"USC Marketing Class Helps CIA Recruitment"

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"USC Marketing Class Helps CIA Recruitment"

Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Thu Apr 09, 2009 12:30 am

...ignorant indoctrinated dupes suckered into helping Gestapo...

"...a preliminary suggestion for a slogan urged potential recruits to "Discover the Truth" about the CIA. That was jettisoned after some students in a test survey didn't understand it and others suggested that such a search might turn up information discouraging to applicants."

:rofl: "...Woa. Decades of installing dictators and torturing people sucks, dude."

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"The USC marketing class, which operates like an actual advertising agency with one account per semester, did not know in advance that its client would be the CIA. The CIA is working with universities nationwide on campaigns that appeal to diverse groups of young people."

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me ... 3800.story


USC marketing class helps CIA recruitment


Looking to hire recent graduates, Central Intelligence Agency turns to university students nationwide for help developing ad campaigns. The economic downturn increases the jobs' appeal.
By Larry Gordon
March 29, 2009

It's not all cloak-and-dagger anymore. These days, the Central Intelligence Agency is using marketing classes at USC and elsewhere to create public recruitment campaigns on college campuses.

The timing during such a deep recession helps sell the agency as an attractive employer, say USC students involved in advertising a CIA recruiting event at their school next month. After all, a well-paid, secure government job, even one touched by controversy, may appeal to soon-to-be college graduates who might never have considered a spy career in better economic times.

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"All we hear today is about the bad economy and how this is basically the worst time to graduate. But the CIA is very interested in hiring graduating seniors and is targeting USC students," said Allison Kosty, a political science major who is in a class of USC students working on the CIA campaign. "So that's a huge bonus for us."

She and 26 classmates are part of a five-year-old program that has joined the CIA with students in marketing courses at 30 universities throughout the country.

The agency wants help selling itself to bright young candidates, especially those who speak such key languages as Mandarin and Farsi or who studied economics or computer engineering. The schools -- USC, Michigan State and the University of New Mexico for the current semester -- say they want their students to gain real-world marketing experience, whether for soft drinks or clandestine operations.

Therese Wilbur, an assistant professor of marketing who teaches the USC course and ran a similar project for the FBI last year, said CIA officers visited her class twice this semester and asked for a campaign that taps into USC's ethnic diversity and does not wrap itself too tightly in the flag.

Wilbur, who managed international brands for toy-maker Mattel Inc. before she began teaching in 2006,
said the campaign tries to appeal both to students' interest in an intriguing, well-rewarded career and to their altruism.

The student marketers say they know they may face criticism that the CIA failed in intelligence-gathering missions before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the U.S. invasion of Iraq and that its past practices are much-debated. Still, Wilbur said, no student objected to assisting the CIA in finding high-quality recruits to help keep the country safe.

In the class, a preliminary suggestion for a slogan urged potential recruits to "Discover the Truth" about the CIA. That was jettisoned after some students in a test survey didn't understand it and others suggested that such a search might turn up information discouraging to applicants.

Instead, the class settled on a slogan that invites people to "Discover the CIA. Be Part of Something Bigger," imposed over a colorful world map in the campaign's graphics.

Class member Sunny Nguyen, a fine arts major, said she was struck by the assignment's significance. "By joining the CIA, you can make a difference globally," she said. "And your life holds a different sort of meaning."

USC is the first Southern California campus to participate in the CIA's collegiate marketing program. Other schools have included UC Berkeley, San Jose State, Georgia State, the University of Pittsburgh and Morehouse College, according to CIA spokesman George Little.

Schools are chosen for their marketing curricula as well as a broadly diverse student population. "We are looking constantly for diverse pools of applicants given the critical nature of our mission," said Little, who added that the agency especially values language skills, overseas experience and candidates from families who are first- or second-generation Americans. U.S. citizenship, however, is a requirement.

Last year, the CIA recruited at about 1,000 U.S. campuses, with the marketing classes a small part of those efforts, he said. About 120,000 people, college-age and older, applied for CIA jobs last year and the numbers are running higher this recessionary year.

Overall, the agency is continuing a hiring surge that began after the 2001 attacks, but Little said the number of hirings is classified. CIA starting salaries range from about $50,000 to $90,000, with bonuses for some language fluencies.

The student-designed marketing programs are arranged through EdVenture Partners, an organization based in Orinda, just east of Berkeley, that serves as a middleman between colleges and such clients as Honda and the country of Morocco. The classes receive $2,500 to cover such costs as posters, table rentals and pizza for focus groups, but reap no reward aside from bragging rights on their resumes, officials said.

Wilbur's upper-division marketing class, which operates like an actual advertising agency with one big account per semester, did not know in advance whom its client would be. So students quickly had to dispel their own CIA stereotypes of a James Bond life with hot cars and cool gadgets or a secretive existence with no family contact allowed.

Jeffrey Kelly, an architecture major and advertising minor who is one of the campaign coordinators, said another common myth, soon belied by their own efforts, was "that you don't apply to the CIA but that the CIA finds you."

