Ad Council Japan

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Ad Council Japan
Public
Industry Public Service Announcements
Founded 1971
Founder Keizo Saji
Headquarters Tokyo, Japan
Key people
Nobutada Saji, chairman
Website Advertising Council Japan (English)

Advertising Council Japan (公益社団法人ACジャパン?, Ad Council Japan, AC Japan), formerly named Japan Advertising Council (社団法人公共広告機構 Kōkyō kōkoku kikō?, Japan Ad Council) until June 30, 2009, is a private non-profit organization that distributes Japanese public service announcements on behalf of various sponsors, including both non-profit organizations and government agencies.

History

It was established on July 7, 1971 in Osaka, Japan as "Kansai Advertising Council (関西公共広告機構 Kansai Kōkyō kōkoku kikō?)" by Keizo Saji, then chairman of Suntory, and had activities in the Kansai region. Then it was reorganised as the nationwide private organization named "Japan Advertising Council (社団法人公共広告機構 Kōkyō kōkoku kikō?)" in 1974, and then renamed to the present name on July 1, 2009.

AC Japan's headquarters are located in Chuo, Tokyo since July 2011. It has branch offices in Sapporo, Sendai, Nagoya, Osaka (formerly the AC Japan's headquarters since its establishment), Hiroshima, Fukuoka, and Naha.

Like the US counterpart, the Ad Council (where the Ad Council Japan is modelled), Ad Council Japan generally does not produce public service advertisements itself; rather, it acts as a coordinator and distributor. Its advertising campaigns are divided into three; national campaign, regional campaign and aid campaign. The advertising campaigns are changed yearly in July, the month Ad Council Japan was founded. Ad Council Japan accepts requests from sponsor organizations for Japanese advertising campaigns that focus on particular social issues.

To qualify, an issue must be non-partisan and have Asian and Japanese national or regional relevance. Ad Council Japan then assigns each campaign to a volunteer advertising agency that produces the actual advertisements. Finally, Ad Council Japan distributes the finished advertisements to media outlets. Some advertising campaigns only appear on a certain medium, such as on printed media only.

During the TV coverage of the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami events, the vast majority of advertisers withdrew their advertising, resulting in a massive increase in filler advertisements by AC Japan, many of which promoted traditional Japanese virtues, such as mutual help (giri, on[clarification needed], amae[1][2][3]) and the importance of greetings.[4] This later became a popular meme in Japan.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. Ruth Benedict, The Chrysanthemum and the Sword, 1946
  2. Alan Macfarlane, Japan Through the Looking Glass, 2007
  3. Takeo Doi, The anatomy of dependence, 1971, page34
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links


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