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Watching the News and Discussing Disturbing Images With Kids

commonsensemedia by commonsensemedia Talking(January 2007) (rank 275th)

By the Editor in Chief of Common Sense Media, Liz Perle

January 2, 2007

The grainy images of Saddam Hussein's hanging are making their way around the Internet, and your kids can easily watch them. Before they stumble across the footage, you might want to talk with them about watching a real-life execution -- not a video game simulation.

Tweens and teens know the difference between fantasy and reality deaths. But they may not be prepared for the emotional impact of watching a real person die. It is, after all, different from the movie, TV, and video game violence that we as a nation seem to willingly accept. So how do you talk to your kids about the difference?

Ask your kids if they've seen the footage. If they have, ask how they felt about seeing a real-life execution. Did it have a different impact than the commonplace violence they see in other forms of entertainment? Does it alter their feelings about entertainment violence?

Don't let kids under 14 see the footage if you can help it. The images require emotional maturity. This is a complex issue that even the most sophisticated media critics are wrestling with. If kids 13 and under have seen the footage, try talking to them about the trial and the reasons behind the execution so they have a context for what they've seen.

For more tips and to read the full article, visit:  http://www.commonsensemedia.org/parent_tips/commonsense_view/index.php?id=191 .

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MadMel
January 2007 | MadMel
Kids TV
I was shocked one day at 8.30 AM my kids were watching Bob in the Box. I was fixing breakfast and heard "Not for children"
I never ran so fast. I turned the boys away just as they were showing a man in USA getting abused then shot for no reason by a police man.
I was so apauled that this sort of 'news break' was being shown on kids TV time. Well needless to say my kids dont watch TV anymore, just DVD's and i wrote a long letter the the TV station. Still no reply...


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Wendigo
January 2007 | Wendigo
I always found it ironic.

The censors insist that TV shows and movies not be viewed by children, that the tv stations keep the unsuitable programs off the air until late at night, and they constantly pump out information to parents about the dangers of exposing our children to things that are not age suitable - yet they allow the news to be shown at a time when kids are watching tv, which is full of death, destruction, horror, and sadness.

When my partner watches the news in the late afternoon, he and I explain to our son that the things that he sees are real, but a long way away and they won't hurt him.  We have to explain that there are some very naughty people in the world that do bad things, and explain that bad accidents and disasters do happen.  We have to constantly assure him that he is safe and has nothing to fear.  At first it was hard, but now he's getting used to the idea that bad things happen in the world and all those bad things are on the news.  I've started a newspaper scrap book for him with all the good stories about good things that people are doing to make the world he lives in a better place.  It's a good counteraction to the devastation he sees on TV, and it has inspired him to do things to help improve his world.

Without our guidance, my boy would be a very scared and upset little boy.  I know I was for a long time as a child, because my parents didn't explain to me that the man on the news that had been hurting little kids wasn't going to find and hurt me.



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