Monday, March 27, 2023

Majors Changes to Army Recruiting Problems

The Man, the Legend
Colonel Andrew Dziengeleski (US Army, ret.) has a fresh take on the Army's recruiting crisis, and how it will be affected by the arrest of one of the stars of their new recruiting ads for assaulting and strangling a woman: From The Cheap Seats: One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

. . . In this case, a good step forward for the Army and its soldiers.

However, the new spokesman for the Be All You Can Be campaign, actor Jonathan Majors, was arrested last night for assaulting and choking a young woman in New York City. Majors, one of Marvel's new stars and a seemingly good choice to be the face of these new ads was arrested whilst the woman was taken to a local hospital.

As soon as I read about the arrest last night, I figured these ads had about a 24-hour shelf life before they were pulled. As reported by Task and Purpose earlier today, Army Marketing and Recruiting leadership did just that. While not all of the ads will be pulled, it’s still a major blow to the Army which continues to struggle to recruit new soldiers into the force.

Army Marketing Command has about a $150 million dollar annual budget, and paying a famous young movie star for his roles in these commercials was undoubtedly expensive. Pulling these two ads he starred in — and any other ads that he was in that have not been released yet — is also wasted money now, even if Majors is found innocent in a court of law.

It's just another incident of poor publicity that the Army cannot afford to have right now. The last major domestic abuse study within DoD, conducted from 2015–2019, reported over 40,000 incidents in that time period, but those are likely under-reported due to a number of reasons captured within the GAO study. Having your spokesman for a new recruiting ad, one with a near-legendary status due to its successes 35 years ago, arrested for domestic violence and strangulation is just about the last thing Army Recruiting Command needs to hear right now.

How will it affect recruiting over time? Probably very little, because as much as these tv ads appeal to old-timers like myself, the reality is people join the Army for more material reasons such as a steady paycheck, adventure, college benefits and the ability to travel on someone else’s credit card. I think there might be a short-term blip for the already bad recruiting numbers, but in three to four months, Majors will have been forgotten about and the Army will have moved on in some other form or fashion as it usually does.

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