Living
a Double Life
Las Vegas nightclubs and casinos
will be inundated with card-carrying astronauts,
neurosurgeons and bounty hunters in the coming
months, thanks to a new turn in tourism marketing.
The
city that encourages tourists to deceive their
parents, children and spouses with the "What
happens here ..." slogan has taken another
step down that road with a national advertising
blitz inviting visitors to create a false identity
- then come to Las Vegas and live it.
The
new "Be Anyone" campaign features
magazine and TV ads, including one called "Jobs,"
in which a man tells colorful fibs about what
he does for a living to "impress the ladies,"
according to an announcement by the Las Vegas
Convention and Visitors Authority's ad agency,
R&R Partners Inc.
The
campaign includes an Internet-based contest,
at www.visitlasvegas.com, in which participants
who concoct the most creative fictional personae
can win an all-expenses-paid Las Vegas vacation
to carry out the hoax in style.
Randy
Snow, R&R Partners vice president and executive
creative director, said the campaign is meant
to poke fun at visitors who use a little "strategic
embellishment" to spice up their vacation.
National
magazine advertisements will get the Blarney
stone rolling with scratch-off cells that allow
players to mix and match names, occupations
and cities of origin. Examples provided by the
tourism authority include "Norm, double
agent from Fiji," and "Cindy, rap
mogul from Havana."
Contestants
will be aided and abetted by "printable
business cards, a real Web site and 800 number
for their faux business, plus printable certificates
of achievement in their field, suitable for
framing," the ad agency says.
Snow
said there were some concerns during the creative
process that the promotional items could be
used to perpetrate actual fraud, so the agency
made sure to stick with outlandish job descriptions
such as "hand model" and "cage
fighter."
"We're
not giving away medical school diplomas to put
on the wall," he said.
Snow
did not speculate as to how far his agency could
take its trickery-touting campaign in the future,
but here are a couple of (apocryphal) suggestions:
"Be
Single" - Does the old ball-and-chain cramp
your style when you visit Sin City? Fill out
an online form explaining why your husband or
wife is dragging you down, and the visitor's
authority might assist you by having two ex-convicts
"host" your significant other in the
trunk of their sedan for the duration of your
stay.
"Be
John Malkovich" - Thanks to face transplant
technology pioneered recently in France, see
what it's like to cavort in Vegas as actor John
Malkovich. Also available: Nicolas Cage and
John Travolta.
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