Supporters buy a "Feel the Bern 2016" T-shirt following a campaign town
hall meeting with Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders in
Conway, New Hampshire, Aug. 24, 2015
Photo: Brian Snyder/Reuters
WASHINGTON — A slogan sounding similar to one used
unofficially by supporters of Democratic presidential candidate Bernie
Sanders has spread across the nation's capital. New billboards reading
“Feel The Burn?,” with red and white swoops and “FreeSTDCheck.org” are
up near metro and bus stops as of Saturday.
The ads are part of a campaign by the AIDS Healthcare
Foundation (AHF), a nonprofit for HIV prevention, testing and treatment,
to promote a website that hosts an online directory of testing centers
for sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) as well as educational
materials such as research papers and responses to frequently asked
questions.
The billboards were first seen last month in Los Angeles,
where the nonprofit is based, and will soon be coming to New York City
subway platforms, AHF told International Business Times.
Sanders’ popularity among young voters had inspired the
organization’s creative for the campaign. “Feel The Bern” is not the
official slogan of the Sanders campaign but has been adopted by
supporters.
“Sen. Sanders’ powerful message resonates with a lot of Americans, particularly young people,” said Jason Farmer,
senior director of creative at AIDS Healthcare Foundation, in a
statement. “We hope that our lighthearted — but highly important —
billboard campaign for STD testing will as well.”
AHF’s website displays another new ad that looks like
Netflix’s logo and reads, “Get Tested and Chill,” which is also inspired
by a popular millennial meme. That design comes after several other
awareness campaigns the organization has done in the past years.
A previous AHF campaign had inspired Tinder to take action.
In September, the AHF sponsored an ad that had silhouettes of people’s
heads with the words “Tinder, Chlamydia, Grindr and Gonorrhea.” Tinder
issued a cease-and-desist letter to the AHF, the Los Angeles Times reported.
AHF agreed to take down the billboards and any other ads mentioning Tinder only after the company added a section to its website and mobile app on Healthy Safety. The change happened in January, four months after the first ad.
The "Feel The Burn?" billboard in Los Angeles caught the attention of singer-songwriters Jason Mraz and Moby in March 2016.
Photo: Facebook Screenshots
AHF has not received a cease-and-desist letter from the
Sanders campaign. The campaign has not and will not send one, Michael
Briggs, a spokesman for Bernie Sanders, told IBT.
Sanders has spoken repeatedly on his support for healthcare,
including funding for Planned Parenthood. “[H]ealth care must be
recognized as a right, not a privilege,” Sanders wrote on a 2013 blog in the Huffington Post.
AHF's campaigns follow several reports on STD increases
linked to the rise of dating apps. The Rhode Island Department of
Health attributed
"social networks" to a 33 percent increase in HIV cases, 79 percent in
syphilis cases and 30 percent in gonorrhea cases, but such a study has
not been performed by the federal Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
The CDC has estimated that people age 15-24 account
for half of 20 million sexually transmitted infections each year in the
United States.
Launched in 1987, AHF is the largest service organization focused on AIDS and provides care in 15 U.S. states and 36 countries.
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