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| Jeff Porter |
Amidst all the noise and confusion leading up to the Super Bowl, there was
a moment of silence. On all the TVs at bars and homes showing the game,
Pepsi chose to air a 60-second commercial with no audio. The spot, entitled “Bob’s
House,” features two Deaf men driving a car through a suburban neighborhood,
looking for their friend’s house. Unsure of which house it is, they lay on the car’s
horn and roll down the street, watching lights turn on in the houses as pestered
residents peer out of their windows. When only one house on the street remains
unresponsive, they know where to find their friend.
The first-time actor portraying the driver in the commercial is none other than
RIT/NTID alum Darren Therriault, who received a bachelor’s degree in Electrical
Engineering in 1989. He then moved on to become an application configuration specialist
at Pepsi, where he was given the opportunity to take part in “Bob’s House.”
In an interview with NTID News, Therriault stated, “I’m hoping [the commercial]
will raise awareness for the whole deaf community; I’ve always wanted to do something
like this.”
According to David Spiecker, Vice President of
the NTID Student Congress (NSC), “The Pepsi ad
was something of a milestone. It was something
that made our culture and its idiosyncrasies
known to a wider audience. It should have been
something that every advocacy organization
should have appreciated, because from there,
the picture of deafness could be expanded.”
NTID Vs. Alexander Graham Bell
However, not everyone agreed with the commercial’s
message of acceptance. The Alexander
Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard
of Hearing (AG Bell) President Karen Youdelman
sent a letter to Julie Hamp, Senior Vice President
of PepsiCo Communications before the
spot even aired. In the letter, Youdelman states,
“Your advertisement perpetuates a common
myth that all people who are deaf can only communicate
using sign language and are, therefore,
isolated from the rest of society. In fact ,
today’s hearing technology, coupled with early
screening identification and intervention,
has led to incredible advances in listening and
spoken language skill development.”
Many NTID students, including Spiecker, were
outraged at the response from AG Bell. “When I
first read the letter, I couldn’t stop shaking my
head in disbelief,” says Spiecker, adding, “I really
felt that [AG Bell was] nitpicking, if not picking a
fight, at a time when we (all of the deaf people)
should celebrate the ad. I can’t help but feel
that the letter was written on impulse without
proper consideration of a much larger group(s)
of deaf people that they could be offending.”
The Loudest Group On Campus
When it comes to political activism, protests, and
demonstrations on campus, the NTID community is
second to none. Look at their track record over the
past of couple years.
April 24, 2006
On-Campus Communication
When NTID students noticed last year that
many NTID faculty and staff were not using
ASL in public areas of the LBJ building, it was
demanded that the situation be corrected and
that all spoken conversations held in the building
should be carried out in conjunction with
ASL, if possible.
October 23, 2006
Galluadet
Galluadet is a Washington D.C. university for
the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. When their administration
announced their new President,
Jane Fernandes, in May of 2006, Gallaudet students
immediately protested until the decision
was reversed at the end of October 2006,
stating discontent with the lack of diversity
among the finalists, Fernandes’ cold
demeanor, and the fact that she didn’t
learn ASL until a relatively late age.
NTID students rallied behind Gallaudet,
incorporating their colors into decorations,
sending letters of encouragement and mediation, and camping outside of LBJ in a
“Tent City” event.
March 23, 2007
Lisa Lampanelli
After CAB invited insult comedian Lisa Lampanelli
to perform on campus, she did a radio interview
where she said some unpopular things about
deaf people, stating that the entire deaf community
was “retarded.” NTID stood up quickly,
disagreeing with the statements. In light of her
statements, a small protest occurred the night of
her performance and a discussion was held after
her performance.
Spring 2007
Lizzie Sorkin
Last year’s Student Government President,
Lizzie Sorkin, was the first Deaf President in
RIT’s history. A Film and Animation student,
her thesis film was a documentary displaying
hearing perspectives of the Deaf community
and Deaf perspectives on their own community.
Her goal was to have it integrated into the
FYE curriculum. Current Film and Animation
student Ruthie Jordan is working on a multimedia
play demonstrating the history of famous
Deaf women.
September 22, 2007
RTS Protest
Earlier this year, two deaf RIT students claimed
that they were discriminated against because
of their deafness when they were not allow
to board a Regional Transit Services (RTS)
bus at the Regal Theatre. One of the students,
NTID Senator Scott Bailey, made the issue
somewhat of a cause célèbre, setting up a table
in front of the College Grind reading “RTS Discrimination
Against the Deaf,” collecting signatures
as part of a petition, and scheduling a
forum at which RTS and other transportation
issues could be discussed.
