Caution: Teenagers May Be Becoming What They Hear

There’s no denying the influence of music on today’s teenagers. You can often tell a kids’ favorite artist by the clothing she wears, a hairstyle, or even the way he acts and talks. This is nothing new…popular music has always influenced the youth of the world. Some would argue that music has had more impact than parents, educators, and clergy combined.
I recall becoming a huge Michael Jackson fan in high school. It sounds crazy to me now as an adult, but back then my life’s goal was to sing and dress like Michael. I, and every other boy in my class, dreamed of slipping on that red leather jacket he wore in the Beat It video and moonwalking across the floor to the screams of untold numbers of adoring (girl) fans. I never got the jacket, but I did get the studded glove, and I’m not too bad a dancer. Today’s kids, however, are inspired to emulate far more dangerous behavior than wearing flashy clothes and doing slick dance moves.
“Most parents are concerned about what their young children see and hear. As children grow older, parents pay less attention to the music and videos that capture and hold their children’s interest.
Sharing music between generations in a family can be a pleasurable experience. Music also is often a major part of a teenager’s separate world. It is quite common for teenagers to get pleasure from keeping adults out, which causes adults some distress.”
American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
There may be a reason teenagers “get pleasure from keeping adults out.” Many a parent’s blood pressure has skyrocketed over headphoned tweens accidentally spouting modern lyrics a cappella while listening to their iPods in the back of the minivan. In her hit song, E.T., teen idol Katty Perry begs, “Kiss me ki-ki-kiss me…infect me with your love and fill me with your poison…” Fellow megastar Nicki Minaj rhapsodizes in her smash, Super Bass, “And he ill, he real, he might got a deal…He pop bottles and he got the right kind of bill…He cold, he dope, he might sell coke.” I’m just guessing, but avoiding a parental meltdown might sound to a teen like a pretty good reason for keeping Katty and Nicki’s lyrics to one’s self.
“A concern to many interested in the development and growth of teenagers is the negative and destructive themes of some kinds of music (rock, heavy metal, hip-hop, etc.), including best-selling albums promoted by major recording companies. The following themes, which are featured prominently in some lyrics, can be particularly troublesome:
• Drugs and alcohol abuse that is glamorized
• Suicide as an “alternative” or “solution”
• Graphic violence
• Sex which focuses on control, sadism, masochism, incest, children devaluing women, and violence toward women”

American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry
The American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry goes on to say that music is not usually a danger for a teenager whose life is balanced and healthy. But, if your teenager shows changes in behavior such as isolation, depression, alcohol or other drug abuse, etc., you might want to check out the lyrics to the songs they’re listening to.

The Teenagers : Their Media and Entertainment

Nearly everyone loves to be entertained on some level. No matter the age, ethnicity or background, most people thoroughly enjoy being amused. Electronic media has caused a virtual explosion in the ability of young people to escape to and share their favorite forms of entertainment. I marvel at the power of recreation to influence young minds, and the underlying responsibility of content providers to be conscious of what’s being offered to young people as entertainment. It’s my observation that never has the goal of being entertained through multi-media been so aggressively pursued as it is today by a massive audience of children, teens, and young adults.

 

“The amount of time young people spend with media has grown to where it’s even more than a full-time work week,” said Drew Altman, Ph.D., President and CEO of the Kaiser Family Foundation.  “When children are spending this much time doing anything, we need to understand how it’s affecting them – for good and bad.”

 

A few hours engrossed in a thrilling adventure story have afforded many of us a much needed break from the daily grind, and now sharing our pastimes is just a click away. Kids are especially adept at living life through the palms of their hands; smart phones, tablets and e-readers allow Harry Potter, Twilight, Hunger Games and even my own book, Sons of Caasi, to offer a near instantaneous escape from peer pressure, cutthroat competition and the usual host of causes of adolescent angst. The release of a super hero blockbuster (think Superman, Spiderman, Batman, etc.), or a chick flick with Taylor Lautner or—you know it’s coming—Justin Bieber, can send multitudes of young people flocking to the theaters for a couple of hours of on-screen diversion. Music, video games, sports and more on the Internet make it possible to enjoy a virtual smorgasbord of mesmerizing multi-media entertainment options with untold numbers of online friends. Facebook and Twitter mean impressions and even experiences can be shared virtually by millions.

 

We live in an age of technology that allows the entertainment experience to be communicated in numbers that boggle the mind. It follows that as producers of entertainment we have the privilege and the opportunity to create content that will be consumed in unprecedented amounts. It’s likely the effects of the entertainment content we choose to deliver on such a vast scale will be felt by children, teens and young adults—the most likely to choose electronic entertainment as their great escape.