At a recent session in a Hoffman Hall classroom, group leaders discussed deadlines for announcements in campus publications, colors for a banner, the name of a website and how to ensure that USC police are aware of the recruiting event, which is scheduled for midday April 7 on a central campus lawn area.

A similar event at New York University in 2005 was canceled after protests, but Little said that had been the only disruption in the student marketing program. The USC students say they have encountered no criticism on campus and don't expect any organized protests at a school that has a substantial number of conservative-leaning students.

Some political activists on campus say that they are not thrilled to host the CIA but that no one wants to stop students from exploring jobs and possibly helping to improve the nation's espionage.

The Rev. Frank Wulf, pastor at United University Church and a campus chaplain active in antiwar protests, said the CIA has the right to recruit on campus. Still, he has concerns "that military, CIA and FBI recruiters use this time of economic crisis to present themselves when students don't have the opportunity to make as independent a choice."

As a result of working on the campaign, some of Wilbur's students say they too may apply for CIA jobs. But as if already inculcated in spy culture, they say they can't publicly acknowledge that.

"No comment," said one young man who was clearly mulling it. "I'd rather not say."


larry.gordon@latimes.com
CIA runs mainstream media since WWII:
news rooms, movies/TV, publishing
...
Disney is CIA for kidz!
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Postby wintler2 » Thu Apr 09, 2009 3:10 am

The banality of evil. To improve chances of being hired students should kidnap random dark skinned peers, torture them into confessing to being Osama's driver, and then stage a show trial. For extra credit, pick a victim with a coincidentally diverting name (Cynthia Mcininey, John Gallow) and sell the film rights to an on-message director.
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Postby brainpanhandler » Thu Apr 09, 2009 6:04 am

Wilbur, who managed international brands for toy-maker Mattel Inc. before she began teaching in 2006, said the campaign tries to appeal both to students' interest in an intriguing, well-rewarded career and to their altruism.


May as well go on to say, " as well as to their humanitarian misanthropy".
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Postby MinM » Thu Apr 09, 2009 11:47 am

:threadhijacked: Speaking of Mattel® :

Toy Monster: The Big, Bad World of Mattel
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Amazon.com Review

Five Questions for Jerry Oppenheimer, author of Toy Monster: The Big, Bad World of Mattel...
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewtopic.php?t=12951
:backtotopic:
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Postby MinM » Thu Apr 16, 2009 2:41 pm

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Re: "USC Marketing Class Helps CIA Recruitment"

Postby MinM » Fri Apr 17, 2009 12:19 am

Hugh Manatee Wins wrote:CIA recruitment

Goon Squad: Calling all James Bond Wannabes!

Since December 2006, the Central Intelligence Agency has been using Facebook.com, the popular social networking site, to recruit potential employees into its National Clandestine Service. It marks the first time the CIA has ventured into social networking to hire new personnel.

The CIA's Facebook page (login required) provides an overview of what the NCS is looking for in a recruit, along with a 30-second promotional YouTube video aimed at potential college-aged applicants. U.S. citizens with a GPA above 3.0 can apply.

"It's an invaluable tool when it comes to peer-to-peer marketing," says Michele Neff, a CIA spokeswoman.

The NCS, one of the four directorates of the CIA, was established following 9/11 to gather intelligence from sources both domestic and abroad. In 2004, President Bush directed the CIA to increase the "human intelligence capabilities" of the agency and hire more officers that can "blend more easily in foreign cities."

Who's funding these 'Net ventures? We the People, for one, thru some of that money that's being looted from Wall Street CIA fronts, like AIG...

YouTube - CIA Clandestine Service Ad

rigorousintuition.ca :: View topic - rigint radio cia psa :signwhut:
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Postby barracuda » Fri Apr 17, 2009 1:06 am

MinM wrote:This JFK-related film -- apparently destined to go straight to dvd -- was the product of a recent USC Film School Grad:

The project to make JFK look like someone who deserved to be murdered never seems to end does it.
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Postby Perelandra » Fri Apr 17, 2009 12:37 pm

Don't know if this is related and apologies for wild speculation, but it's intriguing.
DES MOINES, Iowa – A mystery is unfolding in the world of college fundraising: During the past few weeks, at least nine universities have received gifts totaling more than $45 million, and the schools had to promise not to try to find out the giver's identity.

One school went so far as to check with the IRS and the Department of Homeland Security just to make sure a $1.5 million gift didn't come from illegal sources.

"In my last 28 years in fundraising ... this is the first time I've dealt with a gift that the institution didn't know who the donor is," said Phillip D. Adams, vice president for university advancement at Norfolk State University, which received $3.5 million.

The gifts ranged from $8 million at Purdue to $1.5 million donated to the University of North Carolina at Asheville. The University of Iowa received $7 million; the University of Southern Mississippi, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and the University of Maryland University College got $6 million each; the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs was given $5.5 million; and Penn State-Harrisburg received $3 million.

