California Today: California is rebranding

Why the state's tourism agency ditched its "Dream Big" slogan after more than a decade.
California Today

May 7, 2024

It's Tuesday. California is no longer encouraging tourists to "Dream Big." Plus, more arrests at U.C. campuses.

A symphony performing in a bandshell at night, with a crowd of people seated to watch.
The San Diego Symphony at the Rady Shell, featured in new ads promoting tourism in California. John Francis Peters for The New York Times

Perhaps you remember the commercials: images of the glittering blue Pacific, the majestic peaks of Yosemite, storybook vineyards and ancient redwoods stretching toward the sky.

For more than 10 years, tourism advertisements have painted California as a place for dreamers, a place for adventure and testing your limits by surfing, rock-climbing and skiing. The state tourism agency, Visit California, led the campaign, which invited people from around the world to "Dream Big" and travel to the Golden State.

Not anymore.

This spring, Visit California replaced "Dream Big" with a new campaign and a new brand for the state, as the "Ultimate Playground." The scenes in the ads are much the same as before — with the addition of the Rady Shell, San Diego's outdoor concert venue that opened in 2021 — but there's no longer any mention of dreams.

Caroline Beteta, the chief executive of Visit California, told me there were a number of reasons for the switch, including that branding phrases like "Dream Big" tend to lose power over time and that the concept of dreaming had been popping up elsewhere, in corporate advertising.

Another major driver of the "Ultimate Playground" campaign was a more polarized political climate across the United States, which has created antipathy toward California in some parts of the country.

Beteta told me that the agency's consumer research confirmed that Americans increasingly see the world through a political lens, and that framing California as a place to dream about was striking some viewers as a political statement. "Ultimate Playground" seemed to be a safer and less charged message.

The new campaign is meant to tap into pent-up demand for excitement and travel after pandemic restrictions. Visit California's research found that 43 percent of consumers said vacations were the only time they could really let go and play.

California's tourism sector was doing well even before the new campaign. Spending by tourists rose to a record-high $150.4 billion in 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom said over the weekend — surpassing 2019 and suggesting that the pandemic slump has ended. The surge generated billions of dollars in tax revenue for the state and helped create 64,900 new jobs last year.

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An overhead view of a groundwater project amid fields.
The primary pump in the foreground is part of a groundwater recharge project designed to capture excess flow for groundwater storage in Fresno County. Andrew Innerarity/California Department of Water Resources, via Associated Press

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Two women working at a food cart.
Philip Cheung for The New York Times

And before you go, some good news

The Los Angeles Times has a list of the best-smelling food spots that serve as guideposts throughout L.A. Here's an excerpt from the essay by Julissa James:

"L.A. food leads with the nose. Mostly because the best of it is being cooked on the street — oftentimes we don't even have to walk into a restaurant to be enthralled by it or convinced that it's what we need in that moment. It meets us where we are. Some cities have their own distinct smells according to season — roses in the spring, hot trash in summer. We have Phillips Bar-B-Que and the birria truck that posts up right around the corner, all year round."

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword.

Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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