Dieter Zetsche and Chrysler launches plan to promote national anthem

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by MoPar Man, Mar 10, 2005.

  1. MoPar Man

    MoPar Man Guest

    I guess it takes a German to help Americans learn their national
    anthem. Or to stir up the passions of nationalism that seem to be
    flagging as this jobless recovery continues. Perhaps what is needed
    is another invasion and the few heady months of fanatical patriotism
    that followed. They painted some Dodge Ram's with the flag back then
    - how bout some Jeeps?

    Better that Americans sing the anthem while filling their SUV's and
    pickups with gas. Would take their mind off the price.

    Too bad the one line in the anthem that is most representative of the
    American way of life is never sung:

    "Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,"

    I wonder if Dieter will help Americans learn that verse.

    Sing it Dieter, sing for me. Get Celine to help you.

    ------------

    Politically correct (bastardized/popular) version:
    http://www.usflag.org/thenationalanthem.html

    Full version:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Star-Spangled_Banner

    -------------

    http://www.detnews.com/2005/metro/0503/10/C01-113233.htm
    Thursday, March 10, 2005
    Chrysler is in tune with nation's mood as it launches plan to promote
    anthem
    By Laura Berman / The Detroit News
    O-o say can you see how times have quickly changed?

    Last year, Chrysler Group CEO Dieter Zetsche played cool at the
    Detroit auto show, stepping out of a minivan wearing a streetwise
    fedora on his head. That was back in the days -- can you even remember
    them? -- when the Dodge Boys thought it might be cool to sponsor the
    Lingerie Bowl, a disastrous foray into Super Bowl counter-programming.

    But today, Zetsche will display a keen sense of the current national
    zeitgeist when he kicks off the National Anthem Project -- an effort
    sponsored by Jeep and the National Association for Music Education --
    that aims to put oomph into music education by emphasizing the singing
    of patriotic songs.

    In this case, they're boosting the Star Spangled Banner, our much
    maligned and largely unsung national anthem, which is about to make a
    comeback given the current fascination with values symbolism.

    From pledge of allegiance reinstatement to a move for the Ten
    Commandments in every town square and bare wall, God-and-country
    boilerplate is back in fashion.

    "I think there's been a little bit of a mood swing," acknowledges
    Jason Vines, Chrysler's vice-president for corporate communications,
    who thinks the new sponsorship is a perfect fit for the Jeep brand -
    which an American World War II general once called "America's greatest
    weapon."

    A recent Harris survey found that only 39 percent of Americans could
    recite the anthem's third line ("through the perilous fight"), while
    61 percent don't know all of the words.

    That ought not come as a surprise. There's an old story, probably
    apocryphal, that during World War II, the Americans used the anthem as
    a way to root out German spies: A captive who knew the words to the
    fourth verse would be shot on sight, it is said, since no real
    Americans know the words.

    As one of those who can warble all the way to "and the home of the
    brave, play ball," it's not the singing that gives me pause, but the
    undercurrent to the trend. The sudden emphasis on displaying totems of
    faith in God and country -- from flying ribbons on cars to saying the
    pledge - is double-edged.

    Vines, the Chrysler spokesman, calls the campaign "uncontroversial,"
    and while that's true, that's what also ought to make us uneasy.

    In insecure times, flag-waving is invariably resurgent. The related
    debates, about God in the Ten Commandments and the Pledge of
    Allegiance, are fixated on a similar idea: That Americans need credos,
    codes, and symbols to prove who we are.

    And, more importantly, who we are not. It's no coincidence that during
    the last great flag-waving era of the 1950s, a Congressional committee
    sought to root out those deemed "un-American."

    National anthem education is surely a smart and unobjectionable move
    for Jeep, with its Liberty model. Times have changed and, after a few
    lumbering moves, Chrysler is in sync.

    This time, instead of using lingerie-clad models to sell trucks, the
    company's using another simple association to sell its vehicles. Skip
    the girls, go for God and country.

    And you can hum it, too.
     
    MoPar Man, Mar 10, 2005
    #1
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