You really can't do this stuff on TV..EVEN NOW!
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deltaleeder — 19 years ago(November 18, 2006 06:37 PM)
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So trueI remember playing cops and robbers in the school yard. Last time I went back to my grade school, I heard anything with guns was banned. Kids caught "shooting" other people get sent to the principal's office.
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- Clark
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MaxRenn2 — 19 years ago(November 21, 2006 08:23 AM)
As far as the kids being sent to the principal's office, deltaleeder, it's probably just reactionary parents and school administrators who believe that, since some kids in the past few years have decided to shoot up their schools, every kid is a potential mass murderer on campus.
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MidNYteStorm — 19 years ago(November 23, 2006 06:04 PM)
Back in the mid 80's (when I was in Jr. High, you could make a threat and simply have the principal call your parents. Now the police investigate. You simply can't take a chance anymore.
I've had a pain in the a$$ for the past 45 years! You got any chicken soup for that? -
Nixshows — 19 years ago(January 15, 2007 11:07 PM)
This is true.I think that today you can't say anything because everybody's so hyper sensitive. You actually got groups now monitoring the media looking for something derogatory. It's ridiculous. If you look back at the 80's alot of so called offensive things were said and done, but life was much simpler. Go figure. I think people need to relax and just accept it as entertainment.
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kidpsycho_1999 — 16 years ago(January 20, 2010 09:33 AM)
I was watching some of the eps from 79
they kept making fun of this one kid for being French Canadian and calling him a "Frog"
I seriously doubt you could have a kids show these days where kids are called racial/national slurs like that -
msladysoul — 16 years ago(January 30, 2010 05:18 PM)
I don't agree. Kids today don't seem to know the difference from fantasy and pretend from reality. I would have never tried to do the stuff I saw on tv because I knew it was wrong but kids today actually would be trying to do the stunts. Have you been watching the news, kids setting other kids on fire, kids trying to run over other kids in cars, etc. and the kids are asked why they do what they did and they say they got it from tv or video games. I don't know maybe our generation were a little smarter, knew right from wrong, or our parents made sure to teach us.
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drxcreatures — 15 years ago(May 16, 2010 12:32 PM)
(Actually, it's not that kids would take that stuff too seriously today. It's that PARENTS think that kids would take that stuff too seriously. If kids today would watch this show or on like it they would probably take all the subversive humor in the same way we did as kids)
Well Said!
http://www.cgonzales.net
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http://www.drxcreatures.com -
laeyisoracle — 14 years ago(November 25, 2011 03:41 PM)
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That's actually pretty damn brilliant, dude! It's true, too. It's like the study I read once, kids don't care who they play with(race, religion, wealth status), as long as they have fun. It isn't until their parents warp their little heads about what "supposedly" is "important" in the "REAL WORLD" that they start to develop ideas about who they should and shouldn't hang with, forming the basis of cliques, social segregation and such. Prior to this, all kids are basically the same, unadulterated.
I'll tell you a story. As a kid, I must've been around 5, I openly watched horror movies with my dad, and I mean, these didn't skimp on scenes like gore and full nudity. Scenes that were blood and sex heavy. But, as a kid, I saw this, but it just didn't bother me. Not at all. Maybe the gore, but nudity, to my child mind, was just natural. Naked bodies. So what(<- My way of thinking back then)? It wasn't until my parents started to make fun of the scenes, "Oooooo, they are NEKKID! Doing bad things! You shouldn't be watching this! It's nasty!!!", that I started to get nasty thoughts. I started to shy away from that stuff, or even start to blush at the mere thought. It wasn't until parents ruined it for me that my child perception was changed forever. And yeah, parents ruin childhood for their kids. If they only knew that, if they handled certain subjects the right way, they wouldn't sour their children with social awkwardness and such. Dude, kids TOTALLY wouldn't care what they watch or what they play as long as it was fun. I remember that about my childhood, EASY! It isn't until adults start to come in with their "this is BAD, this is GOOD, you can't watch THIS, you can't do THAT!" that sow the seeds for both awkwardness and rebellion.
It's kinda like in South Park, how the kids seemingly have more sense than the adults, and every time Stan tries to tell his dad the right way about doing something(the most basic, rational way), his dad shuts him down and says, "No no, Stan. It's more complex than that! This is how us adults handle it in the REAL world!".