This post was previously published in an earlier edition of Mad Blog.I recently took part in an Advertising Week panel called “Let’s Face It: I’m Biased and So
Are You."
It was based on the new book “Overcoming Bias: Building Authentic
Relationships Across Differences" by Tiffany Jana and Matthew Freeman.
Author Jana, who jokingly refers to her own “Negritude” along with a host of her other differences, was
on the panel, along with moderator Helayne Spivak of VCU Brandcenter, Alain Sylvain of Sylvain Labs, and Brian Collins of Collins.
Toward the end, an older white male ad exec in the
audience spoke for a lot of people in acknowledging that bias is a topic he never even considered in the past while running his own businesses, and that he was too scared to bring it up now, lest he
offend anyone.
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Jana responded that it’s not his fault. “It’s the way our brains are wired,” she said. “Our brains can get in the way of equality and
fairness.” Her message is that unless we all acknowledge our own biases, and actively work on opening our minds to new wiring, we won’t have authentic change.
“Bias is in the air you breathe,” she writes of the attitudes we are born into. “We harbor bias that we have simply failed to reconsider as we mature.” Eventually,
“unchecked bias can look like privilege.”
Failing to reconsider the bias we are born into as we mature made me think directly of 70-year-old Donald Trump. (MadBlog
acknowledges its obviously pro-Hillary bias.) And it made me consider the idea that he honestly does not believe he is biased -- or, to use a word that has resurfaced for the first time in about 30
years, “bigoted.”
"There is an assault on everything we stand for," he said at a recent rally, "and we’re gonna stop the assault and make America great again."
We are
all feeling raw and frustrated during this season of political extremes. We actually have to thank the Republican presidential candidate for making his viewpoints unabashedly clear, and allowing those
of some of his supporters to surface: that as whites, they are tired of being the “bad guys” and that as a result of changing populations, the new economy and political correctness, they
feel discriminated against and excluded.
Often, in even acknowledging that the idea that race and gender are fluid constructs, the pitched battles begin.
Clinton’s
candidacy has also awakened our culture to the subtle (and not so subtle) stereotypically sexist norms that still exist, and that to this day remain our default behavior.
The Cosby
trials and the sudden, unexpected termination of Roger Ailes from Fox News are just two of the recent incidents that have allowed long-hidden, horrifying behaviors to be excavated, forcing us to see
bias with new eyes.
Our panel on bias followed “Sexism in Advertising and What Brands Should Do.“ Although we’d like to think otherwise -- because the focus on women’s
equality has made some men feel like they are the victims -- its panelists touched on some new and sobering data from a recent 4As study: that at least 50% of women in the industry have experienced
sexual harassment, and that 42% of the women polled felt that they were not “included in decision-making."
And those were only two of the many mini-seminars dealing with bias, sexism and
the need for American advertising agencies to change. How long will this take?
The idea of integrating all-white agencies was the subject of a “Mad Men” episode based on an
incident that took place 46 years ago outside the offices of Young & Rubicam, and resulted in a discrimination suit.
Ironically, the agency’s make-it-go-away instinct in response to
the bad publicity had a great outcome, a gift that keeps on giving. As a partial response, Y&R launched the “A mind is a terrible thing to waste” campaign for the United Negro College
Fund. It has proven to be one of the most compassionate and memorable tag lines ever created in advertising history, and remains effective to this day.
Still, the industry remains
overwhelmingly white.
We have also been talking about the critical need to hire, train, and promote women in the ad ranks for at least 40 years. I have to laugh when I remember writing about
entering a “post-feminist” world in the mid-1980s, because that's what I believed then. (That resurrected memory makes me want to use the word “rueful.”)
One note of
encouragement in the ad world: We now have the awareness, the terms, and the new tools with which to act. But making agencies more diverse and gender-blind requires enlightenment and patience -- not
to mention great expense. The first two qualities are not intrinsic to running any demanding, tech-based American workplace, especially at a grinding time in the economy, when work has to be done
faster and cheaper.
But I do believe that the diversity situation will improve, if only because agencies have no choice. As has been reported lately, brand behemoths like HP and General Mills
have announced new diversity requirements for any agency handling their business.
We have to get there, and deal with the fallout, one way or the other.
Because, to put an ironic
spin on what was once said about General Motors, what’s good for General Mills is good for the U.S.A.