Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Internet, Television, and Teenage Pregnancy

Teenage pregnancy has been a topic of discussion for the last couple decades; things such as why it is happening and what can society do to prevent it. Recently there has been a different debate considering teens and having children, and that topic focuses on the media’s play in the epidemic. Shows like The Secret Life of an American Teenager, which started in 2008 portray the life of a freshman in high school having children. The main focus of this show is to inform teenagers of the struggles that being a young mom entail. The controversy with shows like this is that it is glorifying teenagers having children, and leading them to getting pregnant themselves. Teenage pregnancy is an evident problem in society today, and the media is helping glorify the lifestyle.
            Surprisingly the birth rates of teenagers decreased by forty-two percent from 1990 to 2008, but three out of ten teenagers with get pregnant at least once before the age of twenty. Nearly half of these teenagers will not graduate high school and only two percent will achieve a college degree by the age of thirty (dosomething.org). Even though the teen birth rate is decreasing television shows such as: The Secret Life of an American Teen, Teen Mom, and 16 and Pregnant continue to glorify having children while still being considered a child.
Many of the parents in these shows do not seem to care that their teenager is having a child and many help them out financially, mentally, and some even take custody of the infant and raise their grandchild. Many of these young moms are shown going out, drinking, doing drugs, and dropping out of high school or college, instead of raising their children. This gives the viewers a very unrealistic view on the struggles of being a young mom. In the article posted by mediainfluenceonteenpregnancy.com, the author brings up a valid point about what about the normal teenager, not on television with parents who cannot afford to support her and her child. It is very prevalent that the media does not portray these situations. Another topic these shows do not discuss and should is how not to get pregnant, contraception and how to use it; instead they focus on the after effects. It seems like the media is trying to make it okay to be a teen parent, and forming a new definition of what a teen parent is. According to Google’s dictionary a teen parent is defined as a custodial parent between the ages of thirteen and nineteen who is enrolled in high school or a GED program. This statement definition clearly leaves out those few teen parents who are under nineteen and going to college, such as myself. It is degrading, stating that teen parents under the age of nineteen are only enrolled in high school or a GED program. The media has another opinion to teen parents going to college; it simply does not happen, at least not very often.
The interest in sexual intercourse starts with television shows Rick Nauert claims that adolescents who watch excessive amounts of shows with sexual content are more likely to be involved in a pregnancy. The television shows that these teenagers are watching very rarely state the precautions that need to be taken while partaking in intercourse, TV shows are made for entertainment not for education. The RAND Health researchers’ voice that exposure to sex on television increases the risk for teen pregnancy because it leads viewers to believe that there is no risk in engaging in sex without the use of contraception. But contradicting all of the information that puts blame to television promoting teenage pregnancy in an interview with Bill Albert, the chief program officer for the National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy, he states that television can be just as good of an influence as it is bad and that no one thing is going to solve the problem. When teens are watching the shows like 16 and Pregnant it is an excellent opportunity for parents to step in and talk to their child about contraception and how to prevent pregnancy. Parents like to point the finger at television shows and the media instead of taking the opportunity to talk with their child about what they do not like about the show and how to prevent not acting like the characters in the show. This leads us to the discussion concerning the controversial issue stating whether these shows are beneficial to teens or if it is damaging and promoting teenage pregnancy.
In Gina Stepp’s interview with Bill Albert she asks him the question “Is there a common denominator among teens who become mothers?” to my surprise he answers this question saying that there is no common ground between any of these girls, they all have different backgrounds. He states that the numbers are way too high to be able to find any common ground between the three out of ten girls who will become pregnant before the age of twenty. This ties into our discussion about the media’s play in teen pregnancy in the event that since there is not a common link between the girls the television shows they are watching has nothing to do with it. A girl coming from a disadvantaged home with little to no television stations has the same capability of getting pregnant as the extremely advantaged girl with all the stations. This concludes that the shows promoting and glorifying being a teen mother really have no influence on teen girls getting pregnant, but television can increase the likelihood in both genders to partake in unprotected intercourse.
In November of 2008 psychcentral.com posted an article stating that “Adolescents who have high levels of exposure to television programs that contain sexual content are twice as likely to be involved in a pregnancy over the following three years as their peers who watch few such shows.” This strong claim expresses that teenagers should steer clear of all movies and television shows that promote, have any kind of sexual intercourse, or any sexual references. As teenagers watch and are exposed to teenage pregnancy as a “normal lifestyle” they begin to think it is okay and may even attempt to conform to this idea of “normal”. What these teenagers do not realize is that the teen mothers that appear on shows like Teen Mom and 16 and Pregnant get paid to appear on the show which allow them to not live in poverty and are able to live away from their parents, but in reality teen parents only get paid less than half of the poverty rate. The adolescents viewing these shows are naive in thinking that a reality television show is a true representation of how being a teenage mother would actually be. Which brings up the point of what should be done about these shows, should they be discontinued or is it the parents’ responsibility to talk with their teenager about the issues that are not discussed on the show such as the paycheck.
When two individuals decide that they are going to become parents they take on the whole role of informing their child of all the fantasies of the world, and when that child is a teenager the excessive sexual content that is seen in the  media is one of those things that should be discussed. The American Academy of Pediatrics started the campaign, Media Matters, to inform parents of how influential television and the media can be and how to discuss this with their children, their main goal is to alert parents that it is their job to monitor and control what their child is viewing. MTV as well started a similar campaign to challenge teenagers and young adults to change their sexual behavior. These campaigns are only useful if they are used, and many people do not listen to the messages, they instead pull the wool over their eyes and try and believe that there is not a problem with their child partaking in intercourse. In some ways the parent is just as naïve as the teenager, they both believe that “this won’t happen to me”. With shows like Teen Mom and The Secret Life of an American Teenager on television and being watched it opens up a great opportunity for conversation with one’s child and this opportunity can and should be used, though it may not help the effects of the teenager getting pregnant it can help with the communication between the parent and child. These shows are made for entertainment but also to start discussion and to help the parent-child relationship.

With the statistics of teen parents as dangerously high as they are parents need to be talking to their children about the effects of becoming a teen parents, they need to be watching these shows that portray and to a point glorify the role and discuss how hard it would be to become a teen mother or father themselves. Parents need to take their head out of the sand and talk about the uncomfortable topic of intercourse and protection to prevent becoming grandparents at a young age. The media’s role in the epidemic of teenage pregnancy is both good and bad but it is ultimately up to the parents to decide how far they will let television, movies, and the internet glorify the not so glorious role of being a teen parent.