#YOUTH CONSEQUENCES CAST SERIES#
We got the chance to talk with the co stars, Kara Royster (The Fosters, Pretty Little Liars, KC Undercover) and Sean Grandillo ( Rise,The Real O’Neals, Scream: The TV Series ) to get a behind the scenes look into their experience working on a YouTube Red series. Anna Akana chose this as the setting for her new YouTube Red Series : Youth and Consequences. That just doesn't give credit to the vibrancy of young people.High school can be hard, and social media makes it even harder. She said: "It's almost getting to the stage where it's okay to see every young person as a yob. The campaign has the backing of the youth minister, Margaret Hodge. The awards scheme, called Positive Images, will highlight the best stories in the national and local press, as well as the best publicity campaign by a youth group and the most youth-friendly local council.
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#YOUTH CONSEQUENCES CAST CODE#
The code calls on the media to ensure that young people are given the chance to comment on issues affecting them to avoid "loaded" words like "yobs", "thugs" and "monsters" and to recognise that most young people do not commit any crime. In order to promote better coverage, Young People Now magazine is launching a draft code and an awards ceremony. "The campaign was set up mainly to deal with the issues that young people face in Edinburgh, and change adults' perception of young people hanging about on street corners, causing trouble." She said the Citizen Y campaign, which mounted a play at the Edinburgh Fringe festival last year, wanted to change perceptions. When the antisocial behaviour bill was going through parliament, they would do a story about it and then move straight on to youth crime so people got this image that young people were automatically associated with anti-social behaviour." She said the phrases chosen by the media to describe young people were often pejorative: "Words like neds, thugs and vandals are automatically associated with young people. Karen Sutherland, 17, from Edinburgh, is involved with the Citizen Y scheme in the city, which aims to improve the coverage of youth issues. Only 8% of stories related to positive achievements by young people. But Home Office figures show that 196 out of 10,000 boys aged 10 to 15 in England and Wales committed violent theft and or other serious offences, rising only to 606 out of 10,000 young men aged 16 to 24. In total, 32% of stories featuring young people were related to crime or antisocial behaviour. The quality papers were mostly concerned with parenting and education, and were generally more neutral, but still contained "biases and stereotypes," Mori said. As tabloids have a wider circulation, the impact of the stories on public perceptions could be greater in effect. The tabloids contained the most youth-related stories, but most were negative in tone. Of stories dealing with young people and their activities, only 14% depicted a purely positive image, while 15%, mostly in the quality press, took a neutral tone. The images were mostly of young people - it was a bizarre way to treat this issue."įor the research, Mori examined the main national daily newspapers and a selection of big regional titles in the first week of August. It used CCTV pictures from a local bus company and if readers could identify three 'yobs' in a row they could win a digital camera. A south London newspaper, the News Shopper, launched a 'shop-a-yob' campaign on its front page. "Over the last 18 months there have been certain campaigns in the press that have brought it into the spotlight. Steve Barrett, the magazine's editor, said it had commissioned the research because it felt the problem had been getting worse recently.
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The research was carried out by Mori for Young People Now, a magazine for youth workers, which today launches a "draft media code" for newspapers and broadcasters. The regional press was perceived as putting forward a particularly "polarised" view. The tabloids come in for particular criticism, with 90% of youth workers saying they portray a negative image. In the period under examination, one in three youth-related articles were about crime, and young people were only quoted in 8% of stories.
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The media habitually portrays young people in an overwhelmingly negative light, according to a survey of teenagers and press articles published today.