s**********t 发帖数: 1846 | 1 http://thescoopblog.dallasnews.com/2013/11/protestors-gather-ou
Alenxandra2 minutes ago
As parents and teachers, we do our best to nurture our children. We teach
them good values, guide them in the right directions when they make mistakes
; we protect them from all harms before they are mature enough to protect
themselves. To shield young children from inappropriate contents on TV, many
parents have used the parental control features on their remote control.
Initially, I thought ABC is a family friendly TV channel whose contents do
not need to be monitored, but the Jimmy Kimmel's "Kid's round table" show on
Oct 16 proved me wrong.
In response to the question on how to pay back our debts to other nations, a
6 year old boy proposed the idea of "Killing everyone in China". Mr. Kimmel
chuckled at the answer and made the comment that this was an "interesting
idea". After leading the young guests to a debate on the feasibility of
using mass murder as a problem solving strategy, Mr. Kimmel further asked
the kids in the show "Should we allow the Chinese to live?”, to which he
got mixed answers.
I had briefly wondered how this little boy came up with the idea of “
killing everyone” in a nation. Then I realized that the “Jimmy Kimmel Live
” is not even a live show. Like all talk shows, there are hundreds of
people working behind-the-scenes. Each writer is responsible for writing
monologue jokes and each usually has an assignment for a specific guest. The
shows are recorded earlier in the day to allow enough time for necessary
editing. Now I know that the 6 year old may not understand what he was
saying, but the adults behind the show must know what they were doing.
Instead of asking “Should we allow someone to live?”, which should not
even be a question to begin with, maybe we can ask the following questions
instead: Should we allow adults to channel messages of mass murder and
genocide through a 6 year old? Should we allow our children to consider,
even for a second, killing people as a way to solve or escape from their
problems? Should we allow a TV host to expose thousands of innocent young
viewers to messages of violence and hatred? Should we allow a TV program to
use race baiting to boost a show’s popularity? Should we allow our children
to suffer from all the negative publicity, to be laughed at, to be
emotionally traumatized, so that some adults can enjoy cheap and distasteful
jokes? | s**********t 发帖数: 1846 | 2 http://thescoopblog.dallasnews.com/2013/11/protestors-gather-ou
Alenxandra2 minutes ago
As parents and teachers, we do our best to nurture our children. We teach
them good values, guide them in the right directions when they make mistakes
; we protect them from all harms before they are mature enough to protect
themselves. To shield young children from inappropriate contents on TV, many
parents have used the parental control features on their remote control.
Initially, I thought ABC is a family friendly TV channel whose contents do
not need to be monitored, but the Jimmy Kimmel's "Kid's round table" show on
Oct 16 proved me wrong.
In response to the question on how to pay back our debts to other nations, a
6 year old boy proposed the idea of "Killing everyone in China". Mr. Kimmel
chuckled at the answer and made the comment that this was an "interesting
idea". After leading the young guests to a debate on the feasibility of
using mass murder as a problem solving strategy, Mr. Kimmel further asked
the kids in the show "Should we allow the Chinese to live?”, to which he
got mixed answers.
I had briefly wondered how this little boy came up with the idea of “
killing everyone” in a nation. Then I realized that the “Jimmy Kimmel Live
” is not even a live show. Like all talk shows, there are hundreds of
people working behind-the-scenes. Each writer is responsible for writing
monologue jokes and each usually has an assignment for a specific guest. The
shows are recorded earlier in the day to allow enough time for necessary
editing. Now I know that the 6 year old may not understand what he was
saying, but the adults behind the show must know what they were doing.
Instead of asking “Should we allow someone to live?”, which should not
even be a question to begin with, maybe we can ask the following questions
instead: Should we allow adults to channel messages of mass murder and
genocide through a 6 year old? Should we allow our children to consider,
even for a second, killing people as a way to solve or escape from their
problems? Should we allow a TV host to expose thousands of innocent young
viewers to messages of violence and hatred? Should we allow a TV program to
use race baiting to boost a show’s popularity? Should we allow our children
to suffer from all the negative publicity, to be laughed at, to be
emotionally traumatized, so that some adults can enjoy cheap and distasteful
jokes? |
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