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I believe positive viewing is helpful for kids to learn. I believe the Baby Einstein program helps kids learn and will improve their IQ. Some kids will not pay attention in school and they have a harder time with learning how to read, spell, and mathematics. Baby Einstein helps young kids focus because it is a learning video game. This helps kids because they don’t realize that they are learning. Also, the games are entertaining to play, unlike school. In schools kids have to spell and do math problems in a notebook, but with Baby Einstein it is a fun game. For example, there are spelling games so kids learn how to spell certain words like cat, dog, fish, etc. Also, it helps them in math like pop fourteen balloons from 1 to 14 the kids have to count the number of balloons in order from one to fourteen. This helps them learn how to count and helps them with math. Also, Baby Einstein keeps the kids busy for long car rides and it is better to play a learning game than watch a movie. When I was younger I used to play learning games and I turned out fine.
I believe that the media is the direct cause
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Then the movie company sees the rating and decides what rating the movie should receive. Movies keep receiving PG-13 ratings when they should be getting R ratings is because of the generations. Today we see blood, violence, sex crimes, drugs on the news and sometimes in our everyday lives. People today have seen violence before and when they decide what the rating should be for a movie it will be a lower rating because people are used to violence, blood and nudity. The main thing parents can do to prevent kids from watching violent movies or game is to spend time with their kids and to block certain channels and games on the T.V. so kids can’t watch or play that kind of
The data indicates that movies with a PG-13 rating have an average rating of about 3.8 for sex/nudity, 4.7 for violence, and 4.3 for profanity. The rating category with the highest variance is
The individual rating types are also not a good portrayal of the movie as a whole. Bully was a perfect example of this. Amanda Kehrberg from the Phoenix New Times says “The R-rating is based on a handful of swear words used by students in the film who, by the MPAA's standards, wouldn't be allowed to watch
4.Reasons: 1. Ratings are age based. 2. The content of the game is in a detailed description. 3. Retailers are enforced to get their games rated more than movies. 4. Children are restricted from purchasing mature rated games. 5. The Entertainment Software Ratings Board raters follow
One of the major reasons why the MPAA rating system is unfair is the fact that everyone has different views on violence. The rating system is designed to measure how different parents react to different types of movies and by doing this, every parent will react differently depending on their opinions towards what is being shown (Wilson). Some parents are okay with a little violence while others are more strict. Another example is video games, some parents may allow their child to play the more violent and gory games while other parents strongly prohibit their child from playing those games; the same thing goes for movies; it just depends on how the parent feels about the subject.
All it will do is make them want to watch the movie more. Rating and cencering a movie is easy but, stopping underaged people from watching is hard. Just because the rating is put on the movie and a age is applied doesn’t mean kids and teens won’t watch it at all. What adults aren’t seeing is that youth listen to everyone. Youth picks up on things and can easily learn about explicit
Before a film is released, the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) sets strict guidelines for the rating of the film, thoroughly reviewed to make sure that it is appropriate for the intended audience. Depending on the severity of the content, the film is rated. Descriptions are listed about why the film received a particular rating. With these ratings in place, one can easier decide if they wish to view the film. These ratings help parents know what their children are watching. Parents often exert this right when approving what their children watch. Parents often do not wish for their children to be exposed to violence, sexual themes, pervasive language, drug and alcohol use, or terrifying images or themes. For those reasons, children are not allowed to watch movies of the horror genre. The movie Legion is one such movie. Due to the overwhelming depictions of violence, challenging and disturbing psychological themes, and crass, profane language, I firmly believe that the movie Legion is inappropriate for children and young teens.
PG-13 movies means Parental Guidance-13, parents should be with their children , as some material may not be suitable for children under 13.
