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Image: 'Homeless Hotspot' Stunt Stirs Debate Melvin Hughes, a homeless man BBH Labs hired to provide and promote a mobile 4G Wi-Fi service during South By Southwest, holds the T-shirt proclaiming "I am a 4G Hotspot" that the marketing agency gave him in Austin, Texas, on Tuesday. (AP Photo)

'Homeless Hotspot' Stunt Stirs Debate

Wednesday, 14 Mar 2012 08:41 AM

 

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AUSTIN, Texa — A charitable marketing program that paid homeless people to carry Wi-Fi signals at South By Southwest (SXSW) has drawn widespread debate at the annual Austin conference and around the country.

BBH Labs, a unit of the global marketing agency BBH, gave 13 people from Austin's Front Steps Shelter mobile Wi-Fi devices and T-shirts that announced "I am a 4G Hotspot." The company paid them $20 up front and a minimum of $50 a day for about six hours work, said Emma Cookson, chairwoman of BBH New York.

She called the experiment a modernized version of homeless selling street newspapers. All of the money paid for Wi-Fi — an often-difficult thing to find at SXSW — went to the participants, who were selected in partnership with Front Steps. ($2 was the recommended donation for 15 minutes of use.)

But many have called the program exploitive. Wired.com wrote that it "sounds like something out of a darkly satirical science-fiction dystopia." Techology blog ReadWriteWeb called it a "blunt display of unselfconscious gall." The topic became one of the most popular in the country on Twitter by Tuesday.

Critics have claimed the experiment turned homeless people into inanimate objects for the benefit of well-heeled techies. In an online Op-Ed, The Washington Post wondered, "Have we lost our humanity?"

Cookson took pains to say BBH was listening to criticism of the experiment, which ended Monday. It had been meant to begin Friday but rain delayed its full implementation until Sunday.

"It gives a personal interaction, a connection for homeless people with regular folks with whom they don't often connect and get walked past," said Cookson, who declined to give financial totals but said the stunt raised "more than we anticipated."

BBH doesn't plan to continue the plan, and "lots of lots of questions have been raised," she said. Still, she called it "a big success just in terms of getting attention for the issue and getting debate going."

One of the participants, Dusty White, said the experience of talking with SXSW attendees and earning some cash "made me feel proud."

"I felt like it was a positive thing," White said. "They could have done this with anyone."

Mitchell Gibbs, development and communications director at Front Steps, said he was initially skeptical after being approached by BBH, but was won over by previous work they've done with the homeless. He put the offer to participants in the shelter's Case Management Program, a step-by-step program to move people out of shelters and off the streets.

"Everybody was educated and aware about the process," Gibbs said. "Everybody was excited by the opportunity to make some money."

The shelter's participants roundly enjoyed the experience, Gibbs said.

"We've had more community conversations about homelessness, affordable housing, employment opportunities and shelters than we've had in I can't tell you when," he said. "We count that as a win."

White said: "I would do it again."

© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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