Why is euphoria illegal




















I got you. My emotionally mature 13 year old boy watched this show and loved it. He told me about it and i watched it too and it was amazing. This show is almost exactly what kids go through these days and many of the people reviewing these are clearly too old to see this. All of the drugs, sex, swearing and overall explicity is an amazingly accurate representation of teenage life these days. Its a show about overcoming your addictions, finding yourself and your identity, and the teenage wish to be free.

Addmitedly there is a lot of nudity in mostly an unsexualized manner as in not anything like porn. The sex scenes are very tasteful and realistic and show the damage that porn does to young people's minds. For example, my boy watched this show and was amazed at how unlike sex is to porn. This show even made one of his friends quite porn for good. I think its time we stop trying to shelter and controll our children and let them be free and expriement with themselves and with tv and movies. Much like the transgender character in this show who herself highlights the struggle of fitting in when you feel you dont belong.

Let your child watch it only if the are emotionally mature to understand and appreciate it as an amazing peice of art. Also stop calling it unrealistic because it god dam is im 18 and i only just got out of that worl so i would know as i wasnt born in Ryan.

Positive role models. Helped me decide 6. Had useful details 4. Read my mind 7. Adult Written by NoahMocha September 23, Amazing This show was amazing!

The cinematography, storyline and characters especially there backstory was phenomenon. Helped me decide 4. Had useful details 3. Adult Written by Ryan August 12, Visually disgusting, unappealing, unrealistic disaster An unrealistic, disgusting, and poorly written drama about idiotic high school kids.

The biggest issue isn't even the fact that they show multiple porn scenes, men masturbating, etc, but the fact that this pathetic excuse for a show sorry Drake stans - just because your idol and God produced this show doesn't mean it's good glamorizes the use of drugs, statutory rape, pedophilia, cheating in relationships, and abuse.

It is not meant to teach the audience any lesson that this stuff is wrong, nor does it show the reality of society It's literally just a terrible show that overdoes everything listed above and teaches no lesson to the viewer and leaves you nothing to think about besides "wow, that was disgusting. This title contains: Sexy stuff. Helped me decide 2. Had useful details 5. Read my mind 3. Great for Mature Teens This show is a dark portrayal of teens in high school, narrated by one who is a drug addict.

Although the situations may seem a bit over the top, I do think they are realistic to some extent. If you watch it with your teen it can be a good conversation starter about healthy sexual relationships, etc. Had useful details 2. Parent Written by wizardortitan June 25, Definitely NOT for children or young teenagers.

Graphic sex scenes, full-frontal nudity, very strong language, drug use, violence, etc. Definitely earns its TV-MA and is strictly for adults. Had useful details 1. Read my mind 4. Adult Written by Honestadult December 20, It clearly would be rated R if in the movies. Anyone saying it would be appropriate for young people to watch is being irresponsible.

If your teen wants to watch it and you allow it, yes, I agree you should watch it together despite that it will be immensely awkward. Yes, for some probably. Yes, real-life does have pieces of what is depicted for many, but EVERY kid in this show is sexually promiscuous, vaping, watching porn, failing school, comes from a broken family, and so on. The best words I can use for it are horrific and disturbing. I wish I could unsee it.

I never want to watch it again. The only reason I did was because another teacher recommended it and I think I need to be aware of what teens may be watching. Finally, I hope and pray that this show is not going to result in life imitating art for teens, especially the most impressionable ones. I really love her as an actress and question if this was the right move for her career. I think this is a bad show and really wish the young actors and actresses were not earning a living portraying these characters as the show borders on pornography.

A study in Child Development, for example, looked at survey responses from 8. In fact, America as a whole seems to be going through a "sex recession," with sex frequency at an all-time low. Gen Z teens are also less likely to use drugs in the dangerous ways depicted in "Euphoria. The show's main character Rue is addicted to prescription drugs and was recently released from rehab, and many of the scenes center around alcohol-fueled parties. These are the lowest illegal drug use levels in the past 20 years.

Underlying the show's messages about sex, drugs, and mental health is the common thread of social media use and how it's led to various problems. Social media becomes a means for partaking in the risky behavior "Euphoria" critics are upset about. This may be the most accurate part of the show. The teenagers in "Euphoria" use their cell phones to send nude photos, partake in "camming" performing sexual acts live on camera for a viewer in exchange for money, and form romantic and sexual relationships with strangers they meet online.

Read more: How to sext as safely as possible, according to experts. Although these scenarios may be farfetched for most teens, the idea that social media has negatively affected Gen Z is a stark reality, according to Dr. Barbara Nosal , chief clinical officer at Newport Academy , a treatment center specializing in adolescents.

Nosal said she's noticed Gen Z teens are especially stressed, anxious, and depressed and believes social media plays a role, since it allows people to more easily compare themselves to others. It is probably not a coincidence that teen suicide rates have increased even as substance abuse and sexual frequency have decreased. While the narration for Nate's episode three weeks ago announced that he liked Maddy because she told him she was a virgin, this week showed that she was not being honest with him.

Which in retrospect seems kind of rape-y and weird, but honestly, she was the one in control. Despite this being a visual and thematic reference to Stanley Kubrick's film Lolita, based on the Vladimir Nabokov novel of the same name—both Maddy in the flashback scene and Lolita 's titular character wear the same oversized sunglasses— it's still a bizarre, off-message, and jarring even for Euphoria thing to be included in the narration from a character who has proven to occasionally be all-knowing in this world.

Because if it weren't obvious, it should probably be stated: There is no scenario where a year old, of any gender, is "in control" when with a person who is "like That's not even the first time the show has handled age gaps in a questionable way.

The show has depicted a number of its underage characters engaging in physical relations with older characters. Kat, played by Barbie Ferreira, is clearly going through something of a sexual revolution within the walls of the show, but each "relationship" she's had—a middle aged naked man over a video chat, a former older high school student she met at the fair, and a guy who works in the mall clothing store—appears to have violated age of consent rules.

The "age of consent," by definition , is "the age at which one is legally competent to give consent especially to marriage or to sexual intercourse. The "legally competent" portion of that definition is intrinsically important to understanding this concept: This is age, set by the state, where someone can legally say "yes" to an adult.

If the person is any younger, the adult is liable for breaking the law—even if the younger party seems to think they're "the one in control," to quote Rue. The entire series kicked off with a situation of this nature, when Cal Jacobs, played by Eric Dane, had a one-night stand with Jules.

Jules lied about her age to Cal, saying she was 22 when in fact she was 17, but the show hasn't made this a huge issue; instead, it would seem, Cal's concern is people learning of his secret life involving sex with gay men and transgender women, rather than the fact that he committed statutory rape with his son's underage classmate.

Last week's episode saw Cal and Jules come into contact for the first time since their hookup, and once he realized who she was, it was clear how immediately nervous he was. He told her that if she made his secret public, it could ruin his life—but was he thinking this because she was underage, or because his secret sexual interests could be revealed?

The idea of an older adult and an underage teen being sexually together is not uncommon in the genre; the first season of Riverdale depicted its main character, Archie, in a relationship with a teacher.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000