First came "cool Britannia," Tony Blair's late-'90s attempt to sex up the U.K.'s image. Now Germany is rebranding itself for the British audience. A study by the London branch of the Goethe Institute, which promotes Germany abroad, exposed the U.K.'s lack of interest in the country's people, language and culture. So the Institute launched a publicity campaign, targeted at British students, teachers and cultural bodies, which will fill mailboxes with postcards featuring übermodel Claudia Schiffer and the slogan learn German, and look good.
There's a serious side to this, says the Institute's Klaus Krischok: "There are streets in Germany where Nazis used to walk. These streets have changed a lot, so why not change your perception?" Advertisers German ones, anyway are applauding. "The British do not believe we can mock ourselves, so we have to show that we can," says Ralph Blome, manager of Innovista, a Hanover ad agency. His own suggestion: "A picture of a plate of Sauerkraut and the slogan 'We are Krauts we are having a good time!'" You can already hear the plane tickets being booked.