In my opinion movies that show smoking should not be rated R, just because someone sees a person in a movie smoking doesn't mean that they are going to go smoke, if you see someone jump off a cliff in a movie you are not going to go jump off one too. A PG movie can have smoking in it and not change the persons view on smoking. You see smoking in everyday life weather it be your parents or some stranger on the street. Some kids are never exposed to smoking growing up and still go out and do it, some times it is better to be exposed to something so you can know how harmful it might be. Rated pg.13 movies contain things such as adult language, violence and more horrible things than smoking but what if a movie only has smoking in it and is 'rated
The Classification and Rating Administration (CARA) is a purely voluntary system supported by The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the National Association of Theatre Owners (Crecente). The CARA is funded by film distributors and producers who pay a fee to have their film rated (“MPAA Movie Ratings”). The debate on whether the CARA system works or not is highly debatable. I, personally, think that the system is very functional. This system provides parents and other audiences with a recommended rating for a movie. It is a person’s choice on whether or not to deem that rating as appropriate enough for children or others but, they at least have a general idea or understanding of what the film could entail.
If a movie is rated 12A, it means children under 12 can watch the movie if they are accompanied by an adult. There have been many complaints about some movies that are rated 12A due to the content in the films. The complaints are mainly about that children under 12, should not be exposed to some of the content included in the movie. Very popular films such as ‘The Bourne Identity’ and ‘The Dark Knight’ are rated 12A. However, these two films are considered by many people as to have been classified as a too low of an age rating, and they should have been rated higher. Children from as young as the age were brought along to watch the movies with suitable adults because the 12A rating allows them to have access to see the movie. A great deal of
When you watch an “R” rated movie what’s usually in the movie? It’s either sexual content, nudity, violence and/or language. When parents see an R rating they think that it has sexual content, nudity, violence and language so then they don’t let their kid watch it. Sometimes it’s just rated like this because it swears a couple times. I also doubt that a grade 7 has never heard the “F” word before from their parents or a school friend. It really should not be rated R for that. Another reason for parents to watch the movie first instead of just looking at the rating is because the movie could be rated 13+ but then have other bad things happen in the movie that they are not supposed to watch. If the parents had not just read the rating and
Television may even be beneficial for children and how the learn. Television does also increase some children’s intelligence with educational channels. Some children also may become geniuses with their newfounded imagination from television and that also assists their career in life. Everyone only looks at the negative sides of everything and don’t even compare to the great sides. Television can be good in moderation only, not 7 hours a
In order for us to stop the constant bombardment of uninspired adaptations, sequels, prequels, remakes, and reboots we need to create a new rating system, one which doesn’t stifle the creativity of talented filmmakers by slapping their films with arbitrary ratings. This new rating system would also abolish the supervisory role for movie theaters. The rule that kids must be accompanied by a “parent or adult guardian” to an R-rated film is based on the notion that a 14-year old can be “shielded” from worrisome material by an 18-year old. This is such a ridiculous concept seeing as we live in a time where it’s unbelievably easy to get access to much more explicit content on the internet than anything you’d find in a standard R-rated film. Speaking of, this new rating system would also end R-ratings for multiple uses of the
Furthermore, teens take the inappropriate and violent behavior too far. “…A 16-year-old California boy killed his and admitted to investigators that he had gotten the idea from the movie Scream” (Surette) Restricted movies put bad images and ideas in teenager’s heads, and in extreme cases, people get hurt of killed because of it. On the flip side, teens say that they can tell the difference between movies and real life. Some teens may be able to tell the difference, but what about the other teens? Until they are mature enough to tell right from wrong real from fake, teenagers should not be able to go to R rated movies alone. To sum it up, restricted movies are inappropriate for teens and kids.
The film industry is dependent on adults and children alike in order to sustain their economic success. Without the support of the general public, their profit would plummet and create chaos in the entertainment industry itself. While not allowing children to attend rated R movies with their parents seems like the simplest solution, it is not a plausible one. Upset parents and loss of profit for billion dollar companies impedes this solution’s implementation. The dangers of children being exposed to violence in media content is a great concern to many but not to the film industry. Additionally, many parents are uninformed and do not recognize the potential harm associated with exposing children to fictionalized violence. For a solution to exist between concerned parents and an industry focused around profit, negotiation has to benefit the multibillion dollar industry in its primary focus. In