Billboard (advertising)
A billboard or hoarding is a large outdoor signboard, usually wooden, found in places with high traffic such as cities, roads, motorways and highways. Billboards show large advertisements aimed at passing pedestrians and drivers. The vast majority of billboards are rented to advertisers rather than owned by them.
Typically showing large, witty slogans splashed with distinctive color pictures, billboards line the highways and are placed on the sides of buildings, peddling products and getting out messages. Billboards originally existed alongside and later largely replaced advertisements painted directly onto the sides of buildings or designed into roofs in shingle patterns.
Opposition to billboards modified this Chick-Fil-A billboard to support its vegan aims.]]
Visual and environmental concernsMany groups such as Scenic America have complained that billboards on highways cause too much clearing of trees and intrude on the surrounding landscape, with billboards' bright colors, lights and large fonts making it hard to focus on anything else. Other groups believe that billboards and advertising in general contribute negatively to the mental climate of a culture by promoting products as providing feelings of completeness, wellness and popularity to motivate purchase. One focal point for this sentiment would be the magazine AdBusters, which will often showcase politically motivated billboard and other advertising vandalism, called culture jamming. As of 2000, rooftops in Athens had grown so thick with billboards that it was getting very difficult to see its fabled architecture. In preparation for the 2004 Summer Olympics, the city embarked on a successful four-year project demolishing the majority of rooftop billboards to beautify the city for the tourists the games will bring, overcoming resistance from advertisers and building owners. These billboards were for the most part illegal, but had been ignored up to then.Road safety concernsIn the United States, many cities tried to put laws into effect to ban billboards as early as 1909 (California Supreme Court, Varney & Green vs. Williams) but the 1st amendment has made these attempts difficult. A San Diego law championed by Pete Wilson in 1971 cited traffic safety and driver distraction as the reason for the billboard ban, but that law too was narrowly overturned by the Supreme Court in 1981, in part because it banned non-commercial as well as commercial billboards. Billboards have long been accused of being distracting to drivers and causing accidents. Signs with bright colors and eye-grabbing pictures may cause drivers to look away from the road during a crucial moment. Electronic, animated signs in particular have been singled out [1] as a cause. Studies have also shown that billboards at junctions and on long stretches of highway may have a particularly detrimental effect on road safety[1].Laws limiting billboardsThere has been some legal success in curbing billboards. San Diego's efforts opened up some legal avenues that made it possible for other cities to ban billboards. And at the national level, the Highway Beautification Act of 1965, championed by Lady Bird Johnson, limited the rapidly increasing number of billboards along the nation's highway. (An interesting note about that legislation: around major holidays, volunteer groups put up large highway signs offering free coffee at the next rest stop to keep drivers awake on their long treks from state to state. These billboards were specifically exempted from the limits in the Act.) Billboards often become targets for culture jammers who oppose the commercialism of their message or the corporation that sponsors the billboard. In an activity called billboard liberation, culture jammers modify billboards in ways that change the meaning of the sign altogether, often in a humurous way. For example, the Animal Liberation Front once replaced a Chick-Fil-A billboard's "Eat More Chicken" message with "Eat More Tofu."Uses of billboardsHighway billboardsMost highway signs exist to advertise local restaurants and shops in the miles to come, and are crucial to drawing business in small towns that no one would stop at otherwise. One illuminating example is Wall Drug, which in 1931 put up billboards advertising "free ice water" and the town of Wall, South Dakota as it is known today was essentially built around the 20,000 customers per day those billboards were bringing in as of 1981. Some signs were even placed in locations great distances away, with slogans such as "only 827 miles to Wall Drug, with FREE ice water." In some areas the signs were so dense that one sign almost immediately followed the last. This situation changed after the Highway Beautification Act was passed; the proliferation of Wall Drug billboards is sometimes cited as one of the reasons the bill was passed.Big name advertisersBillboards are also used to advertise national or global brands, particularly in more densely populated