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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMischief's Genius Ads for NPR Provoke Urgent Questions About the Right to Information
Reporting continues with vigor at NPR, despite some inevitable challenges, and the organization has doubled down on its mission to approach stories and news through the lens of curiosity and understanding. In collaboration with New York-based ad agency Mischief, a new campaign reimagines NPRs logo into prompts aiming to ignite inquiry and investigation.
Mischief creates work that makes a stir, because the riskiest thing a brand can do is be ignorable. The campaign, titled For your right to be curious, is conceived as a way for NPR to stand up for the publics right to ask hard questions, the agency says in a statement. Across a range of formats, from merchandise and the sign on NPRs headquarters to billboards and ad screens on the New York City subway, the recognizable block letters transform into urgent and timely questionsmany that listeners around the country are asking. How does AI affect my electric bill? Why are groceries still so expensive? How is my farm going to survive?




Curiosity is the fuel of a functioning democracy, says Mishka Pitter-Armand, NPRs chief marketing officer. NPR is essential civic infrastructure built to protect the right to inquiry. As a cornerstone of American life for over 50 years, this work is our pledge to the public: we will continue to provide the trusted context you need to explore the world, encouraging every American to keep listening and asking the hard questions.
https://www.thisiscolossal.com/2026/03/mischief-npr-ad-campaign-logo-questions-curiosity/
malaise
(297,317 posts)Get thee to the greatest page RFN!
SheltieLover
(81,413 posts)mopinko
(73,830 posts)This is very important to me. Never heard of that site..must check it out..
democrank
(12,655 posts)benfranklin1776
(7,026 posts)Brilliant!
ret5hd
(22,536 posts)OhioBlue
(5,202 posts)Uncle Joe
(65,366 posts)Thanks for the thread Donkees
summer_in_TX
(4,226 posts)NPR is a jewel. Especially these days when it's so hard to get real news giving a broad context.
summer_in_TX
(4,226 posts)Marketing helps connect what they promote with the values people have. Ads take a mediocre product and work to make people like it.
NPR has been something I've valued for 40 years. I discovered it during a long commute. I've learned so much through the stories on NPR, and I've had many driveway moments. Actually, I usually just drive around until the story is over.
So many conversations have been stimulated by something my husband or I heard on NPR.
I'm thrilled to see NPR has a great marketing campaign like this. May it go far.