From On Air - Winter 2003
Teens and Television
TV producers, writers, and network executives
from the ten daytime weekday dramas gathered in Los Angeles
on October 26-27 for PCI’s Soap Summit VI, which looked
at youth and the way U.S. teens are portrayed on television.
The annual event raises awareness within this broadcast community
about its abilities to shape attitudes and behaviors.
The Summit began on Friday evening with
a welcome by Irwin “Sonny” Fox, PCI’s senior
vice president of U.S. programs. In an impassioned keynote
address, Martin Kaplan, director of the Norman Lear Center
and associate dean of the USC Annenberg School for Communication,
reminded the audience that they are “the nation’s
storytellers” with the power “to inflame our fears,
educate our hopes, and tell us what is good or bad.”
Dr. James D. Marks, assistant surgeon general, was on hand
to present the second annual Sentinel for Health Award for
Daytime Drama. The award was developed by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and recognizes exemplary
portrayals of story lines in daytime soap operas that inform,
educate, and motivate viewers to make choices for healthier
and safer lives.
The finalists were “Joe May Be HIV-Positive,”
from Port Charles; “Ecstasy and Agony,”
All My Children; “Fetal Alcohol Syndrome,”
Days of Our Lives; and “Raul’s Diabetes,”
from CBS’s The Young and the Restless, which
received the award.
Leading experts on adolescence opened the
Saturday sessions with an examination of how teens are viewed
in U.S. society. Dr. Rae Simpson, working with the Harvard
School of Public Health, pointed out that the media often
portray teens as rude, selfish, violent, and materialistic.
She cautioned the audience that these stereotypes are damaging,
and suggested that adults need to reach out and share the
struggle with teens.
Dr. Gordon Berry of UCLA emphasized the
impact on young people of television’s “modeling”
behavior. He stressed the need for parents to help adolescents
learn to be wise consumers of this broadcast information.
A lively panel of teenagers startled and
educated the audience with their frank views on sex, drugs
and, most important, their parents. Most of the teens felt
that their parents were overly protective, and that they were
fully capable of making their own decisions regarding these
complex subjects.
Dr. Laura Kann, director of the Youth Risk
Behaviors Survey at the CDC, gave a disturbing presentation
on health risks to teenagers. She analyzed a representative
class of 30 students for risk of obesity, pregnancy, early
sexual activity, smoking, dating violence, drug use, and suicide.
The presentation was stark, but Dr. Kann noted that suicide
and homicide are declining. She reminded the television community
of their power to teach teens the skills required to journey
through the maze of adolescence. And as an avid soap watcher,
she counseled them, “I’ll be watching.”
In the final morning panel, the audience
was surprised to learn that, in many states, teens have legal
access to reproductive health services without parental consent.
Dr. David Kaplan, pediatrician and chairman of the Adolescent
Health Committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics, underscored
the need for pediatricians to maintain confidentiality of
reproductive health services and other medical issues for
teens.
A feature of the day’s sessions was
a sobering look at a particularly bad mix of drugs in Houston
last summer. Sgt. Bill Stephens of the Houston Narcotics Division
vividly described how far drugs travel, how many hands they
pass through, and how little control there is over what is
passed on to the buyer.
Dr. Joye Carter, chief medical examiner
in Harris County, Texas, explained how her office determined
that the public had to be notified of this “bad”
drug on the street. The clear warning from both presenters
was that, aside from the inherent danger of using illegal
drugs, people who buy drugs have no guarantee of what they
are buying and ultimately ingesting.
The day ended with breakout sessions where
participants interacted with panelists to further explore
teen behaviors, teen health, and drug risks.
The daytime drama community was once again reminded of the
powerful medium that they use to impart their message, and
the opportunity they have to make a substantial impact on
the attitudes and behaviors of their audiences.
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