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TexasHSFootball
02-24-2006, 01:51 AM
By Paul Tait
Reuters News Service

Australia launched a new A$180 million ($133 million) advertising campaign Thursday which seeks to attract international tourists by swearing at them.

"Where the bloody hell are you?" asks the new campaign launched by Australian Tourism Minister Fran Bailey.

Bailey said the campaign will target potential tourists in China, Japan, India, the United States, Germany and Britain and would be rolled out in the next few weeks.

It echoes the hugely successful "Put another shrimp on the barbie" tourism campaign of the 1980s, which featured singlet-wearing comedian Paul Hogan and which lured an estimated 250,000 American tourists to Australia.

The new campaign, which can be seen on Tourism Australia's Web site (www.wherethebloodyhellareyou.com), features a series of Australian backdrops.

It begins with characters saying: "We've poured you a beer and we've had the camels shampooed, we've saved you a spot on the beach ... and we've got the sharks out of the pool."

A bikini-clad woman then asks: "So where the bloody hell are you?."

Bailey and Prime Minister John Howard both defended the campaign against complaints about the use of the word "bloody," a mild profanity used to express annoyance.

"It's a colloquialism, it's not a word that is seen quite in the same category as other words that nobody ought to use in public or on the media or in advertisements," Howard said.

"I think the style of the advertisement is anything but offensive but is in fact in context and I think it's a very effective ad," he told reporters in Sydney.

Howard complained last month about the decline of good manners in Australian society, blaming the drop in standards on increasing vulgarity on television.

Bailey said the campaign had been tested in some of Australia's key markets and had been successful, although she gave no details.

"This is presenting Australia as we are. We're plain-speaking, we're friendly. It's using the vernacular," Bailey told reporters.

While the "shrimp on the barbie" campaign attracted thousands of tourists, its crassness caused many Australians to cringe.

It was followed in 1995 by a A$100 million ($74 million) campaign -- then Australia's biggest single marketing and advertising campaign -- which sought to convince the world Australia also had culture.

Bailey said Australia's tourism industry was worth A$73 billion and employed 500,000 Australians.

HighSchool Fan
02-24-2006, 06:02 AM
i guess it works, my wife is going in may

3afan
02-24-2006, 07:06 AM
i've been 8 times - love it! (but the 15 hr flight from LA to Sydney is a beech)

neck_06
02-24-2006, 09:05 AM
still not going............

HighSchool Fan
02-24-2006, 09:13 AM
Originally posted by 3afan
i've been 8 times - love it! (but the 15 hr flight from LA to Sydney is a beech)

the first time my wife went she left from NY, she took the long route. she was a travel agent and it only cost her the taxes that time. this time she's going thru LA and it cost alot more:(

lostaussie
02-24-2006, 09:14 AM
Originally posted by 3afan
i've been 8 times - love it! (but the 15 hr flight from LA to Sydney is a beech) How do you get to go to Australia 8 times. I was born there and haven't been back since i was 4. I would love to find the time and money to get back and see all my relatives.

3afan
02-24-2006, 09:15 AM
"work" .......

big daddy russ
02-24-2006, 01:55 PM
I still wish I could go, but it's not in the cards for a broke college kid like myself. Viva Mexico! For now.