The situation
Playing contact sports, especially football, often results in repeated hits. Each one causes brain trauma, even if it doesn’t cause a concussion. And these repetitive hits add up to long-term risk for the debilitating, deadly brain disease, chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). This is especially concerning for young people, because the earlier they start playing tackle football, the longer they will experience repetitive hits, which increases their risk for CTE. Fingerpaint employee Angela Harrison lost her father to CTE and reached out to the Concussion Legacy Foundation to work together to develop a pro bono campaign. The campaign would highlight the dangers of youth tackle football by comparing the risks to that of smoking cigarettes—noting that over time, a child’s risk of developing CTE from tackle may add up faster than a smoker’s risk of developing lung cancer.
The insight
After study findings on the dangers of CTE were published in the Annals of Neurology medical journal, Rebecca Carpenter, Angela Harrison, and former NFL player Chris Borland were shocked to hear the strong correlation between starting tackle football at a young age and the development of CTE—a stronger correlation, in fact, than that between smoking and developing lung cancer over time. The creative and controversial PSA was created to highlight this in a way that would get people talking. After a long football practice, children are taken off the field for a huddle break, where they are handed cigarettes by their parents and coaches. As the kids catch their breath and puff away, the PSA describes the dangers of youth tackle football, comparing it to smoking and noting the younger children start, the longer they are exposed to the dangers.
The solution
The website and creative spot launched the day the clinical study was published in the Annals of Neurology. From there, the team executed a local and national news blitz that included the creative director of the project doing live national interviews, as well as getting the project picked up by the Associated Press to syndicate on local channels across the nation. Additionally, the PSA was aired on both broadcast and connected TV. The website, PSA, and social media efforts overwhelmingly performed either at or above benchmark, garnering billions of impressions from hundreds of thousands of users. The provocative PSA started conversations everywhere, raising awareness of the dangers of youth tackle football.
The results
The PSA was picked up by the AP for nationwide local coverage, as well as every major national news network. It was covered extensively in print, television, online, and news media. It was most notably featured in:
The NY Times, Washington Post, USA Today, and many other major newspapers
ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX; creative director gave a live national interview on HLN
Network shows like “The Doctors”
Parenting blogs, including ScaryMommy.com
More than 100 local TV news stations featured the PSA on morning and evening show segments, and most ran full packaged stories on the issue of CTE. Additionally, website traffic in the quarter the PSA was released (Q4) reached a record high, and it became the most-watched video on CLF channels.
Since it first started airing, the PSA has significantly impacted fundraising for the Concussion Legacy Foundation. Funds raised during the month the PSA first aired increased 32% over the previous year, average donation amounts in the month after the release of the PSA increased 52% compared to the previous year, and total donations in the quarter after the PSA was released (Q4) increased 37% compared to the previous year.