More importantly, AG Bell’s stance has shed
light on the history of a man that many members
of the Deaf/HoH communities no longer
wish to honor. A petition demanding the removal
Alexander Graham Bell’s name and plaque
from RIT’s Bell Hall dormitory recently acquired
over 1,000 signatures. According to NTID Senator
Scott Bailey, those signatures are more than
enough to rename the dorm that resides near
the Lyndon Baines Johnson building.
Bailey explains, “NTID is offended by [Alexander
Graham] Bell, because he was a eugenicist,
an oralist, and on the plaque in Bell Hall the last
sentence says NTID follows [his] ideals, when we
don’t. We deaf people use sign language mostly,
not just oralism. We’re a diverse school.”
Robert Davila, Laurent Clerc, and George Veditz
are all potential candidates to replace Bell,
but, according to Bailey, the decision won’t be
made until a future advisory board meeting
with NTID Dean Dr. Alan Hurwitz.
Other Voices
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| Jeff Porter |
Besides NTID, the National Association of the
Deaf (NAD) replied to AG Bell’s letter, “We are
disappointed with the negative tone of your letter
and obvious lack of respect for deaf people
who use ASL. We are also sensitive to the fact
that many members of the AG Bell Deaf and
Hard of Hearing section know and use ASL.
We find it deplorable that AG Bell continues to
perpetuate the myth that the use of ASL isolates
deaf people from mainstream society, a stereotype
that is far from the truth.”
The main objection to AG Bell is that they fail
to teach or accept American Sign Language,
opting instead for the exclusive use of auditory-verbal
communication. One of the principles
expressed on their website states that their
mission is to “guide and coach parents to help
their child use hearing as the primary sensory
modality in developing spoken language without
the use of sign language or emphasis on
lipreading.”
NSC has since decided to draft and send a letter
to PepsiCo, thanking them for airing “Bob’s
House” and encouraging them to disregard the
criticisms brought forward by AG Bell.
AG Bell cites that the majority of the 30 or so
million Americans living with hearing loss use
spoken language as their primary mode of communication.
However, an overwhelming amount
of these people are elderly men and women who
are hard of hearing and do not participate in
Deaf culture, and that is the root of the debate:
does culture (capital-D Deaf) supercede the inability
to hear (little-d deaf)?
The prominent mentality on Deaf campuses
such as NTID and Gallaudet is that being deaf
is not a disability to be corrected, but a culture
to be embraced. There is a certain degree
of cultural tension between deaf individuals
who use cochlear implants and deaf individuals
who don’t. As Spiecker explains, “A difficult
thing about deaf culture is that we’re essentially
based on our hearing loss. If someone tries to
restore hearing or assist hearing, it’s almost like
saying, ‘I don’t want to be deaf.’ While this is
often not the case, the small size of our culture
makes us more protective of it.”
Bailey offers, “People who use cochlear implants
use them to understand sound, get sound waves,
etc. Deafness is a disability, yes, but I consider
oralists who use cochlear implants equal.”
Individual decisions are respected until groups
or individuals start claiming that receiving
cochlear implants is either right or wrong,
such as AG Bell has done. No one wants to be
told that they need to be “fixed.” (For more information
on cochlear implants, see Cochlear Implants.)
As Spiecker asserts, “People who embrace assistive
hearing technology sometimes frown
on people who don’t because often they are the
people who say, ‘I don’t need to talk to hearing
people.’ You see divisions within the polar extremes
of deafness. This conflict often expresses
how it can be difficult to establish an identity
that you feel comfortable with, and in what
method you interact with the rest of the world.
Those different factions within the deaf community
are essentially people who feel strongly
that their method of interacting with the world
works and shouldn’t be encroached on.”
The Squeaky Wheel
“[…W]e have people here who are not afraid to
be heard. At RIT/NTID, we have a safe community
here where people are educated about deafness.
This means that any objections or concerns
raised by deaf people won’t be ignored,”
explains Spiecker.
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| Jeff Porter |
Bailey adds, “I think NTID is a proactive
school, because we have been involved in several
protests over last few years. For example,
Lizzie Sorkin, our former SG President, wanted
Respect from staff and faculty of NTID who
wouldn’t sign in public places. That ended up
in protests, and Dr. Hurwitz asked all staff
to please sign in public places,” states Bailey.
With such a track record of sticking up for themselves,
the Deaf/HoH community constantly establishes
themselves as the squeakiest wheel
of RIT. With so many organized protests and
political actions on their part, NTID has perhaps
become the loudest college on campus
(see sidebar).
As Spiecker puts it, “If people feel strongly about
something, often a protest is the best way of
earning sincere attention. The most important
of all factors is that people have an invested interest
in making a better place for everyone and
actively pursue change.”
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