It's not clear whether the gifts came from an individual, an organization or a group of people with similar interests. In every case, the donor or donors dealt with the universities through lawyers or other middlemen. Some of the money came in cashier's checks, while other schools received checks from a law firm or another representative.

All the schools had to agree not to investigate the identity of the giver. Some were required to make such a promise in writing.

"Our chancellor was called to a Denver law office and had to sign a confidentiality agreement that she would not try to find out," said Tom Hutton, spokesman at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs. "Once the chancellor signed it, she was emphatic that we don't try to find out."

Each was delivered since March 1 and came with the same stipulation: Most of the money must be used for student scholarships, and the remainder can be spent on various costs such as research, equipment, strategic goals and operating support.

"We have no idea who this generous individual is, but we're extremely grateful," said Lynette Marshall, president and chief executive of the University of Iowa foundation. "This is the first time in my 25-year career that something of this magnitude has happened."

Usually when schools receive anonymous donations, the school knows the identity of the benefactor but agrees to keep it secret. Not knowing who is giving the money can raise thorny problems.

William Massey, vice chancellor for alumni and development at UNC-Asheville, said the school contacted the Department of Homeland Security and the IRS to make sure the money was legal before accepting it.

"There may be an ethical problem if you knowingly accept funds from ill-gotten gains," said Colorado Springs' Hutton. University officials "do due diligence and ask the appropriate questions and receive satisfactory answers."

The $6 million donated to the University of Southern Mississippi was the largest single gift ever bestowed to the school.

"It was a remarkable gift particularly during these economic times," said David Wolf, vice president of advancement.

"I think somebody is out there, or potentially a group of people, that has a great respect for the value of a college education and the power that it brings," Wolf said. "Gosh, if it's the same person or the same collective group of people, it's an amazing story."
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090416/ap_on_re_us/mystery_gifts
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Postby Hugh Manatee Wins » Mon Apr 20, 2009 7:44 pm

"...the product of a recent USC Film School Grad..."

Film spook central.

George Lucas was teaching Navy film propagandists how to do it when he used an all-Navy crew and cast to make his student version of THX-1138.
Lucas got special access to buildings to make his student film because...he was with the US Navy.

The new crop of psyoperators are being groomed at USC every year.
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Disney is CIA for kidz!
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Postby MinM » Mon Apr 27, 2009 11:57 am

"MSU Marketing Class Helps CIA Recruitment"

CIA enlists MSU students’ help in creating marketing program, event to draw new recruits
By Chris Vannini
The State News
Published: April 26, 2009

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Students of MSC 480, Entrepreneurship Capstone Experience, discuss ways to distribute information about their CIA recruitment fair to be held at 5 p.m. today. The group has been working with an advertising agency and the CIA to create marketing strategies for recruiting new CIA employees...
http://www.statenews.com/index.php/arti ... n_possible
Image
http://www.cia-on-campus.org/msu.edu/msu.html

http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board/v ... hp?t=16875
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Postby MinM » Wed Sep 30, 2009 10:13 am

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Postby Searcher08 » Wed Sep 30, 2009 6:12 pm

wintler2 wrote:The banality of evil. To improve chances of being hired students should kidnap random dark skinned peers, torture them into confessing to being Osama's driver, and then stage a show trial. For extra credit, pick a victim with a coincidentally diverting name (Cynthia Mcininey, John Gallow) and sell the film rights to an on-message director.


Of course there is the FastTrack program, which gives a full experience in 'wet ops' (soap for washing of hands supplied). You will learn how to snort coke through $100 bills using both nostrils at once, how to be organise a latino hooker gangbang for your Yale friends, run your own Central Asian 'import export' business - be the executive of your own cherry picking farm, and Middle Eastern flight school!
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Postby JackRiddler » Wed Sep 30, 2009 6:32 pm

.

CIA using the academy? The examples are, of course, legion. This may be its most important institutional linkage, this is where the main functions of recruitment and legitimation take place.

Reminds me of this thread about a former ops directorate agent abusing his classes as a propaganda platform:

"Add your own: CIA prof's post-9/11 ethics class scenarios"
http://rigorousintuition.ca/board/viewtopic.php?t=20974
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MSU offers a new class on fending off Zombies

Postby MinM » Wed Mar 07, 2012 12:29 am


"MSU Marketing Class Helps CIA Recruitment"

CIA enlists MSU students’ help in creating marketing program, event to draw new recruits
By Chris Vannini
The State News
Published: April 26, 2009

Image
Students of MSC 480, Entrepreneurship Capstone Experience, discuss ways to distribute information about their CIA recruitment fair to be held at 5 p.m. today. The group has been working with an advertising agency and the CIA to create marketing strategies for recruiting new CIA employees...
http://www.statenews.com/index.php/arti ... n_possible
Image
http://www.cia-on-campus.org/msu.edu/msu.html

http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board/v ... hp?t=16875

Bono is a jerk!
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