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| Excuse | 79% | 237 votes | Total: 299 votes | |
| Truth | 21% | 62 votes |
Excuse
Created on: March 21, 2010 Last Updated: March 22, 2010
Considering some of the garbage on TV today, and the list is long, it's easy to want to blame the networks, producers, and writers for their products. However, they are pandering to the wants and needs of the viewing public.
Reality shows, which in no way are reality, have captivated the adult audience, not the children. I cannot imagine a parent, however, allowing their children to watch them, when all they do is promote anger, swearing, and childish behavior.
Children think this is how they are supposed to act, and so therefore start to emulate the actors. This only creates aggression and misbehavior among children, which is carried out in classrooms and on playgrounds.
All too often, children are allowed to watch adult-rated TV. Violence, language, and murder, and these shows are not explained in verbiage that a child understands, or the ramifications thereof.
Cartoons have even gotten so out of hand with hitting, swearing, and disrespect for authority, and we wonder why we have so many juvenile delinquents. Maybe they should be watching more episodes of 'Cops.' Children do what they see, and they learn and think what is acceptable.
To answer the question, however, is TV to blame, the answer is no. It is just an excuse for bad parenting. TV programming may have a lot of garbage on it, but it also has some excellent programming.
PBS (Public Broadcasting Station), AMC (American Movie Classics), A & E (Arts & Entertainment), Biography, History, Nickelodeon, Disney, Discovery, and Hallmark, are excellent channels for children of all ages.
It is up to the parents to guide channel-viewing and not just hand the kids the remote to keep them busy or out of your hair because you don't want to deal with them.
Children learn by example and if they're allowed to watch trash, then their behavior will mirror what they are watching.
Aggression, anger, selfishness and bad habits are learned behaviors. We cannot protect our children from all things sinister or vile and children do learn from other children, but as parents, it is our responsibility to instill right from wrong and the moral values for what is acceptable.
To place the onus on TV, video games, or any other public media is ludicrous. As a parent, you should be in control of what your child does and watches. Explain to them that what happens on TV is not necessarily true, and if they have questions or are conflicted about what they've seen, they need to know they can come to you for the 'right' answers. Let's start placing child-rearing where it belongs.
Learn more about this author, Nanette Piotrowski.
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Truth
Created on: November 11, 2009 Last Updated: November 13, 2009
Television is responsible for all of life's social problems. Before TV, there was no drug or alcohol use, no spousal abuse, and absolutely no violence whatsoever. Now, we all want to be rock stars, shooting heroin and being depressed, or Samantha Jones in Sex in the City so we may permit ourselves to sleep with whomever we feel like; or dismiss the law like our favorite gangster, Tony Montana.
There is no black-and-white answer to this. No clear-cut scientific study to reveal the "right answer". Like wine, exercise, and red meat, TV is alright if taken in moderation. You must know what not to take in, just as much as when and how much to take in. Watching the news keeps you informed (assuming you're getting accurate news of course), certain documentaries enlighten to numerous subjects, and sometime you just need a good movie to relax to after a hard day. I said good movie.
Is it okay for 12 year-old teen girls to watch shows like What I Like About You, which depicts sex and relationships. I'm what you call old-fashioned, so the message that it's "cool" to have sex out of marriage is still stupid to me. I'm not making a religious point, I'm making a smart point. If everybody were to wait till they get married to have sex, we wouldn't know what an STD is. If she were to get pregnant, the mother would have at least one person for support and the child would have both parents to raise it , which already increases the chances of the child's success in school and all relationships, and anything else that has to do with life. I'm not even going to mention that a majority of a drug users, criminals, and promiscuous individuals come from broken and/or single parent homes.
Reading is scientifically proven to help intelligence. So is exercise. Playing music also helps. How much reading can one do with the TV one? What's easier- to watch a movie about sports or to actually go out and get some exercise? Exercise strengthens your heart while releasing oxygen to your brain, aiding in lowering stress which in turn helps in school and/or your job. Would it benefit us more to know what all our crazy celebrities depicted on TMZ were up to, or would it be wiser to be entertained by classics such as Crime and Punishment, Anna Karenina, Tom Sawyer, or any other number of literary works. Wouldn't it benefit you to read a documentary on individuals who overcame struggles such as Abraham Lincoln or Elizabeth Blackwell, so that you may remember them when life starts kicking your butt? You think Brangelina care what you're doing?
TV , in a sense, is like driving by a bad accident: You have to look even though nothing good will come out of it. As long as we don't take the media's advice on relational life (marriage, parenting, friendships, etc.), we should be fine. Everything you see on TV sends a message. The younger and/or more fragile you are, the more impact that message will have. If you see the same message over and over, you will accept it as normal and okay. What messages are shows sending to us and our kids?
Learn more about this author, Casey West.
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