urban areas. According to the Outdoor Advertising Association of America, the top three companies advertising on billboards as of 2003 were McDonald's, Anheuser-Busch and Miller. A large number of wireless phone companies, movie companies, cars manufacturers and banks are high on the list as well.Tobacco advertisingBillboards are also a major venue of cigarette advertising (10% of Michigan billboards advertise alcohol and tobacco, according to the Detroit Free Press [1]). This is particularly true in countries where tobacco advertisements are not allowed in other media. For example in the U.S. tobacco advertising was banned on radio and television in 1971, leaving billboards and magazines as some of the last places tobacco could be advertised. Billboards made the news in America when, in the tobacco settlement of 1999, all cigarette billboards were replaced with anti-smoking messages. In a parody of the Marlboro Man, some billboards depicted cowboys riding on ranches with slogans like "Bob, I miss my lung."Non-commercial use of billboardsNot all billboards are used for advertising products and services—non-profit groups and government agencies use them to communicate with the public. In 1999 an anonymous person created the God Speaks billboard campaign in Florida "to get people thinking about God", with witty statements signed by God. "Don't make me come down there", "We need to talk" and "Keep using my name in vain, I'll make rush hour longer" were parts of the campaign, which was picked up by the Outdoor Advertising Association of America and continues on billboards across the country to this day. South of Olympia, Washington is the privately owned Uncle Sam billboard. It features conservative, sometimes inflammatory messages, changed on a regular basis. Al Hamilton first started the board during the Johnson era, when the government was trying to make him remove his billboards along interstate 5. He had erected the signs after he lost a legal battle to prevent the building of the freeway across his land. Numerous legal and illegal attempts to remove the Uncle Sam billboard have failed, and it is now in its third location. Humor has been more sucessful. One message, attacking a nearby liberal arts college, was photographed, made into a postcard and is sold in the College Bookstore.HistoryEarly billboards were basically large posters on the sides of buildings, with limited but still appreciable commercial value. As roads and highways multiplied, the billboard business thrived.
See alsoReferencesGeneral references\n* Outdoor Advertising Association of America homepage\n* OAAA's history of outdoor advertising\n* Scenic America website\n* Creating Award-Winning Outdoor a wonderful billboard style guide, with plenty of humorous examples\n* Scenic America Billboard Information Scenic America's huge reservoire of information on billboards including statistics on how many there are.\n* External-To-Vehicle Driver Distraction by Dr Brendan Wallace of Scotland Executive Social Research study on normal billboards and accidents\n* A history of Wall Drug, the store built on highway billboards\n* Billboard Liberation Front\n* Billboards coming down in city centre to reveal glimpses of classical AthensLegal history in the United States\n* Highway Beautification Act 23 U.S.C. Section 131\n* 23 Code of Federal Regulations Part 750 (Highway Beautification)\n* Analysis of 23 C.F.R. Part 750 Subpart G, in the Federal Register (40 FR 42842-42844, Tuesday, September 16, 1975) responses to comments and changes in the rules for HBA\n* Legally Speaking, San Diego Metropolitan Magazine, June '97 by Pamela Lawton Wilson some of the legal history of attempts to ban billboards\n* METROMEDIA, INC. v. SAN DIEGO, 453 U.S. 490 (1981). Supreme Court decision on San Diego billboard ban, decided July 2, 1981.\n* SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS IN THE USE OF COMMERCIAL ELECTRONIC VARIABLE-MESSAGE SIGNAGE (Federal Highway Administration Report No. FHWA/RD-80/051) study on electronic billboards and accidents\n* 15 U.S.C. 36 section 1335 "Public Health Cigarette Smoking Act" outlawing cigarette advertisements on television and radioBillboard galleries and campaigns\n* The "God Speaks" billboards\n* Ask SAM, Winston-Salem Journal, Jan 29, 2002 research into the origins of the "God Speaks" campaign\n* Ron English billboards Culture Jamming\n* Tobacco Settlement Billboards\n* Foundation For a Better Life\n* Snoyes's Pro-Billboard Campaign Category:Wikipedia Featured Articles\n\n |
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"Few things are harder to put up with than a good example." - Mark Twain (1835-1910) |
A billboard or hoarding is a large outdoor signboard, usually wooden, found in places with high traffic such as
popularized canned shaving cream with the first billboard campaign employing a roadside sequence of signs telling a joke or rhyme.]]
An interesting use of billboards unique to highways was the
modified this 