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Edited by Christian Lowe | Contact

G.I. T.V.

I’m sitting in a room with a half-dozen soldiers. And we’re watching animated carrier pigeons on TV.

“I’ve got this amazing navigation system,” one of the birds says to the other. “I just can’t find Sgt. Kowalski.”

“No change of address form, hunh?” the second pigeon answers. Off-camera, an announcer reminds for G.I.s to notify the post office when they change bases. The soldiers in the room groan. “It’s shit like this that makes me embarrassed to be in the Army,” a sergeant to my left spits, as the television returns to its regular Fox News broadcast.

All of the major networks donate programming to the Defense Department, which re-broadcasts it to military outposts around the globe, commercial-free. But that doesn’t mean the shows run uninterrupted. Instead of slickly-produced come-ons for cars or energy drinks or Tom Cruise’s latest opus, troops are bombarded with amateurish, half-baked ads that sit in the space somewhere between public relations and public nagging. Cross-breed your local Chevy dealership’s TV spot with the company newsletter, and you have the commercials of the Armed Forces Network.

“Baby safe instruction manuals.” Websites that let you apply for jobs at the PX. The Air Force’s traveling, Las Vegas-style review. “The best softballers in Europe.” No item is too picayune or too inconsequential to be hyped on AFN. And at no point do the commercial-makers ever assume that their uniformed audience has any more than a few dozen points of IQ. “Diversification is a big word,” a talking chicken tells us.

But that doesn’t mean that AFN wants their Neanderthals to leave the armed services. Hell, no. Every branch of the military advertises on the network to get troops to re-enlist, to lure them from one service to the other, or to convince their children – presumably watching from military-provided houses – to sign on up.

It’s a tension that I’ve heard ever since I got to Baghdad. Officers keep telling me that the counterinsurgency here is a “thinking man’s war” that requires even the most junior personnel to make quick, smart decisions. And, they assure me, that America’s troops are well prepared for that mission. But, minutes later, those same officers will also tell me that “we’re not too smart” or that “I’m not the brightest guy,” or that “there’s a reason most of our soldiers didn’t go to college.”

So which is it? Has the Pentagon sent a bunch of warrior-geniuses to Iraq -- or a pack of grunts, dumb as rocks? Maybe it’s a self-selecting process, covering defense technology. But most of the troops I’ve met over the past four years have been pretty damn bright – even the ones (often, especially the ones) that never made it past the 11th grade.

AFN, on the other hand, seems to have come to entirely different conclusion. One with simple words, short sentences, and cartoons. Lots and lots of cartoons. “Don’t get wrapped up with these high interest credit cards,” an announcer says, while the television shows us a crudely-drawn mummy. “Quitting cold turkey can be tough,” coos another, as an animated man jumps off of a cliff, and splats on the ground. “Nicotine replacement products can soften your landing.”

Later, an airman shows off the skills he learned in survival school – by wearing green camouflage makeup in a snowstorm. A man dressed up like a human heart does jumping jacks and runs up stairs, to prove a point about exercise. And a doe-eyed young soldier in a gym keeps rocking his head back and forth, left-to-right, left-to-right. A buddy asks what he’s doing. “Training,” he replies. For an Army tennis championship, to be held in Germany soon. “I’m not training to compete. I’m training to watch.”

Comments

I have been trying to reenlist and i took my physical and past it but they dont want to do prior service with a RE-3. Can anyone know why and is there another way i can get in?

Posted by: Agustin at April 29, 2009 06:05 PM


So yeah Ive been in Iraq for 6 months, we have AFN everywhere and I am really getting tired of being told 50 times a day, dont kill yourself, the Army is Great ! Reenlist ! Are sad do PT ! Seriously just give us a normal comercial so we can have a sense of normality not constant army propoganda bs

Posted by: Jean at April 20, 2009 04:05 PM


I have read most of the comments in this section and while I to cannot stand some of the Annoying AFN Infomercials to the point that I change the channel to avoid slitting my Wrists sometimes,
I understand that they are Understaffed, Under budgeted and Lack any sort of Credibility in the T.V. Biz. We are not on the F'en Moon why cant we have TV from Satellites. Leave it to the Pros Uncle Sam and do what you do best fight the wars that the Politicians make you!!

Posted by: Dave at December 23, 2008 03:53 PM


You ever get the feeling that the militray or AFN thinks that we would never make it in this cruel and tough world without their commericals? We would be out there putting our feet on peoples coffee tables, shaking our babies, not making "to do lists." I only have two more months left, hopefully I can make it in the civilan world without AFN commercials!

