Racheal Lee
May 16, 2013

Stunt 'resignation' of Singa sparks courtesy conversation

SINGAPORE - Yesterday's 'resignation' letter from Singa the Courtesy Lion, a marketing initiative by Singapore Kindness Movement (SKM), hit the mark by creating a social-media conversation about the topic of kindness.

Sad Singa
Sad Singa

In a letter to Singapore yesterday titled “I quit” on the SKM website, the sad-looking Singa (the word literally means “lion” in Malay) said he needs a “long break” as he is “too tired to continue facing an increasingly angry and disagreeable society”. Singa has been on the job for more than 30 years in various campaigns promoting courteous and gracious behaviour.

He explained that “kindness shouldn’t be a campaign”, adding that “it’s time for real people to step up and for the mascot to step aside”.

William Wan, general secretary of the movement, told Campaign Asia-Pacific that Singa has a persona, and SKM is using that persona to talk to Singaporeans via social media, to remind people to act graciously.

"This is a campaign by the SKM, which challenges the conventional thinking of how campaigns are run," he added. "Over the past three years, Singapore has become more vocal due to the explosion of social media. We have talked that we are a people’s movement, and we want to engage Singapore more in getting them to champion the cause of kindness in their own communities."

He noted that Singa’s 'resignation' is a platform for people to react, whether negatively or positively, and discuss the role of kindness in their lives.

"It provides a focus for discussion, and we believe in the maturity of that discussion," Wan said. "While that’s not to say traditional campaigns do not still have their place, it was time to look at something which would give people something to talk about , and hopefully reflect on the state of kindness in Singapore and the kind of society we want to be."

The initial smiling Singa
SKM is working with Strategic Public Relations Group (SPRG) and 3-Sixty Brand Communications on this initiative. Wan was earlier reported as saying that the lion is venturing into cyberspace as SKM is taking its campaign to the online arena.
 
Wan said there will be further engagements in the coming weeks, where the organisation will talk more about what constitutes true kindness in the country.
 
The campaign, he stated, is built to engage more with ordinary people, to encourage them to become role models.
 
"While we will still run an annual campaign reminding people of their own power to be kind, we would like to ask for people to start their own kindness movements, as we have seen some do in the past few years," he added.
 
Almost all Singaporeans grew up with Singa, who remained relatively unchanged even through a revamp and reintroduction in 2001. A golden lion with a bright smile, Singa was used for various public education campaigns in the country, to educate the public on courtesy, graciousness and eventually kindness.

The “resignation” came after the release of the latest Graciousness Index, an annual study that tracks the perception and experience of kindness and graciousness in the country: The Graciousness index fell eight points to 53 this year.

Perceptions of overall graciousness, nevertheless, did not drop as sharply. There is a slight dip of 0.4 points to an average of 5.8 this year, and many still perceive Singapore as a kind country.

Most netizens have expressed sadness toward the resignation. "As expected, the responses are varied," Wan said. "Some have asked for Singa to return, stating its importance as a national icon. Some have said that Singa was irrelevant in the first place. Some have questioned our values as Singaporeans, while others dismiss this as a publicity stunt. We welcome all responses, because it is important for Singapore to speak up about what they want for our society."

An online commenter by the name Ah Loong said: “So screwed up even the mascot has to quit. Faith in humanity lost”, while another said “NO! Don’t give up, Singa! You’re obviously needed more than ever”.

A commenter named Renee, meanwhile, said: “Can you not retire Singa in favour of some new mascot? Seriously, as a Singaporean, I’m tired of everything changing in SG. At least keep Singa as a mascot that generations of Singaporeans can identify with!”

There are also cynical comments on the post touching on the country’s issues including the growing foreign workforce and education.

"Singapore Patriot" said: “Kindness and graciousness have little place in a meritocratic society, where people have been socially engineered to think that kindness and graciousness need to be ‘merited’ as well'...so, are you being replaced by foreign talent?”.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

5 hours ago

APAC is a market of inspiration: OMD's George Manas

In a conversation with Campaign, OMD's worldwide CEO George Manas and APAC CEO Charlotte Lee discuss everything from managing agency operations to cookie deprecation to Gen AI, diversity and more.

5 hours ago

Google delays cookie deprecation again: APAC adtech ...

Google will now phase out cookies entirely in 2025 after being told the concerns around Privacy Sandbox still need to be addressed.

8 hours ago

Cheuk Chiang assumes CEO role at Bastion's ANZ ...

Chiang moves from his position as APAC CEO of Dentsu Creative.

15 hours ago

Having the balls to check: How a pregnancy test ...

An Ogilvy-backed campaign’s 40-second ad features a pair of gonads — Tano and Nato — who take a pregnancy test and find out they are negative for testicular cancer.