27.9 C
Karachi
Friday, April 19, 2024
- Advertisement -

Humorous ads targeting Muslim stereotypes debut on NYC subway

TOP NEWS

Reuters
Reuters
Reuters is an international news organisation owned by Thomson Reuters

“The Ugly Truth About Muslims: Muslims have great frittata recipes,” reads one of the ads created by comedians Negin Farsad and Dean Obeidallah who are using humor to break down stereotypes promote their documentary “The Muslims Are Coming.”

The advertisements debuted after a federal court in Manhattan ruled in October that being Muslim was a religious, not a political, identity. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has a policy prohibiting political speech in ads on public transportation.

The ad campaign strives to combat negative perceptions of Muslims as the world grapples with accommodating millions of people fleeing Middle East violence and abject poverty in other parts of Africa.

A man passes a poster promoting the new documentary film ‘The Muslims Are Coming’ inside the City Hall subway station in the Manhattan borough of New York City, March 7, 2016.

“The point of the movie is just to show Muslims in a positive light, to build a bridge with mainstream Americans,” Farsad said in an interview. “Muslim-Americans can be super-hilarious and that’s kind of just what we want to show people.”

In June 2015, New York-based Vaguely Qualified Productions LLC, the company behind the documentary, filed a lawsuit against the transit authority after it withdrew prior approval for the ads. A federal judge had already allowed the transit authority to reject an ad from the American Freedom Defense Initiative after the agency adopted a policy against political advertising.

“Here we are 15 months later and a federal lawsuit later and finally these funny posters are going up that were tied to our film in which it shows Muslims being funny and in a different light,” said Obeidallah. “That’s all it was about.”

The ads, which cost about $20,000, will be posted in about 144 subway stations, according to Farsad and Obeidallah.

One ad at the City Hall station in lower Manhattan carried three statements with the caveat that only one was true of Muslims. Edgar Sanchez, 45, of Queens, said he thought the ad was a positive attempt to combat stereotypes. “In every country and every religion there are good people and bad people,” he said.

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -
 

POLL

Will the PML-N led govt be able to steer Pakistan out of economic crisis?

- Advertisement -
 

MORE STORIES