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Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Spring Break Reflection on Crucial Education and Parenting Resources


Daily Sharing of a Spring Break Activity:
  • Pleased to find this amazing PBS documentary is now on-line.  I first watched years ago and was so enthralled with the quality of presentation and the horror of the program's topic that I bought the VHS version on-line (apparently using a dial-up connection, given the reality of ordering a VHS).  I have shared my copy for years with parents of kids in my class and especially those parents with teenage children.


http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/cool/view/

They are the merchants of cool: creators and sellers of popular culture who have made teenagers the hottest consumer demographic in America. But are they simply reflecting teen desires or have they begun to manufacture those desires in a bid to secure this lucrative market? And have they gone too far in their attempts to reach the hearts--and wallets--of America's youth?

FRONTLINE correspondent Douglas Rushkoff examines the tactics, techniques, and cultural ramifications of these marketing moguls in "The Merchants of Cool." Produced by Barak Goodman and Rachel Dretzin, the program talks with top marketers, media executives and cultural/media critics, and explores the symbiotic relationship between the media and today's teens, as each looks to the other for their identity.
Teenagers are the hottest consumer demographic in America. At 33 million strong, they comprise the largest generation of teens America has ever seen--larger, even, than the much-ballyhooed Baby Boom generation. Last year, America's teens spent $100 billion, while influencing their parents' spending to the tune of another $50 billion.

But marketing to teens isn't as easy as it sounds. Marketers have to find a way to seem real: true to the lives and attitudes of teenagers; in short, to become cool themselves. To that end, they search out the next cool thing and have adopted an almost anthropological approach to studying teens and analyzing their every move as if they were animals in the wild.