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A.G. Bell Vs. National Association for the Deaf

Part I of the A.G. Bell-NAD Debate Regarding the Super Bowl Pepsi Commercial

By Trina Council, published Apr 01, 2008
Published Content: 6  Total Views: 3,169  Favorited By: 0 CPs
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Rating: 4.5 of 5
For those of you who missed it, Pepsi aired, what I believe, is a fantastic commercial in sign language acted out by real deaf individuals. A friend asked me the other day if I had seen the AGBell letter and the NAD response to said letter. We both agreed there were good points to each view, but WAY too much negativity on both parts. My other friend, however is supportive of NAD all the way. I can see his point of view, but as a late-deafened individual, I am able to see both sides.

First of all, the premise is funny, while of course, predictable. One problem I have with it is why is the entire block in total and complete darkness, without even a porchlight? Most people put on a porch light, or have at least one light on in the house...I mean, really. Eh, call me nitpicky.

In any event, the Alexander Graham Bell Association of the Deaf had a little problem with this commercial. They believe that PepsiCo is perpetuating a "myth that all deaf people can only communicate in sign language, and are, therefore, isolated from the rest of society." They call the ad a misleading stereotype and that with the advancement of technology such as cochlear implants and other assistive technology, the deaf have many more communication options open to them than before. They state that not only are many deaf actively working in the hearing world (true), but many also communicate using speech, speech reading, and other means.

AGBell's philosophy is that oral communication, speech reading, and assistive technology are the most viable option for the deaf and hard of hearing in this world. They frown upon the use of any form of sign language. While their opinion has some validity, they forget one thing: sign language, in any form or fashion, is the oldest means of communication in the world. By that I do NOT mean American Sign Language. I mean hand gestures.

Comments
Comments 1 - 14 of 14
 
 
Trina, I absolutely enjoy reading what you write! Thank you for presenting one side and I am excited to read part two! I agree, AGBell should calm down. It is a commercial (granted, it is a history-making one and one to be proud of, me being from the area that it was created and produced in *grins*). The commercial merely presented one side of the deaf community. It did not say that ALL Deaf or hard of hearing people are like the people in the commercial, nor did it say that every deaf person MUST use sign language. Honestly, it was a dumb thing to nitpick about on AGBell's part. If they want to raise money or use money for assistive technology, where is their fundraiser? If that is so important, then they can do that. No one said they couldn't do that, right?

Posted on 05/04/2008 at 4:05:17 PM

 
As I have read both letters, and plan to include the URL's for both in the next posting. Thank you for your patience, Brenster1 :-)

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 5:04:08 PM

 
I can understand the points you make. When I said, "AG Bell had a 'little' problem" that was sarcasm....some of my points were edited out before publishing when created a gap in my reasoning. My last sentence says..."I can see their point, but I don't necessarily agree with it. " Meaning, I do NOT agree with AG Bell's stance. I was born hearing and lost my hearing, which makes me a late deafened adult. I am trying to see both sides of the debate here, which may cause others to think I support AG Bell's opinion. I do not. I hope this clears up any confusion for you. Some of my deaf friends still have difficulty understanding my "hearing slang" and I apologize for that. I hope this doesn't keep you from reading my future articles. :-) I will submit the second part of this in about a week. The next part will focus on NAD's response to AGBell.

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 4:04:28 PM

 
OK, thanks. I re-read this article and want to point out a few things... 1) You said AGBell "had a little problem with this commercial." Actually, this organization had a MAJOR problem with this commercial; otherwise, it wouldn't write a letter basically putting down the signing Deaf community. This is not the first time it had happened. Please see this blog: http://www.ythree.com/?p=175, and another blog that shows copy of correspondence between AGBell and NBC station: http://blog.deafread.com/abcohende/2008/03/05/ag-bell-infamous-telegram-to-nbc/ . 2) Actually, it is NOT "Alexander Graham Bell Association OF the Deaf" as it is "Alexander Graham Association FOR the Deaf and Hard of Hearing". It is important to point out, because "OF" and "FOR" are huge different. Lastly, just my comment... I did see that you do support sign language, but the last paragraph you said that AGBell does have a valid point that money spent on commercial could have been better spent... THAT I completely disa

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 3:04:08 PM

 
I will mention this to AC, because I actually feel the same way. I mentioned this to a friend of mine, the stuff on the left is distracting, and detracts from the rest of the articles. I can't promise better editing or changes, but I will certainly let AC know of the problem!

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 1:04:03 PM

 
Hi Brenster. I wish I could, but that is Associated Content editing my article. I have no control over the layout unfortunately. :-( It happened with my other articles and papers, also. AC has stated they will allow more control in editing, etc., but until then, I must endure their own strange concept of "editing" and "layouts."

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 1:04:29 PM

 
OK, I'll look out for the second part, then. May I suggest to improve the layout of your "article"? Keep your article in one-page format rather than breaking it down into 2, 3, 4 or more pages, depending on the length of the article. Also your article posted is far at right side of the screen with many things in two left sidebars making it rather "cluster" to my eyes. Not very relaxing read. I started reading your other articles, but I gave up on reading further, because it was broken down into more than 4 pages. Just FYI. Thanks-

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 12:04:20 PM

 
Hi Brenster....apparently you misunderstood that this is a two-part debate. I neither support nor am against their stand. In fact I am supportive of sign language. I plan to post my second half soon.

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 11:04:59 AM

 
I enjoyed your perspective on how the humans' need to communicate is instinctive, primitive and predisposed--much like a baby instinctly looking for the mother's breast for milk. It's already built-in. People who use Sign Language are the Masters of body language. Give us any idea or concept and we will communicate that in body language alone. Try us. Language comes in many different forms and shapes. Body language is one, sign language is another. Spoken English is another thing entirely, as well as Farsi, Morse Code, Math, etc. These are all vectors with which ideas and thoughts are *conveyed*. There is no superior language. The difference I see between the Deaf Community and the Hard of Hearing community is in the Culture. The Deaf have a culture. The Hard of Hearing do not, hence the common thread that binds us all--American Sign Language. The common thread in Hard of Hearing? Cochlear implants, hearing aids, speech therapy, speech therapy, speech therapy, spee

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 11:04:01 AM

 
Why be nitpicky with that PepsiCo commercial? There are plenty of commercials involving hearing actors that are plainly stupid. For example, another PepsiCo commercial, a guy flying and falling on the ground over and over, because a girl was drinking a pepsi with a straw. It's just a commercial! Light up. Signing Deaf people are NOT MYTH! In fact, they do EXIST! There was nothing in the commercial that indicates that ALL Deaf people USE sign language. They DO work in the hearing world. AGBell's letter promotes lack of understanding and acceptance toward diversity in the Deaf community. And you endorse it!

Posted on 04/16/2008 at 7:04:59 AM

 
I had not seen this commercial. This is a great piece welcome to AC!

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 5:04:10 PM

 
Another job well done!

Posted on 04/08/2008 at 7:04:41 AM

 
Thanks, Chrissy! Great to know others appreciate my work. I speak from my own experience and those of others I know well. I hope that by making my own experiences known, people who aren't familiar with hearing loss will learn to appreciate our unique challenges. Again, thanks for the encouragement!

Posted on 04/06/2008 at 7:04:18 PM

 
Great submission Trina! I am a Content Producer here at AC, with over 3,000 pieces of content and working my way up to two million page views. I've written several pieces on hearing impairment and look forward to reading more of your submissions. If you keep writing great content like this, you'll soon bypass me! Great job and welcome to AC!

Posted on 04/06/2008 at 12:04:46 PM

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