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  • WEDNESDAY MAY 9 2007 12:00 PM

Wil Wheaton's Geek in Review: The Damn Parents Today

Just before the end of Spring break a few weeks ago, my wife and I took our kids camping for a few days. I'm not the biggest fan of camping, but we've done this since we were dating, because it's an inexpensive way to get away from the real world and all its responsibilities, and force me to get offline for more than a few hours at a time (I'm not the only technophile who gets the shakes after ninety luddite minutes, am I?)

This year, rather than some sort of rustic camping experience on a secluded beach or high up in the mountains, we did some car camping down in Chula Vista, at this campground we used to take the kids to when they were really little. With our oldest heading off to college in a few months, I think it was as much about the nostalgia of those simple days as it was about the convenience of easily-accessible showers and a camp store, but if we were expecting anything like what we saw ten years ago, we didn't find it.

First of all, the campground has WiFi. Wait. What? WiFi? In a campground? Yes, JOSHUA, there is WiFi, and you can play Global Thermonuclear War from the comfort of your own tent. It was hard to believe, but I saw just as many guys sitting at a picnic table playing World of Warcraft as I saw people reading books in the shade of a tree.

There have always been RVs with television antennas, but nearly all the ones I saw this year had portable satellite dishes, so their owners wouldn't miss a single moment of CNBC or the TV Guide channel while they were away from home.

Isn't the whole point of camping to get away from these things? I thought so, but I'm probably out of touch, and the people who choose a well-developed, freeway-close campground probably aren't looking for the most rustic experience in the world, which is entirely reasonable, I think.

However, I did see something in this campground that really grinds my gears. While I played Frisbee with my kids, a bunch of other kids riding bikes around us, I saw one child, probably 7 or 8 years old, sitting outside at a picnic table, playing a gaming console. This kid was glued to his button mashing, oblivious to everything going on around him. His parents brought him camping, where he was surrounded by other kids his age who were all playing together, and there he was, glued to the PS2.

What. The. Fuck.

Now don't get me wrong: I love gaming. I love technology. In fact, I almost wrote a column this week all about the majesty of handeld games in the 70s and 80s (Merlin and Mattel D&D FTW!) and when I was younger, I took my Mattel Football and then Gameboy just about everywhere with me, but my parents gave me limits, (I didn't miss Old Faithful erupting because I was playing Tetris, for example) and they certainly never brought our Atari 2600 with us on a vacation.

I've been ruminating on this for some time, but I've recently concluded that there is, in fact, an entire generation of parents, about my age or just a little older, who are substituting technology for parenting. As a result, there's an entire generation of children who are overstimulated and undersocialized, and in some cases heavily medicated, because their damn parents would rather distract them with a DVD or video game than, you know, interact with them.

Is this the new way we're supposed to raise emotionally healthy and well adjusted kids? I must have missed a memo, because these people are everywhere.

Next time you're in the freeway and you see one of those obnoxious SUVs with the fucking little family sticker on the back window (you know, the one that has the adorable little stick figures of mom, dad, their seven kids and the dog) take a look as you pass them. In four out of five cases, the seven kids are all watching a DVD. On the way to the store. Because god forbid they have ten minutes in a row where they're not watching Dora or The Wiggles.

In restaurants, it's all too common to see parents completely ignoring their kid while he plays a PSP or Nintendo DS, and I've recently seen kids watching an ultra-portable DVD player while they drink Coke after Coke as mom talks on the cell phone, oblivious to everyone around her – including her child.

There's a car commercial running right now that is an unintentionally powerful and disturbing commentary on how many people in this generation of parents are raising their kids. It starts in a school lunch room, filled with kids who are jumping and running around, throwing food, and generally raging out of control. A teacher tries to get them to settle down, and is ignored, so he flips down a little display, like you'd see in a car-based DVD player, and the entire room instantly turns into slackjawed, television watching zombies. What's the message here? "If you can't get your kids to listen to you, don't worry, all it takes is a little DVD action to do it for you, so you can get back to the peace and quiet you inexplicably thought you'd enjoy when you had seven fucking kids."

I know this basic phenomenon is nothing new. As long as television has existed, parents have sat their kids in front of it while they did other things, but the current portability of media, and the complexity and depth of handheld video games, is leading to a generation of kids who are so used to its constant presence, when it's taken away, they just don't know what to do with themselves -- and neither do their parents. If you've ever seen a kid running around a grocery store like a ferret on crystal meth, while their hapless parent stands by and avoids eye contact with other shoppers, you know what I mean.

When this generation of kids, who have never learned how to sit still or entertain themselves for more than a few minutes at a time, grow up and meet the creepy home schooled kids whose parents have substituted mythology for science and history, the shit is really going to hit the fan.

When that day comes, though, I have a plan: I'll just carry a portable DVD player with me at all times. If any of them tries to give me shit when I'm collecting my social security check, a little Dora should transform them from annoying Customer Service Jackass into helpful Customer Service Zombie in a matter of seconds.

Wil Wheaton is totally winning this contest he's in with Rob Corddry.

 

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Comments
Mrs_Misha

Mrs_Misha

Los Angeles, CA
September 2003

MAY 11, 2007 01:25 PM


great article Will, definitely something to think about.

I've been noticing alot lately that I have something going on at all time. The Tv the Radio, My I pod, my DS or Wii and never a moment of quite just to let my mind wander.

I don't know how I got this way, but I am definitely try to give myself that quiet time everyday.

Balance is hard, but well worth it

urblueygrl

urblueygrl

Covington, LA
July 2004

MAY 11, 2007 03:28 PM

great article, i think the last 2 paragraphs sum it all up... very well said.

