Cleaning Up The Media Clutter In Your Kid’s Room
Janice Shaw Crouse
Townhall.com
February 5, 2008
Today’s kids spend an average of five-and-a-half hours a
day watching the variety of media available in their
homes — television, playing video games, surfing the Web
or using some other type of media. In fact, nearly half
of all families own all four of the major media —
television, VCR, video games and computer. Some experts
refer to “media clutter” in describing the options that
are available to children in their own homes, with 57
percent of the nation’s children having a television in
their own bedrooms. Further, the media landscape
continues to expand with CDs, DVDs, and MP3s. With such
exploding choices available to children, parents have
difficulty in monitoring what their kids are watching
and hearing.
One of the most detrimental influences on children in
media is marketing, and that marketing extends far
beyond the television screen or computer monitor. The
question, then, is whether parents — and the public —
will continue to allow commercial interests to take
precedence over the well-being of the nation’s children.
Industry spending on advertising to children has
dramatically increased over the past decade with a
current price tag of over $2 billion. Brian L. Wilcox,
chair of the American Psychological Association’s Task
Force on Advertising and Children, said, “The clearest
evidence we have that television influences children’s
thinking and behavior is the fact that advertisers
invest literally billions of dollars trying to influence
the perceptions, choices and behaviors of children
through advertising. We know very well that they
wouldn’t be investing the amount of money they do
without clear evidence that those messages are
influencing kids.” Studies show that on average we see
3,000 advertisements per day. The Russian space program
even launched a rocket that had a 30-foot Pizza Hut
logo. We have grown used to what the marketers call
“ambient advertising” — ads on cars, buses, park
benches, elevator walls, stadiums names, clothing and on
celebrity’s sports equipment.
Product placement has become a ubiquitous advertising
tool targeting children. For instance, in the 1982 film,
ET, having the candy Reese’s Pieces in a pivotal scene
resulted in an increase of 65 percent in sales of the
product. Such product placement is now commonplace and a
highly effective marketing tool.
With the help of researchers and psychologists,
advertisers understand what motivates children; they
have in-depth knowledge about kids’ developmental,
emotional and social needs at the various stages of
their development. Advertisements utilize that analysis
to tap into children’s behavior and dreams with very
sophisticated marketing strategies. Even very young
children today can identify hundreds of specific logos
and mascots.
Parents have ready access to resources to help train
their children to deal with the barrage of advertising
they receive through media. The website “Zillions” is a
teen’s version of Consumer Reports. There, parents and
children can review the ratings for toys, crafts and
games and compare the ratings to the marketing claims
about these products. There is an award-winning
children’s program called “Street Cents” that tests
various consumer products for their “truth in
advertising.” And other resources abound.
As media options have proliferated, so have concerns
about the quality of media available to children and its
impact on their lives and potential. Growing numbers of
parents, educators, researchers and policy makers note
the absence of quality programming for children and
young people. Equally disturbing is the growing
availability of questionable entertainment with
gratuitous violence, sexual content, and negative role
models. Numerous studies have documented the effects of
media on children and the power of media in the lives of
children and young people.
One psychologist explained, “Parents used to be the
channel through which children learned about the outside
world.” Family used to be isolated from the public as a
safe haven where the parents determined when, if and
what the child saw beyond the home. With the invasion of
media, the family sphere is now permeable, and the
outside world constantly pervades the living rooms,
kitchens and bedrooms of our homes. An articulate
scholar put it well: “TV takes our kids across the globe
before parents give them permission to cross the
street.”
Few of us would deny the power and influence of
television and other media on children’s lives. Parents
face the challenge of keeping media from becoming a
wedge that drives the family apart; they also face the
challenge of shaping their children’s values, attitudes
and beliefs, rather than having today’s media be the
major influence on their children’s future. Media’s
impact in America’s homes is huge. Will it be used to
enhance children’s well-being or detract from the
influence of the parents?
