Anonymous wrote:Have you talked to them about how they fell about this show? I don't think blocking them from watching it is an option if they are 17 but would you watch with them? so they know they're not alone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter (12) says all her friends are watching this, and it's true. They're all talking about it over social media, texting, etc. (yes, I check and my daughter is fully aware that I do). I don't want her watching this; it seems far too mature for her age group, and yet her friends are watching it. Anyone else in a similar situation?
I am in the same situation with my dd13. She watched the first 11 eps without telling me. Not sure what I will do and open to advice.
Do you need to do anything? What I mean by that is, did she violate a house rule by watching a new show without telling you, or has some sort of problem arisen as a result such as her being distressed or showing signs of unacceptable behaviors? If not, I might do nothing in particular and just let her decide whether to keep watching. If she enjoys the series, she would continue, but if it's more unpleasant (distressing, confusing, etc.) than enjoyable she'd likely choose to stop watching it on her own it it doesn't suddenly become forbidden and therefore more interesting to a teen. As long as you're available to talk to her if she has questions, I don't necessarily think that's a bad age to watch the show.
Don't you find it disturbing that this child binge-watched nearly an entire series without parent knowledge? It's only been on the air for like a couple of days. Does PP have zero control/limits on screens?
Tbh no, I don't find it disturbing. It's less than an hour a day total if she watched the episodes one at a time. And even if she did spend 12 hours one day just watching Netflix, or several hours for a few days, if it's an occasional thing and she still has a life other than TV & meets her commitments I wouldn't be terribly bothered by an occasional TV binge. I've done it before, too. Not ideal, but certainly wouldn't be something I would call "disturbing"; to me that's a fairly strong word.
It's appropriate though. You give your young teen unfettered access to Netflix? Wow.
Anonymous wrote:My kids middle school (NBMS) just sent a letter home to all parents about this show yesterday.
Anonymous wrote:My kids middle school (NBMS) just sent a letter home to all parents about this show yesterday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter (15) just thinks it is horribly produced and the girl is manipulative. How would ALL these kids find cassette players? HOW does Tony keep popping up at just the right moment? If he wears that leather jacket EVERY day, why does it still look like new? What is the deal with Clay's parents - Seriously? The principal is surprised that the kids write on the bathroom walls?! And the school photographer kid is everywhere! How many high school kids are that heavily tatted up - its like a prison yard! The whole thing is a mess.
Ugh, tell your daughter it's "make believe" like in a tv special. Heavily tatted up, visit my DD's school, the teachers have more tattoos than that and yes, plenty of students have that many tattoos and the piercings are out of control.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is hilarious that most of you don't seem to realize it is based on a novel. A popular YA novel that a lot of kids read before the TV series.
This. The parents on this forum are so "reactive" rather than pro active. Too late again, parents.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is hilarious that most of you don't seem to realize it is based on a novel. A popular YA novel that a lot of kids read before the TV series.
Anonymous wrote:Dh and I were watching it over the past 2 week to prescreen it for our 13yo anti social DS. We could not get past the 7th episode. I don't think it's a good show - bad production value, terrible writing. Maybe it gets better but I don't have 6 more hours to waste and find out.
So far I dont think it's appropriate for our DS. He has 2-3 good friends he plays video games with and would prefer to watch cartoons or super hero flicks!
Anonymous wrote:My daughter (15) just thinks it is horribly produced and the girl is manipulative. How would ALL these kids find cassette players? HOW does Tony keep popping up at just the right moment? If he wears that leather jacket EVERY day, why does it still look like new? What is the deal with Clay's parents - Seriously? The principal is surprised that the kids write on the bathroom walls?! And the school photographer kid is everywhere! How many high school kids are that heavily tatted up - its like a prison yard! The whole thing is a mess.