Title: Lie back and think of your mother: Obama-inspired ad urges Danes to Do it for Mom Source:
TheGuardian URL Source:http://www.theguardian.com/lifeands ... o-it-for-mom-denmark-travel-ad Published:Oct 20, 2015 Author:Helen Russell Post Date:2015-10-24 11:32:44 by TheFireBert Keywords:de-population, obama, procreation Views:1485 Comments:6
he Danes have done it again. The travel company behind Do it for Denmark, the ad watched by eight million people on YouTube that urges Danes to procreate for their country, has launched another video. This time, it is encouraging Danes to lie back and think of their mothers in a bid to make more grandchildren, in Do it for Mom.
A white-haired woman in her 60s sits on a park bench, looking wistfully at a grandmother feeding the ducks with her granddaughter. A John Lewis ad-style voiceover tells us: You were there when your son learned to walk (cue footage of mother and son through the decades) you were there when he learned how to ride a bike. And when he learned how to read. But when it comes to making children, it might be a bit awkward to help out At this point, we cut to a man and a woman in their underwear enjoying a passionate embrace while Denmarks answer to June Whitfield tiptoes in and gives her son a hand removing his partners bra.
Similar campaigns didn't work so well in either Russia or Japan.
People in Japan and Russia didn't have anywhere to live,either. Back in the "good old Soviet days" it was common to have two and sometimes 3 families living in the same apartment,and sharing one bathroom and one kitchen. Most slept on fold-out couches in the living room.
How many kids would YOU want to have while living in those circumstances? More importantly,how many of the people who share the apartment with you want to have to put up with all the smells and noise of a infant when they all live in the same room and have to sleep so they can go to work?
Japan was and is better in the sense that families didn't share apartments,but a 2 or more bedroom apartment in Japan is horrendously expensive.
I don't think any of the Scandinavian countries have these problems.