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thedrifter
09-02-02, 07:28 PM
Subject: Football Fans to Get Glimpse of Military Sacrifices

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug. 29, 2002 -- Throughout the upcoming
season, American football fans will get a glimpse of the
sacrifices the men and women of the armed forces make.

The National Football League is sponsoring "American
Postcards," a series of profiles to be broadcast during
regular and post-season games.

"About 120 million people watch an NFL game each weekend,"
said Allison Barber, a Pentagon spokeswoman. "Our goal is
to allow men and women across America to be able to feel a
connection to our military members."

Barber said NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue came up with
the idea in early August. "What they had in mind was just
regular stories of military folks who had written letters
home, or who have e-mailed or who have found unique ways to
communicate with their families," she said.

NFL Films chose stories from suggestions from the Defense
Department and the services -- including two stories
featured on www.DefendAmerica.gov. The spots are scheduled
to begin airing on Sept. 5 with the New York Giants vs. the
San Francisco 49ers game on ESPN. The spots will also run
during NFL games broadcast on CBS, Fox and ABC.

NFL Films traveled to Afghanistan to speak with service
members and to stateside hometowns to speak with family
members and friends. In one instance, filmmakers spoke with
Army Spc. Julia Pilat in Afghanistan. An Army Reservist,
Pilat is a 10th grade teacher from Beacon, N.Y. The spot
will feature her as she speaks with 19 students from her
class via a video teleconference link.

Another ad features Marine Capt. Rico Hunter. The NFL crew
caught Hunter as he was calling Paul Johnson, his former
football coach at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Another features Air Force Airman Amy Ting. On Sept. 11
last year, she was a civilian and in the Marriott Hotel
across the street from the World Trade Center. She enlisted
the week following the attack. The NFL crew filmed Ting on
duty at Dover Air Force Base, Del.

Plans are for future spots to feature service members based
in the Persian Gulf, aboard ship and across the United
States.

"In the midst of a football game, we want people to pause
and recognize that every minute of every day, someone is
defending our country," Barber said.

She said a secondary DoD goal is for people to become
excited about the military. "It's not a recruiting campaign
in any way," she said. "But it is an education campaign."

Barber said the NFL is just the latest in a long list of
organizations that have contacted the Defense Department
looking for ways to support the men and women of the
military.