Taming
                                  the Toxic Media 
                                  Excerpt
                                  from Daughters 
                                  by
                                  Joe Kelly 
                                  
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                                Last
                                year, a coalition of entertainment companies
                                and interest groups loudly launched an initiative
                                called “PauseParentPlay.” The coalition
                                (including Fox, Time Warner, Viacom, Comcast,
                                and NBC Universal) claims it wants to show parents
                                how to shield their kids from violent and exploitative
                                TV, music, movies, and video games. Among its “tools” are
                                industry-created ratings systems for TV, movies,
                                and video games--rating systems that are inadequate
                                to the task, unevenly administered, widely ignored,
                                and largely discredited.          
                              
 I
                                  see PauseParentPlay as one more example of
                                  the entertainment industry’s success in marketing
                                the idea that families hold all responsibility for handling the damage from the
                                children’s entertainment industry’s own output. This program is a
                                whitewashing attempt to divert us from the fact that exploitative media hurts
                                kids, particularly girls, who are so often depicted in sexualized and disrespectful
                                ways in shows and games.          
                               Remember
                                  Love Canal, where Hooker Chemical dumped poisons
                                  that sickened upstate New York families and
                                  forced them to leave their homes? No one suggested
                                  that the families held no responsibility in
                                  the ensuing crisis. Those parents were responsible
                                  for taking themselves and their children to
                                  the doctor, taking the medicine that could
                                  help them survive, and packing up their belongings
                                  to move away from Love Canal. But no one suggested
                                  that these parents were responsible for Hooker’s actions,
                                or that Hooker could absolve itself by mailing neighboring families a list of
                                oncologists while continuing to dump benzene in the groundwater.            
                               It’s
                                time that we held the children’s entertainment media to standards akin
                                to the ones chemical companies must observe-for the common good. Yes, parents
                                should pause the media, parent their children, and then play with their kids.
                                But the entertainment industry must do its part by stopping its contemptuous
                                dumping of cultural toxins-and its stance of no responsibility.                                      
                               We
                                  parents and our leaders—most of whom are parents as well—should find ways
                                to hold the entertainment industry liable. It’s time to use your voice.         
                               Visit SeeJane.org
                                for media viewing tips and ground-breaking research
                                on gender imbalance and portrayals in media made
                                for children. 
                                
                              
About Daughters.com
 
Created exclusively for parents, grandparents and caregivers of girls ages 8-15, it�s where you find expert answers for all your questions about raising girls.  Anchored by more than 250 articles on a variety of topics, from body image to building friendships and communicating successfully, you can connect with others who care about girls.  Learn more at www.daughters.com. 
 
                              
                                 
                                  
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