I have lived in New Jersey for going on 40 years. I live here now by choice and bristle at some of the dumber jokes made at the state’s expense (and laugh when the jokes are funny). So I can sympathize with the folks who have kicked off this campaign to combat the stereotypes.
And yet, I am flummoxed that its slogan is “Jersey Doesn’t Stink.” First, some areas do, but that comes with the territory (farms and industry) and is true for most states. More importantly, it is a dopey slogan, a negative that has nothing positive to say and that plays to, rather than against, the stereotypes. The campaign would have done better with one of those silly songs that made the rounds several years ago — “I Like Jersey Best” — or a billboard with famous Jerseyans (Springsteen, Sinatra, DeVito, Nicholson, Robert Pinsky, William Carlos Williams, Rick Barry, Franco Harris, etc.).
Now, that doesn’t stink, right?
- Send me an e-mail.
- Read poetry at The Subterranean.
- Suburban Pastoral, a chapbook by Hank Kalet, available here.
Having an actual sense of humor makes these sort of rebranding efforts so much more fun and effective: To wit: http://www.brooklyn-usa.org/Press/2003/july21.htm
NJ has the shore, mountains and the Pine Barrens. Physicists Einstein (Institute for Advanced Study), Oppenheimer, and Eugene Wigner spent a lot of time in NJ.We have one of the top rated public school systems in the country, no thanks to Christie, the destroyer.
I'm all for a pro-New Jersey campaign, but \”Jersey Doesn't Stink\” sounds a little defensive and starts off on the wrong foot. It just invites people to disagree. Too bad, a perfect opportunity to make some noise about all the good in NJ & it just begs more abuse. My non-Jersey friends are already making fun of the slogan!