Red Nose Day to shine again
Charity shifts annual event into year-round fundraising venture amid the pandemic
NEW YORK — What happened to Comic Relief ’s Red Nose Day 2020, like so many philanthropic campaigns during the pandemic, was no laughing matter.
Back in February of last year, Alison Moore, the CEO of Comic Relief US, had said the charity was ready to do “amazing things” around its annual day of wearing bright red fake noses to raise money and awareness for needy American children. It had raised $240 million since 2015 and helped 25 million children.
Yet within weeks, COVID-19 had forced the charity into a diminished, mostly virtual event.
This year, Red Nose Day will rise again. And its mission will be more ambitious than before, with the nonprofit expanding its star-studded plans in partnership with NBC, Walgreens and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Most notably, perhaps, Red Nose Day will now become a year-round endeavor, with the idea of addressing children’s needs and spotlighting their issues every day.
“That mission will be on full display May 27, this year’s Red Nose Day, when NBC will air a fundraising edition of its game show “The Wall” to cap nearly two months of buildup for one day of fundraising. Yet it won’t end then. The growing need for its grants and programs led Comic Relief US to decide that its campaign will run all year to ensure that children are safe, educated and healthy, including having enough to eat, said Lorelei Williams, Comic Relief US’ senior vice president of grants programs.
Comic Relief US is hardly alone in fine-tuning its mission in the wake of the viral pandemic and its economic destruction as well as the protests for racial justice intensified by the police killing of George Floyd.
A survey by the consulting firm Dalberg Advisors, the Council on Foundations and Philanthropy California found that more than 60% of U.S. foundations adjusted their plans and increased their donations by an average of 17% in 2020.
That shift is continuing in 2021, in part because foundations require time and additional information to revamp their priorities to make sure their hiring and funding practices, as well as their investments and business practices, support their new mission.
Given the urgency of their mission, organizers of Red Nose Day say they plan to embrace those challenges. Moore said last year’s Red Nose Day managed to raise around $37 million — less than in previous years but a solid showing considering the enormous uncertainties in those months.
“We were pleasantly surprised,” Moore said. “Then, we thought about how we keep that going.”
That’s when they hatched the idea of turning Red Nose Day into a year-round venture. The organization felt it needed to continue to inform its donors about children’s need for technology to take classes online as well as about the growing problem of food insecurity.
Though this year’s Red Nose Day will still be a hybrid of virtual and in-person events, organizers hope to generate momentum for their new, year-round fundraising efforts.
“There’s this entire element of Red Nose Day signaling not only hope but empathy and action,” Moore said. “It has to come with a call to action, a call to the community to do something.”