Be vigilant, even among scholastics
STEVE SMITH
So Howard Stern gets fined, booted off a whopping six radio stations
out of his zillion and we’re supposed to believe that the Federal
Communications Commission has finally grown a spine.
Fining Howard Stern for inappropriate language is like citing Dale
Earnhardt, Jr., for speeding. You may as well have thrown Muhammad
Ali in jail for assault or written up the Beatles for disturbing the
peace.
As a parent, I’m not overwhelmed by the fact that Stern has a
trashy show. He has been doing it for many years and only now and
then has he appeared on the radar singled out for a fine or severe
tongue-lashing. I don’t buy Stern’s George Bush conspiracy against
him, but I do believe that if this were not an election year, he
wouldn’t have gotten a fine or have been removed from six stations.
There are other trashy shows on the radio and I don’t care much
about those either. Why? Because I know what to expect and I keep
that station off the radio in my car and at home. Likewise, PG-13
movies are screened before my kids can see them.
What I object to, as I wrote a few weeks ago, is being ambushed,
having inappropriate words and pictures flung at my kids from places
where I least expect them and therefore do not give me a chance to
monitor their content.
These surprise attacks -- usually in the name of the right to free
speech -- remove from me the right to parent my children as I see
fit.
Janet Jackson’s pitiful half-time show was one ambush. The
magazines in the neighborhood grocery store are another. Provocative
billboards are another.
Now, the school district has provided yet another.
It came into my 11-year-old son’s life a few days ago in an order
form for books from Scholastic Reader, a mail-in program that allows
kids to purchase books for some pretty good prices.
He gave us the form and told us he’d like to order some books by
the Friday deadline. But when I opened the form to page two, I saw a
picture of a man and woman locked in an embrace. His right hand was
high up on her thigh. The picture was the cover of a book called,
“Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights” and for only $3.95 my son could read
about Katey, George and “a connection with a boy that she’s never
felt before.” Doesn’t elaborate on whether Katey has never felt the
connection or never felt the boy.
Or he could go to page three and order “The True Meaning of
Cleavage,” in which “Sara is obsessed with snagging a popular
senior.” “Snagging” ... now there’s a euphemism I haven’t heard in
awhile. Then there’s “Bad Girls in Love” in which Margalo has a crush
on her teacher and “Mikey,” a girl, has a crush on “super-hunk
Shawn.” The copy asks, “ ... will these two girls get their men?”
So is the translation for “Bad Girls in Love,” “ ... will these
two girls sleep with their men?”
I called the Scholastic headquarters in New York and was
transferred to Judy Corman, the senior vice president for corporate
communications. All you public relations wannabes, pay attention
here.
“You are not the first person to call in about this,” Corman said.
“We absolutely know what is appropriate and we made a mistake. It was
a terrible error on our part.”
Corman went on to say that they have age-appropriate versions of
the form, but this missed the cut. She went on to offer a refund, to
express that she hoped it had not affected my son and that they “care
about the trust of parents.”
There are several lessons to be learned here. First, when you see
someone or something trying to influence your child in a way that
makes you feel uncomfortable, speak up. You must speak up, even if
yours is the unpopular voice and your kids cringe while saying, “Oh,
Mom!”
Second, remain vigilant. Always, always, always remain vigilant
because the surprise attacks are coming faster and faster at your
kids.
Three, when you screw up, as Scholastic did, own it. Fess up, say
you’re sorry and mean 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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