South Carolina Will Place Ads Inside School Buses
South Carolina will begin selling ad space inside their public school buses—11-inch strips above the windows are now for sale, and "Interested school districts get about $2,100 per month per bus."
The South Carolina Board of Education approved the plan last month, and appears to be moving forward with it.
"I never thought [advertising inside school buses] was a good idea to start with," said Donald Tudor, South Carolina's DOE School Transportation Director, "but when you run a state program and districts request this be set in motion, you do it so they can make a choice. Ultimately, I couldn't think of a good reason why they shouldn't have the option."For its part, SAC promises the ads will be age-appropriate, promote a healthy and productive life, and are directly approved by district appointed personnel. Ads sold thus far are from local businesses.
(Thanks to Carlton!)
"School Buses Latest Victim of Ad Creep" [BrandWeek]
(Photo: Getty)
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People might complain about this, but in reality its a indicator of where our priorities are in this country. They aren't putting ads up in buses because they are corporate shills. It's because they don't have money. With schools now pulling soda out of cafeterias, they have to compensate for that revenue somewhere else.
If you don't like the ads, then attack the actual problem not the symptom. Get more money to schools.
Disgusting. Absolutely disgusting. And as proved by the local Bus Radio discussions here in Denver parents and educators simply don't give a shit - and our more concerned with people "rocking the boat" and giving their school districts a bad name.
The only saving grace is that young people are smart and savvy at creep, guerilla marketing, and selective about what they consume. They aren't stupid. But I still find it perverse.
Abercrombie butt crack boys get taken down, but this goes up? Christ...
Our country seems to be taking backwards steps. The fact that we have trillions of dollars for war but school districts can't find the money to give children a proper education says a lot about the United States.
Of course I don't blame just the government for not giving education enough money. I remember when I was in school we were rationing paper and supplies (e.g. any test the teachers gave you had to write on your own paper then give the test back because the school couldn't afford for every student to have a copy), but at the same time they were putting a lot of work into making the football and baseball stadiums top of the line.
The problem seems to start at the top with not enough money being allocated for schools, then the money gets sucked up by beaurocrats before it reaches the teachers and students. Plus you also have the issues of schools only really doing things to look good to parents (e.g. zero tolerance policies), and a lot of other problems that are too long to list in these comments.
I hope our education system gets back on track sometime soon.
Since this is in South Carolina let's put up the following ads to really piss off the people there
For the evangelical right wing:
Trojan Condoms
Planned Parenthood
And if you wanted to piss off the left:
Fox News - You could make it "Fair and UnBalanced" by putting all the fat kids on one side of the bus.
US Army/Navy/Marines Recruiting
And to just get everyone mad:
Pay-day loan vendor
Wal-Mart
Any other suggestions?
Instead of prilosec, the pharma companies should probably be pushing their new Hannah Montana blood sugar monitors. It's one thing for schools to accept ad revenue from companies like Sylvan Learning Center and Kaplan, but this is pretty repugnant.
They wound up pulling a lot of the soda machines out because as it turns out, Coke takes a much bigger chunk of the change and the schools make far less than they were led on to believe. I wouldn't be surprised if something similar happens here. They'll wind up paying the schools for placement and then charging all kinds of hidden maintenance fees.
I can't imaging my knucklehead riding a bus and taking the time to read these things. Unless they are physically attached to a girl, he probably won't notice.
At 13, he doesn't do much of our household shopping; this is advertising to the wrong market and I imagine it won't be long until these ads show up on the commuter bus I ride to and from work every day.
Isn't the lottery supposed to be the saving grace for public schools
$2100/bus-month... that suggests the ad company is promising somewhat more than $2100/bus-month in revenue to the advertisers.
Consumers tapped out? Start early with the kiddies -- and the great thing is that this approach, exposure is damn near impossible for a parent to control! woohoo! Pure Genius!
Purely obscene. Repulsive, contemptable and disgusting.