Posted by: Ty at April 12, 2008 02:36 AM


I actually prefer the cheaper commander spots over the slicker public service announcements and whatnot. At least guys like "Doc" Fogelsong gave us something to laugh at.

These days it's nothing but Squakers the friggin' Hamster and the 21st Theater Support -- sorry, SUSTAINMENT -- command. Why we need 20 spots a day on 21st TSC, Defense Logistics Agency, and the rest, I don't know. Unless they have so much of an inferiority complex from being "support weenies" or "REMFs" that they felt the need to dump a lot of their budget into trying to convince the rest of us to give a damn. That's the only thing I can think of.

Posted by: some guy at December 18, 2007 12:02 PM


hey, i have bee stationed here in germany for 3 yrs with my husband. AFN is about to drive me crazy, thank god i'm outta here in a month. i have a great idea. why doesn't direct t.v. or somebody and the military make a deal. we can pay for the damn service and have some decent t.v. without all the propaganda in our face 24 hrs a day. cut the afn job and save the military tons of money by not paying people to pretend to be news anchors and commerical writers.

Posted by: jennifer at October 24, 2007 06:44 PM


A TOTAL TO MY INTELLIGENCE, "SQUEAKERS THE HAMSTER" "iBUSTED COMMERCIALS" COMMERCIALS ON HOW THINGS WORK IN THE ARMY, ARENTS WE ALREADY IN THE ARMY? "NEWS UPDATES".... I KID YOU NOT ONE DAY A NEWS UPDATE BROKE INTO PROGRAMMING ADN SAID " DONALD RUMSFELD SIAYS THE WAR IS GOING WELL, THIS HAS BEEN YOUR PENTAGON CHANNEL NEWS UPDATE" WHAT A GREAT NEWS UPDATE.

Posted by: Daniel at September 6, 2007 09:15 AM


I saw the same ones while I was in Germany and Uzbekistan. What really pissed me off was Fogleson, the Air Force general, standing in his flight suit telling me to always, "CHECK SIX" WTF man? We aren't all pilots, let alone fighter pilots. Don't tell me to check six or whatever lingo you use. The AFN does insult our intel, but I guess what can you expect?

Posted by: Jess at December 18, 2006 04:28 PM


Dude AFN is Absolutely Fucking Nonsense! "HELLO MOMMY!" "I've ridden motocycles for most of my life well... since I was eighteen"

Some peckerhead sitting in Los Angelas CA bringing us the best of whats on tv in the states right! Uncle sam needs to shut the whole damn thing down.

SLINGBOX guys get one!

Posted by: fred at October 21, 2006 11:08 AM


How about ads like "We are the 999th Logistical Command Agency. Providing for the critical needs of...." Hey I'm impressed. I always figured if I needed to get my batallion of tanks from my house back in the states delivered over here so I could do my part for the war effort, I'd go with the 222nd Agency of Logistic Commands. But from what I've just seen the 999th blows them out of the water. But what do I know. I didn't realize that in Europe I was still subject to the laws of UCMJ until I saw that ad where all those youngsters at the diner were poring through the law books to find an often overlooked legal implication. Good luck on the bar exam guys.

Posted by: David at May 25, 2006 06:07 AM


Yeah, well your haircut fuckin' sucks. Ever think of that! If you really feel this way, don't listen to our radio station! AFN is an Army organization, just like your Personel Office, the Clinic, or the Mess Hall - understaffed and underfunded - but like them, we have some people who do actually care and are trying to make a difference. Tell me what Army support organization do you know of that functions well? What?...MWR?, AAFES?, the truth is that you complain just as much about those guys too I'm sure. If you didn't have them I guess you think life would be grand!? If you're not happy with AFN then write your congressmen and tell him to push for more funding for ABS (Army Broadcast Service). Or better yet, tell him that AFN sucks and he should push to shut it off! Listen to silence, yeah, that's better than AFN!

Posted by: Nate at May 12, 2006 06:38 PM


OK, so anyone in Europe noticed the change in radio? What the fuck is the eagle?!? And the music sucks now. I called the other day to make a request and they actually turned me away.

Posted by: DJ at April 26, 2006 07:09 AM


It is not just that the commercials were terrible it is that they played the same ones over and over, even in succession. For the life of me I can't understand why they never thought of "If something is worth doing, it is worth doing well". I can tell you after being stationed in Germany and deployed to Iraq that we would rather have silence than our intelligence insulted!

