COMMENTARY
		
		Under the Influence: TV and Teen Sex
		
		Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                 
            with Charles Colson
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
              Approximately  $60 billion is spent every year on television advertising. That’s $200 for  every man, woman, and child. It is spent in the hopes that by seeing something  on television, people will think or act in some desired fashion. 
              Judging  by the reaction to a new study on television’s effect on our kids, that $60  billion might better be used as kindling. 
              The  study by the Rand Corporation followed 2,000 kids between the ages of 12 and 17  for three years. It asked them about “their television viewing habits and  sexual behavior.” The shows they reported watching were analyzed “to determine  the frequency and type of sexual content the adolescents were exposed to during  their TV viewing.” 
              The  researchers found that adolescents with “high levels of exposure” to television  shows containing “sexual content” were twice as likely to be “involved in a  pregnancy” as those with less exposure. 
              The  researchers acknowledge, as social scientists do, that correlation isn’t  causality. Watching television shows with “sexual content” didn’t cause kids to  have sex and get pregnant. At least not by itself. As Anita Chandra, the lead  author, said, “Television is just one part of a teenager’s media diet that  helps to influence their behavior.” 
              The  key word, you see, is “influence.” Teenagers are people, not robots, and they  can’t be programmed. But their attitudes, values, and actions can be shaped by  what they watch. 
              This  seems obvious, but both the people who produce these kinds of shows as well as  their audience, deny any connection. I guess that’s all they can do! The  creator of the racy show Gossip  Girl had the audacity to tell NPR that “teens were having sex and  getting pregnant ‘long before there was even television.’” Talk about missing  the point. 
              A  15-year-old from suburban Washington said that she didn’t “think the show  affects teens’ behavior,” but added that she “suspects that it might affect  their attitudes.” 
              “Affects  their attitudes” is, of course, another way of saying “influence.” If we  honestly believed that what people watch had no effect on their attitudes and,  thus, their actions, we wouldn’t spend $60 billion a year on TV advertising!  Our trips to the movies wouldn’t include the now-mandatory ads for cars, soft  drinks, and all the other stuff companies want us to buy. 
              Likewise,  we wouldn’t ban cigarette ads from television, and there wouldn’t be a fuss  over people smoking on TV and in movies. No one would care about the impact of  these images on “impressionable” teenagers. After all, people were smoking long  before there was television and even the movies, right?  
              But  we know better. We know that, as writer Terry Mattingly says, images have a  cumulative affect on our souls and dispositions. One by one, they shape our  imaginations, and, thus, our ideas about what is normative and desirable. 
              Better than anyone, advertisers understand the power of images. It’s why  they’re so anxious to be associated with a show that is billed as “every  parent’s nightmare.” They know that the kids watching are prepared to buy both  what’s in the commercials and what’s in between them, as well.
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  2009 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org.  
              This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley. 
               
              
              
          
		  
 
 
CBN IS HERE FOR YOU! 
	Are you seeking answers in life? Are you hurting?  
	Are you facing a difficult situation? 
 
 A caring friend will be there to pray with you in your time of need. 
			
		
		 |