America's first tourism ad campaign: Will it bring back visitors?

The U.S. never felt the need to lure guidebook-toting foreigners to the Statue of Liberty or the Golden Gate Bridge... until tourism plunged in the wake of 9/11

Roseanne Cash
(Image credit: YouTube)

This week, America launched its first-ever tourism ad campaign in Japan, Canada, and Britain, and is planning on expanding the feel-good media blitz in the coming months to Brazil, China, France, Germany, India, and South Korea. In one ad, a guitar-strumming Roseanne Cash, backed by an almost-too-diverse-to-be-believed band of musicians, beckons tourists to "come and find your land of dreams" over burnished shots of vintage Cadillacs, elderly dominoes players, and wedding celebrations — largely in lieu of classically tourist-friendly activities. (Watch the clip below.) The campaign, including print, web, and video ads, was created by Brand USA, a partnership between the U.S. government and a group of American companies. It's part of an effort to reverse a 10-year decline in tourism triggered by 9/11, when new travel restrictions and procedures spurred vacationers to go elsewhere. But will the campaign actually succeed?

It could help improve America's global image: Over the past decade, the U.S. has developed a global reputation "for being unwelcoming," even "arrogant," and the campaign could encourage foreigners see the country in a more favorable light, says Mark Johanson at International Business Times. Brand USA went out of its way to omit "all nationalistic plugs," and even the U.S.A. logo, a composite of multicolored dots, steers clear of "any hint of patriotism." The strategy just might work to "help lift the nation out of the economic doldrums."

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