DhD_No_Pants

DhD_No_Pants

Katy, TX
May 2006

MAY 11, 2007 04:04 PM

My mom used to have to take my books away and force me outside.

I got grounded from reading and had books stashed in my room like most teens hide pot.

PhilConnors

PhilConnors

Fredericksburg, VA
January 2004

MAY 11, 2007 04:07 PM

Technology IS a tool, it shouldn't make one a TOOL. Gaming systems, laptops and ipods are fine (my 6 year old nieces both have the old laptops, named Thing1 and Thing2) but limits & socialization are vital. whatever

malkav11

malkav11

Saint Paul, MN
July 2003

MAY 12, 2007 12:05 AM

DhD_PillowPants said:
My mom used to have to take my books away and force me outside.

I got grounded from reading and had books stashed in my room like most teens hide pot.



That was pretty much my experience too, up until we got a modem hooked up to our computer. I mean, she didn't usually actually take my physical books away (I had far too many for that to be practical), but I was not to be reading them until I'd done whatever it was she wanted me to do. And if she caught me doing so, I was in big(ger) trouble. She did take away the book I was *currently* reading from time to time.

But once I got addicted to the Internet, that was the new thing to withhold.

PRockGirlScout

PRockGirlScout

Portland, OR
October 2005

MAY 13, 2007 11:26 AM

It's so great when people who don't have kids make broad sweeping generalizations about whole generations of parents and children based on a few limited observations.

yellowdays

yellowdays

Wetaskiwin, AB
January 2005

MAY 13, 2007 04:23 PM

my sister inlaw lets her kids run rampid and they pull pop after pop out of the fridge all day as they please. the tv is always on, junk food strune about the living room and really the whole house. to eat super she puts their food on the coffee table and then sits at the kitchen table and ignores them, they dont eat anything, the 5 year old just throws it all out and she lets them, then off to yet another pop. the sadest part, they are autistic. so they need more disapline, not less. it hurts my head. i sit my baby infront of 'my first signs' to teachhim sign launguage, but i also watch it and then use those signs later with him. i tell my boyfriend often that we are not raising our child that way, or rather not letting the tv raise our child. i agree whole heartedly with this article. i say to my mom a lot that i dont understand why there has to be a dvd player in new vihicles. i had a discman and a gamegear when i was a kid, but i know what the rocky mountains look like. i saw bears and moose and mountain goats and glaciers. i went fishing and survived with out tv for a week or more on many occasions in my childhood. my son will have an imagination.

Claian

Claian

Australia
April 2006

MAY 13, 2007 05:56 PM

bravo wil,

i'm a tv baby and i can admit it. but i still know how to get away from tech for a while every now and then.

I guess a healthy liking of DnD and MTG as well as spending my teenage years in scouting helped. but i still don't see how people get into that trap of raising kids that badly.

I just hope i can do a good job of raising our children when my fiance and i have some.

apesamongus

apesamongus

Atlanta, GA
July 2002

MAY 14, 2007 08:20 PM

DhD_PillowPants said:
My mom used to have to take my books away and force me outside.


That happened to me too. Probably why I hate trees. They're like the neighborhood bullies of my childhood.

hellomrworld

hellomrworld

Westbrook, ME
December 2003

MAY 30, 2007 06:42 AM

Its interesting ... some friends of mine run a Ecology School at a beach in Maine and talk about Outdoor definency disorder ..

Some kids don't know how to just play outside ...

I can see nothing sillier then bringing the PS2 to go camping near the beach .. or playing World of Warcraft when camping ...

And my attention span is pretty short .. I can't imagine how it will be for Generation Z (After X and Y) ...

BrotherSutek

BrotherSutek

Forestdale, MA
March 2004

JUN 03, 2007 05:16 PM

+++ You've met my son I see. Don't get me wrong I loved tv growing up but once we were outside we had to forced to come inside! My son has to be forced outdoors and then whines to get back in or that he's tired when we go for a hike in the woods. Mind you once we get him away from all technolgy he claims boredom, so he worries me lack of imagination to create his own games. 10 kids running around he claimss there's nothing to do! frown

orangeinfinity

orangeinfinity

Surrey, BC
May 2007

JUN 20, 2007 08:57 AM

Every year since I was BORN my family has taken a summer road trip from Edmonton to Vancouver Island. This involves two days of driving, various stops for food, and an overnight hotel stay in Kamloops. During NONE of this were we allowed to play games or watch TV, even when we were in the hotel. Instead, we swam in the POOL. What a thought. We were given books to read, coloring books and toys; we played I-spy, twenty questions and the alphabet game. We listened to tapes or the radio. And every year we made it! We never had temper tantrums or my mom would have probably killed us. She just doensn't put up with shit like public temper tantrums -- really, no parent should. I'm ashamed to be part of this narcissistic, self absorbed generation and I'm afraid of what will happen when we all grow up.

Girthy

Girthy

Canoga Park, CA
July 2005

JUN 20, 2007 06:44 PM

PRockGirlScout said:
It's so great when people who don't have kids make broad sweeping generalizations about whole generations of parents and children based on a few limited observations.



Who's this directed to?

The_Reverend

The_Reverend

United Kingdom
September 2004

JUN 21, 2007 09:55 AM

Great but scary article.

Team Wheaton or Team Corddry?

Solaris

Solaris

SUICIDEGIRL

British Columbia, Canada

JUN 21, 2007 10:11 AM

Luddite said:
+ a bazillion for using the word Luddite.

Your like the 5th person I know who actually knows what it means. Ahh, the admiration is expanding



you need to meet new people i think.

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