I think its a major problem of our society.TV shows create a totally different mind setup for the children.They don’t have that much sense to understand what is good or what is bad.What should do and what shouldn’t.
creating consciousness in innocent mind towards crimes..where as also bringing violence in attitude somewhere..children sometimes try to act like heroes rescuing people and saving lifes..but also sometimes utter slang for their own parents and friends..areas are required to understand the minds and thoughts of children if whats growing up inside their brain..children are just like clay in molten state, ready to be transformed as shaped however and family can only mould them by making them understand correct thoughts and aspiring their minds in a correct direction..by spending time with them..which however requires no heavy effort..
i think violence activities in TV shows create bad impact on kids,,,,as they repeat and tried to do all as they view in tv in their surroundings…children are innocent and sweet so they are always ready to do what ever they without knowing right and bad side of it,,,,
yes its definitely creates violence among not only youngsters but also teenagers and las but not the least adults. This is why the criminal offence are increasing day by day.
A young mind is naive, and can’t judge between the right and the wrong.. it is very important to provide proper guidance at that age. TV is one of that box today which is present at every single person’s home so children are now-a-days addicted towards different shows popularly, cartoons! but violence if any form when shown in these shows has adverse effects on them.. they can bend their minds into that of a criminal or make them shy, reserved and scared of smallest of things.
(Center for Media and Public Affairs: “Merchandising Mayhem: Violence in Popular Entertainment 1998-1999”)
The current trend in TV programs is to not only permit the police to commit justifiable violence, but criminals as well. “HBO’s The Sopranos, [is] the beginning of a new trend celebrating what’s called the ‘criminal protagonist,’ in this case a murderous crime boss we can learn to love,” says L. Brent Bozell III, president of the Parents Television Council. “Entertainment producers and critics alike love ‘moral complexity,’ but what they’re sowing is moral confusion. They think good and evil, black and white, is so old hat. Let’s coat everyone and everything with a lovely shade of gray – as the red blood flows.”
Bozell’s group is not against TV, but has serious problems with the amount of violence currently shown on the networks. The PTC has also lead many campaigns against advertisers to try and reduce the revenue streams to violent programs. “Imagine my shock – and the shock of millions of others – coming across FX’s wicked-cop series The Shield . . . the show ended with ‘criminal protagonist’ Vic Mackey gratuitously shoving a man’s face into an electric burner. Watch the melting flesh as Fox counts the advertising dollars.”
On TV today, it’s not even that “bad” characters go unpunished, but that “good” characters are justified in being bad. Sure, the cops on Miami Vice had to be violent to get the criminals, the A-Team was always “wrongly accused” and Buck Rogers didn’t ever do a bad thing with a laser gun. The idea of justifiable violence is something that should have parents really consider what their children are watching.
I think its a major problem of our society.TV shows create a totally different mind setup for the children.They don’t have that much sense to understand what is good or what is bad.What should do and what shouldn’t.
creating consciousness in innocent mind towards crimes..where as also bringing violence in attitude somewhere..children sometimes try to act like heroes rescuing people and saving lifes..but also sometimes utter slang for their own parents and friends..areas are required to understand the minds and thoughts of children if whats growing up inside their brain..children are just like clay in molten state, ready to be transformed as shaped however and family can only mould them by making them understand correct thoughts and aspiring their minds in a correct direction..by spending time with them..which however requires no heavy effort..
i think violence activities in TV shows create bad impact on kids,,,,as they repeat and tried to do all as they view in tv in their surroundings…children are innocent and sweet so they are always ready to do what ever they without knowing right and bad side of it,,,,
Avijit
yes its definitely creates violence among not only youngsters but also teenagers and las but not the least adults. This is why the criminal offence are increasing day by day.
A young mind is naive, and can’t judge between the right and the wrong.. it is very important to provide proper guidance at that age. TV is one of that box today which is present at every single person’s home so children are now-a-days addicted towards different shows popularly, cartoons! but violence if any form when shown in these shows has adverse effects on them.. they can bend their minds into that of a criminal or make them shy, reserved and scared of smallest of things.
(Center for Media and Public Affairs: “Merchandising Mayhem: Violence in Popular Entertainment 1998-1999”)
The current trend in TV programs is to not only permit the police to commit justifiable violence, but criminals as well. “HBO’s The Sopranos, [is] the beginning of a new trend celebrating what’s called the ‘criminal protagonist,’ in this case a murderous crime boss we can learn to love,” says L. Brent Bozell III, president of the Parents Television Council. “Entertainment producers and critics alike love ‘moral complexity,’ but what they’re sowing is moral confusion. They think good and evil, black and white, is so old hat. Let’s coat everyone and everything with a lovely shade of gray – as the red blood flows.”
Bozell’s group is not against TV, but has serious problems with the amount of violence currently shown on the networks. The PTC has also lead many campaigns against advertisers to try and reduce the revenue streams to violent programs. “Imagine my shock – and the shock of millions of others – coming across FX’s wicked-cop series The Shield . . . the show ended with ‘criminal protagonist’ Vic Mackey gratuitously shoving a man’s face into an electric burner. Watch the melting flesh as Fox counts the advertising dollars.”
On TV today, it’s not even that “bad” characters go unpunished, but that “good” characters are justified in being bad. Sure, the cops on Miami Vice had to be violent to get the criminals, the A-Team was always “wrongly accused” and Buck Rogers didn’t ever do a bad thing with a laser gun. The idea of justifiable violence is something that should have parents really consider what their children are watching.