Public service announcement

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A public service announcement (PSA) or community service announcement (CSA) is a non-commercial advertisement broadcast on radio or television, ostensibly for the public good. PSAs are intended to modify public attitudes by raising awareness about specific issues.

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[edit] In the United States

The most common topics of PSAs are health and safety, although any message considered to be "helpful" to the public can be a PSA.[citation needed] A typical PSA will be part of a public awareness campaign to inform or educate the public about an issue such as smoking or compulsive gambling.

Often, a charitable organization releasing a PSA enlists the support of a celebrity; examples include Michael J. Jordan's PSAs in the U.S. supporting research into Parkinson's Disease and Crips street gang leader Stanley "Tookie" Williams speaking from prison to urge youth not to join gangs.

Some religious groups produce PSAs on non-religious themes such as T.V. values. Examples include the long-running "Homefront" campaign from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Seventh-day Adventist Church, and more recently the United Methodist Church.

The military produces PSAs to recruit enlistees, in addition to paid advertising and sponsorship efforts.

In the U.S, the role of PSAs was affected by desegration of the broadcasting industry in the 1980s. Previously, a broadcast license was assigned to a television or radio station that was expected to serve as a "public trustee" by airing PSAs (in addition to meeting other requirements). Continued licensure no longer depends strictly on programming content, and the number of PSAs that are deliberately scheduled has declined.[citation needed]

The Ad Council is the largest producer of PSAs in the United States.[citation needed] Other producers distribute traditional PSAs distributed to station directors.

[edit] Well-known PSAs

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