Posted by: Atopilot at January 13, 2006 01:14 PM


Hey, good job making a post out of watching TV in the camp. It might seem like not a news-y event but it's actually a fun little topic I can discuss with my friend over there. It's an unexplored niche.

Posted by: Noumenon at November 3, 2005 01:34 AM


Untill the 25th of Aug I was one of those DOD contractors in Balad. I went thru the airport several times in Baghdad though. I did just over a year.

AFN commericals are lame. Not as lame as when I was in back in the 80's. My favorite commerical was a overweight G.I. coing thru the serving line and piling his tray high while a sound track of pigs snorting played in the background. It was great.

Most of the contractors I worked with were not overweight, esp. those guys serving in Force Protection and Fire Fighting. And the G.I.'s I worked with were not stupid either. I worked outside the wire and have nothing but respect for the G.I.s I knew. Any bonus monies they get for reuping, they deserve. More power to them.

I actually miss Iraq and the crap over there. In this dismal culture of America, where the focus of people seems entirely on possessing as much b/s as possible, I believe the Iraqis have a deeper culture.

They are more involved with family, land and God than any part of America. I hope the best for Iraq. And any contactor or G.i. who reads this post come home safe.

Posted by: john beard at September 14, 2005 02:08 PM


But most of the troops I’ve met over the past four years have been pretty damn bright – even the ones (often, especially the ones) that never made it past the 11th grade.
most of them joined up after getting a GED so the could pay for college with the GI BILL..sounds pretty smart to me

Posted by: Mary Ann at July 28, 2005 07:41 PM


You should hear the folks in this unit groan when Fogelsong comes on the air. "Why won't he die already," is the most common refrain.

Posted by: Noah at July 23, 2005 08:52 AM


The absolutely worse part about watching AFN while I was in Qatar last fall was the commercials (if you can call them that) featuring that idiot Air Force 4-star, 'Doc' Fogelsong, strutting around in a g-suit and reminding everyone to have a 'combat wingman' with them when they went out drinking or whoring or whatever (Fogelsong is the head guy for the USAF in Europe and is, according to everything I've heard, a complete and total tool). Since I was working with Army, Navy and Marines in Qatar, I got a constant barrage of "Dude, what the hell's up with that Air Force general on AFN?"

If you think being in the Army can be embarassing, try being in the Air Force and explaining that one. . .

Posted by: SOLE-Man at July 22, 2005 06:56 AM


I like the TV spots on AFN about US history and naming state capitals. I think those should be run in the US civilian market. The other spots they run about credit and what you described should be relegated to the garbage.

Posted by: JHiggins at July 22, 2005 04:56 AM


Think of AFN as Public Service Announcement Hell. It's the joining of the Precautionary Principle with lack of budget and folk with little experience as well as leadership that doesn't see it as a priority. Sometimes it's amusing, ignorable otherwise.

Posted by: JSAllison at July 21, 2005 08:48 AM


er, "actual" not "action" in that last sentence...

Posted by: PJ at July 20, 2005 12:53 PM


"So which is it? Has the Pentagon sent a bunch of warrior-geniuses to Iraq -- or a pack of grunts, dumb as rocks?"

It's the third category that isn't mentioned: A group of people who have the lost skill of self depreciation, not needing to constantly brag and boast in order to prove that they're the best. A group of people who can let their behaviors and actions speak for themselves, while the action individuals stand quietly outside the spotlight.

Posted by: PJ at July 20, 2005 12:52 PM


Retired from the Navy 20+ years ago. Looks like things haven't changed as far as AFN goes.

Steve W.
OSC USN (Ret)

Posted by: Sailer Steve at July 20, 2005 12:17 PM


Taken out of context, this makes an even better sense:

“It’s shit like this that makes me embarrassed to be in the Army,” a sergeant to my left spits, as the television returns to its regular Fox News broadcast.

Isn't Fox News just as stupid as the informercials?

Posted by: Rainer Herzog at July 20, 2005 11:47 AM


WTF was that, Noah?

We don't need the JTF, F22, JTTRS OR FCS, what we DO need is a better A/V club? Yeah, AFN sucks, it sucks the way nothing else sucks in all of the history of the world, even PBS, but its our 'alternative to silence' as they say on the ONE US radio station in Okinawa.

Intelligence isn't about who can think up the most airy idea and put it into beautiful execution; its about doing it, period. The US military has a hell of a track record on doing it, period, to hell with their Karoake skillz and amateurish commercials. They need bullets not self esteem.

Posted by: Brad at July 20, 2005 11:06 AM


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