LA Metro's new courtesy campaign, featuring anime characters, takes a unique, light-hearted approach in the agency’s ongoing efforts to educate riders about pervasive etiquette problems, such as eating and blocking aisles. Video screenshot: LA Metro
2 min to read
LA Metro's new courtesy campaign, featuring anime characters, takes a unique, light-hearted approach in the agency’s ongoing efforts to educate riders about pervasive etiquette problems, such as eating and blocking aisles. Video screenshot: LA Metro
The Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro) launched a new imaginative online and print etiquette campaign to raise public awareness about proper behavior while riding Metro buses and trains.
Using anime characters, the campaign, called “Metro Manners,” takes a unique, light-hearted approach in the agency’s ongoing efforts to educate riders about three of the most pervasive etiquette problems on Metro’s expanding transit system: seat-hogging, blocking aisles and eating and drinking while riding.
Metro has produced three videos and an accompanying print campaign featuring Super Kind, a pop star super hero who battles a monster named Rude Dude who blatantly violates etiquette rules on Metro’s transit system. Super Kind saves the day by calling on her super powers to teach Rude Dude a lesson in transit courtesy.
Ad Loading...
Metro’s Customer Code of Conduct provides common sense courtesy and safety rules that apply to all riders. Occupying more than one seat per person, also called seat hogging, is not allowed. Patrons also should not block aisles, doorways or the operators’ exit. Those with luggage, bicycles or other oversized items should place them in the specially designated area of the bus or train for large items. Eating, drinking and smoking are all prohibited on Metro. Each offense carries a possible $75 fine that increases for every additional cited offense.
Metro teamed with creative production studio Lord Danger and director Mike Diva to develop the campaign. The campaign’s colorful approach was developed by Diva, whose interpretations of pop culture and digital connectedness has resulted in tens of millions of views on social media. Metro Manners is the first integrated campaign for Diva and Lord Danger. The producers cast Anna Akana, who has more than 1.8 million subscribers on YouTube for her weekly series, as Super Kind, Metro’s official protector of the agency’s Customer Code of Conduct. Rude Dude was designed in conjunction with noted collaborator FONCO.
Garo Hovnanian explores how agencies can better navigate competing priorities, strengthen decision-making, and prepare for a future shaped by electrification and emerging mobility.
The plan includes investments in cleaner vehicles and upgraded stations, NJT LiveView to provide real-time GPS tracking of train and light rail service, enhanced safety initiatives through a new Real Time Crime Center, and the debut of a redesigned NJ TRANSIT mobile app.
ABQ RIDE Forward is the first transit system overhaul in more than 25 years. This latest phase marks 15% completion of the 16-phase rollout, which will continue over the next several years.
During the meeting, the board approved a resolution invalidating a previously amended contract and authorized Board Chair Ann Duplessis to negotiate a separation agreement with CEO Lona Edwards Hankins.
The Pilot Program for TOD Planning helps support FTA’s mission of improving America’s communities through public transportation by providing funding to local communities to integrate land use and transportation planning with a new fixed-guideway or core-capacity transit capital investment.
Transit agencies have moved past pilot projects, but scaling electrification is exposing a harder truth: the real challenge isn’t vehicles, it’s everything around them.
The only new subway opening in the US this year, the D Line Extension represents one of Metro’s top transit priorities and a historic milestone for Los Angeles, with Sections 2 and 3 set to open in 2027.
In Part 2 of a two-part conversation, AC Transit’s director of maintenance joins co-hosts Alex Roman and Mark Hollenbeck to discuss his maintenance team’s work with various types of vehicle, training, augmented reality, and more.
The transit agency cites labor disruptions, demographic shifts, and evolving rider needs as it advances safety initiatives, paratransit changes, and major infrastructure projects across its network.