokeswoman Leah Waymark said Wednesday.
“Getting young people thinking perhaps thinking twice before they do
something dumb, that's a great outcome.”
John
Mescall, creative director at advertising agency McCann Worldgroup's
Melbourne office, said the key to producing the nation's
fastest-trending internet hit ever was sneaking up on those the safety
message was intended to reach. “If it looks and smells and tastes like
an ad, it won't get shared,” he said. “You need a good title. Dumb Ways
to Die! Who wouldn't click on that? If we'd called it How to Behave
Around Trains, you'd be looking at just 100 000 shares.”
Mescall
put the rip-roaring success down to breaking the taboo and being funny
about death. “I think a part of us needs to do that,” he said. “It's
like laughing at the thing that's hiding in the corner that's going to
get us all in the end.” - Sapa-dpa. The brains behind the clip, John
Mescall, says he has been taken back by the response. He says YouTube
has told him it is one of the most successfully shared files on mobile
devices. ''From the beginning we planned to make it very shareable, but
look you can never plan for something to be the biggest viral campaign
in the world,” he said. The song can also be downloaded from iTunes. It
has become an unexpected hit in several Asian countries including
Taiwan, Vietnam and Singapore.
Ms
Waymark says while the popularity of the video has been overwhelming,
she says the importance of the message should not be lost. “To have
young people singing about safety around trains is just a terrific
outcome for us,” she said. The video has knocked off Rihanna's Diamonds
and Psy's Gangnam Style to be number one on the Viral Video Chart.
It's
hard not to like “Dumb Ways To Die”, the cute, three-minute animation
that this week became Australia's fastest spreading viral advertisement
and which promotes safety around trains. It features a bunch of
colourful, pill-shaped figures, each demonstrating a ludicrous way to
kill oneself - taking one's helmet off in space, using one's private
parts as piranha bait, scratching a drug dealer's new car. At the song's
final verse we get the message: that possibly the dumbest ways to die
are by being too close to the edge of a train station platform, driving
around the boom gates at a level crossing, or running across the tracks
between the platforms. Humour is importantat because “young people often
see themselves as being indestructible so shock images of body bags
don't work,” said Leah Waymark, the Melbourne's Metro Trains
spokeswoman. Why do we like doing activities that are risky for us? To
escape from these harmful behaviours we should have a greater commitment
to our inner self and the Supreme.
WHAT DO THE VEDIC TEACHINGS TELL US?
The
average lifetime of a human being consists of many days and nights, so
major scares are bound to come up every now and then, incidents which
bring a person to the verge of death or some other major calamity. Some
things such as accidents and natural disasters are more or less
unavoidable, but other scares come about through choices that are made.
... but how do people react to these near-death experiences if they do
occur? ... Why do we repeatedly perform activities that we know are bad
for us? ... Harmful behavior can only be eradicated if we have a higher
engagement. ... The problem is that the activities which best stimulate
the senses are often those which are the most harmful. So what can be
done? The Vedas, the ancient scriptures of India, tell us that the
living entities need a higher engagement, something which transcends all
other activities. ... This discipline is known as Bhakti-yoga, or
devotional service.
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