• News/Talk
  • Music
  • Entertainment

Marketplace

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Listen to the show

I don't want an ugly American passport

Karrie Jacobs

The plain pages of U.S. passports are now being replaced with pages displaying Americana and quotes of famous presidents. Commentator and travel writer Karrie Jacobs says the new look is not something she's proud to have in hand.

Karrie Jacobs (Harry Zernike / www.houseandgarden.com/trends/2007/04/trends_jacobsbio)

More on Travel

  • New U.S. passport design

    New U.S. passport design

TEXT OF COMMENTARY

KAI RYSSDAL: It's not enough to just say you're an American anymore. As of today you're going to have to prove it if you're trying to get back into the country from Canada or Mexico. There is some good news. You can get a credit card-size passport now. But commentator Karrie Jacobs says the government might be pushing the American brand a little too hard.


Karrie Jacobs: I recently mailed in my passport to get additional visa pages, because I was running out of space. But the National Passport Center didn't send me the familiar pale, blue pages I was expecting.

What I got instead were pages gaudily printed with scenes of Americana: Liberty Bell and Independence Hall, cowboys and longhorn cattle, a bald eagle in profile with grazing buffalo.

My bank sells checks with similar imagery, like artwork by Thomas Kinkade, painter of light, or a pattern called "Puppies! Puppies! Puppies!" Me, I always order the plain, blue safety paper.

Each newly redesigned passport spread also features a quote from a famous American. For example:

"What a glorious morning for our country." -- Samuel Adams

"We live in a world that is lit by lightning. So much is changing and will change, but so much endures and transcends time. -- Ronald Reagan.

I can't say that I'm happy.

First of all, there's the aesthetic question. I love my passport -- the classic blue cover, the stamps and stickers from all over the world. It's the adult version of my childhood stamp album. And now, somehow, it's become a vehicle for visual propaganda.

But the bigger issue is one of identity. When I travel, I try to be the Complex American -- a citizen of the fascinating, nuanced, multicultural, messy and basically decent place I know this country to be. But I feel like this passport blows my cover. It's like suddenly, against my will, I'm wearing ugly khaki shorts and talking way too loud.

It's not that I'm unpatriotic. But the need to repeatedly thrust our whole catalogue of national iconography in the face of every customs officer we meet strikes me as kind of gauche. Isn't the gold eagle on the blue leatherette jacket enough of a symbol?

And, if not, could I please just have: "Puppies! Puppies! Puppies?"

RYSSDAL: Karrie Jacobs lives in Brooklyn. She uses her passport on assignment for Travel & Leisure, where she's a contributing editor.

Music From This Show

  • Let Love In Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds Buy
  • American Girl Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers Buy
  • Flux and Meter Tommy Guerrero Buy
  • Love You Madly Cake Buy
  • Life Is Full Of Possibilities Dntel Buy

Marketplace Confessional

"I disagree with Diana Nyad, who told Bob Moon today that Americans are not interested in Wimbledon because there are so few Americans playing. I love watching tennis, no matter who is playing. I have watched tennis for years, but the networks toy with us, creating drama rather than showing the match. Oftentimes, televised matches end precisely when the allotted time expires, even if they have to cut and splice. When they don't, as happened in a Nadal match last weekend, we were left hanging at the end of two sets, as NBC switched to women's golf. I don't have cable TV, so I couldn't switch to MSNBC as was suggested. It's enough to make me turn off the TV and read about the matches online."

The Specials

Conversations from the Corner Office

Marketplace goes one-on-one with CEOs, company founders, head honchos...

Sit in

Working

Intimate profiles of workers in the global economy.

Meet them

Consumer Consequences game

Find out what the world would look like if everyone lived like you. An interactive game from American Public Media.

Play

Marketplace on iTunes U

Marketplace is now available in iTunes U, Apple's online education platform. Get free, downloadable content in subjects like History, Science, Business and more. Study up

Sustainability

What is "sustainability?" It boils down to this: Don't eat your seed corn.

Learn more

 ©2008 American Public Media