This is also exemplary of what happens when people [South Carolina Board of Ed.] think too much. Seriously. What, is the SCBoE composed of Reagan-Era MBA's? sounds like.
oh well...
@jamesdenver: Kids can be bright but that doesnt mean they wont be sheep.
Fact is people like to be told what to do, what to eat, what to drink, and how to be cool.
I would imagine that the adds would do much better on the outside of the bus.
As long as the adds were actually for good/educational/activity type things like a museum, a bike/skate board/sports equipment company, milk, or even a sporting goods store or the discovery channels I don't have a big problem.
@forgottenpassword: I think it will be in-class product placement.
1st grade Teacher: Today class we will be learning about addition. Turn your text books to page 57.
Teacher: If Johnny has 4 cans of Delicious Coca-Cola >, and Suzie has 2 cans of refeshing Sprite, now with Zero Calories and no Caffine, how many cans of soda do they have all together?
Sammy : They have 6 cans all together.
Teacher: Good Job Sammy, now why don't you come up here and select a delicious Coca-Cola product from our in-class cooler, and remember, tell your Mommy and Daddy that Coke is the REAL Thing! Class Dismissed.
Ads on the bus would have caused me a serious case of civil disobedience, well ok, vandalism. What a great place for some selective sign replacement. Explain the evils of high fructose corn syrup in everything. Why being a mindless buying sheep is a bag thing. Break down the evils of sub prime credit cards.
First off, $2100 per month is nothing. They should be paying more, like $5000 per month per bus.
I don't have any qualms with coke, pepsi, Great America, etc sticking ads inside schoolbusses. Why not? Because ads are EVERYWHERE. You get ads on tv, ads on billboards, ads on side of buildings, ads on bus shelters, ads in malls, in newspapers, plus, I am sure there are pepsi and coke vending machines a the school. Might as well try to get some money from it.
The thing I don't quite understand is how we can send trillions of dollars to Iraq and build up their schools and municipalities and communities, yet, when it comes to our own country, we don't have any money even for schooling, so that they have to resort to putting ads inside schoolbusses to generate extra revenue.
YEA YEA YEA YEA YEA!!!!!
The schools need money - and most people fight any type of tax increase to give schools more money - so if they can get advertisers to pay some money for something as simple as placing small ad's in the bus - then YEA!
(as long as they are appropriate ads - don't need no Viagra ad's or stuff like that)
@Chris Walters: Chris, I think you should have mentioned this was a photoshop and not an actual example of the practice. It seems deceptive and wrong to put a photo of something that will clearly turn the conversation against the idea (if it wasn't there already) (and admittedly, it's a bad idea). But worse, it's like being lied to by a friend, the Consumerist.
This is deplorable. I know schools are always looking for more revenue sources, but this should never have been an OPTION. At the risk of sounding like "Will someone please think of the children!", you're actively advertising to little children who have no concept of how the consumer nation works, or probably even an allowance to buy the products themselves. It's just flashy signs that try to get the kid to pester their parents continuously until they get the thing for them, and they probably have no idea what the heck they want IS besides they saw it on the school bus!
High school students might be old enough to make consumer decisions, but that's not to say that they're not impressionable.
Can we just agree that even if we are a nation of consumers that there is in fact a line to be drawn and South Carolina just blew past it?
@KleineFrau: what country, that isn't full of genocide and the like, will you be in that there is no advertising?
I highly doubt kids are going to pay attention to them anyway. After all, students on a bus are (supposed) to face front and ahead. I don't see them staring at the walls of the bus through the whole ride. If the ads were on the back of the seats or something like that, that would be a whole different matter.
1. No ads should appear where the government mandates your presence. It is a government endorsement of a product or viewpoint. (And I doubt that they will take every ad that someone will pay for. No KKK ads I assume).
2. Money is not the answer to every school problem. Many schools do better than others with less money.
3. Schools want money, fire the old and ineffective teachers that have been around since the 60's

























Prilosec? On a school bus? Really?