The American Media's Impact On Our Youth

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Media is everywhere in modern society. Internet, television, radio, video games, newspapers, music videos, and movies are all considered media, and teenagers spend a lot of their time with it. While there are shows, ads, and movies with good morals and ideas, many convince the youth of today’s culture to do iniquitous actions. Hundreds of studies have proven the link between media and violence and increased sexuality. American media is giving youth subliminal messages and causing them to perform violent actions and forcing them to take drastic measures to stay with society’s idea of perfection.

Teenagers spend at least 6.5 hours a day with media. Teen Research Unlimited, a company that creates records on how teenagers act and spend their time, found that teenagers spend about 11.2 hours per week watching TV, and at least 10 hours per week listening to FM radio (Meenkashi Durham 30). There us at least one television in 99% of American homes. Three quarters of children ages 8 to 18 have a television in their bedroom (“Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General” 7). By age 17, an average youth will have seen over 250,000 commercials (“Media Influence on Youth”).

The media that is surrounding today’s teenagers contains a considerable amount of violence. By age 18, a youth will have seen over 200,000 violent acts, 16,000 of them being murders. Unfortunately, young adults are most likely to act out in violence because of violence in media, and TV is a major source of this violence. (Craig Anderson et al 87). Every hour, there are 812 violent acts on TV (Eugene Beresin). Many people believe that the violence that shown in media causes America’s youth to act out in similar violence. In fact, over 1,000 studies confirm...

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...this pressure on America’s youth.

Works Cited

Anderson, Craig, Leonard Berkowitz, Edward Donnerstein, L. Rowell Huesmann, James D. Johnson, Daniel Linz, Neil M. Malamuth, Ellen Wartella. "The Influence of Media Violence on Youth." Department of Psychology, Iowa, Dec. 2003. Web. 08 May 2011.

Beresin, Eugene V. "The Impact of Media Violence on Children and Adolescents: Opportunities for Clinical Interventions." American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. AACAP, 2010. Web. 07 May 2011.

Durham, Meenakshi Gigi. The Lolita Effect. Woodstock, NY: Overlook, 2008. Print. Katz, John. Virtuous Reality. New York: Random, 1997. Print.

Katz, John. Virtuous Reality. Ney York: Random, 1997. Print.

"Media Influence on Youth." Crisis Connection, Inc. Web. 08 May 2011.

"Youth Violence: A Report of the Surgeon General." Office of the Surgeon General. Web. 07 May 2011.

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