Guest guest Posted March 28, 2010 Report Share Posted March 28, 2010 Don't be blue...keep the rainbows: Please forward. I recently saw a Facebook post regarding Autism Speaks wanting people to wear only blue {instead of the Autism spectrum colors (usually red, blue, green and yellow, but sometimes including purple and orange)}, change their Facebook profile picture to the Light It Up Blue logo, type emails in blue, wear the Autism Speaks blue puzzle piece, and Bake puzzle piece shaped cookies and frost them with blue icing, then bring them to your school, work or place of worship during April (Autism Awareness Month), especially April 2 (World Autism Awareness Day*). *NOTE: The logo for World Autism Awareness Day is multi-colored not just blue. Imagine someone goes to a store to buy a puzzle, and their options are a puzzle with a spectrum of many colors or a solid blue puzzle...which would most people buy? To me, putting together a solid blue puzzle would seem rather pointless. Hypothetically, this would be like the The Breast Cancer Society deciding they want October to be The Breast Cancer Society month and telling people to wear green ribbons instead of pink. It doesn't make sense. A lot of people spent a lot of time, energy and money over the years getting autism awareness known as rainbow colors. When I'm driving and see a rainbow ribbon on the back of a car, I know what it is long before I'm close enough to read the words " Autism Awareness " . This blue stuff undermines all that effort at branding....and further divides the autism community. There are lots of blue causes. However, only a few use causes prominently use rainbow colors: autism (typically a puzzle piece, but has various other forms {example a butterfly}) and gay pride (usually a triangle or a flag but has various other forms also) and 's " Rainbow Coalition " . That said, I suspect autism has achieved the broadest recognition in the overall population. Do we, the autism community, really to undermine all the causes using blue by adding yet another cause to blue, just to become a needle in hay stack...indistinguishable from the others? To be clear, this is not to disparage those who support Autism Speaks, since I can not imagine that they want the autism community to have another issue to be divided over nor have our branding diluted. This is about the blue idea being poorly thought out. I haven't seen a marketing idea this bad since 1985 when Cola Cola introduced " New Coke " ....and Pepsi was very happy. I realize that some may find it distasteful to refer to autism awareness in marketing terms, but the fact is any awareness campaign involves a great deal of marketing strategy....and jumping into the sea of blue causes is seriously flawed marketing. For longer than most (if not all) of us have been alive, the color blue has been associated with sadness, hence someone saying they have " the blues " ...while a rainbow is associated with unity, prosperity and hope...like the song " Somewhere Over the Rainbow " . Check out the lists that I've compile of blue causes. Blue cause color for at least 22 causes (likely more): Anti-Tobacco Arthritis Child Abuse Prevention " Bring Home Our Troops " campaign Colon Cancer Crime Victim Rights Domestic Violence Drunk Driving, Education Electronic Frontier Foundation's Online Free Speech Epstein-Barr Virus Freedom of Speech Hurricane Support Hydranencephaly International No Diet Day Police Officers Lost in the Line of Duty Prostate cancer Reye's Syndrome Sex trafficking and slavery awareness Tuberous Sclerosis Water Safety Also, somebody recently asked me, " How were they supposed to light up the Empire State Building with multi-colored puzzle pieces? " They didn't have to do the puzzle pieces, rather they could have done just multicolored lights. That said, there are outdoor projectors that people use to project images of holly, Santa Claus, etc. on their houses during the holidays. Similar projectors could have been used to project giant puzzle pieces or even a puzzle ribbon onto the Empire State building. That would have been so cool!!! ...because people would recognize it as autism...kind of like Mc's and the golden arches...making use of the branding work that's already been done. The blue building requires that people be told what it means or are interested enough to ask. People are busy, and a lot of people won't invest that time...so the message is lost. The blue building is like a billboard. Billboards work if the message is straight forward enough to be understood at the time of sight. That is not going to be the case for many who see the blue building. Marketing does no good. if people don't understand it. Autism is a spectrum, and people understand that. Again I ask, do we, the autism community, really to undermine all the causes using blue by adding yet another cause to blue, just to become a needle in hay stack...indistinguishable from the others? I implore you, please keep the rainbow alive!!! Don't drown us in the sea of blue!!! Please post/send rainbows, wear rainbows, make rainbow cookies, cakes, salads, whatever...do it all with the rainbow in mind!!! Please forward this to everyone that you know! Thank you for your time! Peace be with you!--- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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