The romantic notion of turning off the TV
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STEVE SMITH
First, thank you to all who expressed concern about my car. To
summarize, our family had a major mechanical challenge while on the
road to Lake Tahoe last week. The problem was solved by a mechanic in
Reno, Steve Tout, who provided very fast service and got us back on
schedule.
But something is still wrong and I’ve decided not to spend another
dime figuring out what it is. The car has 120,000 miles and it’s time
to get something else.
On the road, there’s a lot of time to think. And it occurred to me
that I have something in common with the supporters of the El Toro
airport. That is, they have no hope of ever seeing an airport built
down there but they cling to the romantic notion that it’s still
alive. If only that same passion could be directed toward something
useful, such as the fight to have Starbucks include those cardboard
sleeves with each cup of coffee instead of forcing us to ask for
them.
I mean, that coffee is so hot, you can boil an egg in the cup. Not
having a sleeve is far to macho a move for me and just about everyone
else I’ve seen.
What I have in common is that I’m still clinging to the romantic
notion that parents in the U.S. will realize that the best thing they
can do for their children’s education and physical and mental
development is to turn off the TV. But no one is listening and still
I go on.
I’m still pushing the TV-free life because every time I consider
giving it up, some major agency or association -- from pediatrician
groups to the American Psychological Assn. -- produces a report
detailing just how bad TV is for kids. While we were away, it was
announced that television for kids younger than the age of 7 could
reduce their attention span. I’m sorry that we had to spend time and
money to figure out this no-brainer but glad that it’s now official.
Again.
While in Reno, I read a story about the upcoming school budget
crisis in California and received an e-mail a few days ago on the
same subject. Seems as though districts are canceling arts, sports
and music programs right and left in order to save money. Plus,
school class sizes are scheduled to rise.
I don’t believe the school budget crisis is going to go away soon.
So it only seems logical to embrace at this time the words of the
renowned theorist, professor Irwin Corey, who was the first to say,
“Less is more.”
For now, less in schools will have to be more. One way to make
less more -- heads up here, teachers -- is to start a no-TV policy.
Properly executed, a classroom of 38 kids who do not watch TV could
become as manageable as a classroom of 30. That’s because their
attention spans will increase, and they will not be receiving daily
examples of how not to conduct our lives. Nor will they be bombarded
with ads that manipulate them into thinking that a new pair of a
certain type of shoes is going to change their lives. They’ll begin
to understand that only a good education will do that.
The news about TV’s effects on kids is so overwhelmingly bad and
there is so much of it that I’m ready to get radical on the project.
I’m ready to start pushing for penalties for parents of kids younger
than 7 who let them watch TV. Seems to me that enough experts have
declared it bad enough that TV viewing for these kids should fall
into some form of child abuse or child endangerment.
See, this is where I converge with the El Toro folks. No chance of
a “TV child abuse” act ever happening. But I’m still talking about
it.
The fact is that our district needs to get on this bandwagon. Save
for one resolution endorsing National No-TV Week a few years ago and
for some individual teacher classroom efforts, there has been no
district move toward the idea.
And the really good news is that such a program would cost little
or no money.
For me, this is the road more traveled, having written about the
joy of a no-TV life and spoken about it all over Southern California
for many years. What I have found is that it’s not the kids who can’t
live without TV, it’s their parents. And since a no-TV home doesn’t
work unless everyone participates, there will be no program in the
district or in homes. Parents don’t want to give it up.
I don’t really want to hear grousing about rising gas prices
either, particularly from anyone driving a gas-guzzling SUV. I’ve
done the math and for someone driving 12,000 miles a year, the
increase in gas could be more than offset by cutting off the cable TV
service.
But that’s about as likely happen as getting an airport at El Toro
or sleeves back on the Starbucks cups.
There’s still time. National No-TV Week starts Monday. Try it --
you’ll like it.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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