fightingduck
Footballguy
FWIW. Maybe our side hasn't been clear on the problem.
My two daughters (6 and 10) have watched HM for about a year. We have both discs, a karaoke version, some DVDs of the show, etc. I've seen every show that has been made. Probably several times. It's a good show for the girls and it reminds me of the Cosby show, Family ties or any number of shows about a family that I saw growing up. That show and several others (Suite Life, Raven) are fun shows to watch on the weekends (typically when new episodes air). As a family, we watch them. We talk about them. They bring up issues such as obey your parents, doing your homework, not lying, cheating or stealing, the value of charity, etc. We re-quote the funny parts and re-enforce the positive messages. The Cyrus' (for better or worse) have been a small part of our lives, the same way the Cosby family was part of mine growing up.
It was HM and Miley Cyrus that has given me the opportunity to talk about real life and make believe. My kids are very good at pointing out the real person from the character on TV - and Miley is the primary reason for that. My kids know a lot about the Cyrus family. They know that her real name is Destiny Hope Cyrus. Miley is a nickname that her Dad gave her. It is shortened from "smiley" because she smiled a lot. For better or for worse, we've put some trust in the Miley family, the HM brand name, and the Disney channel. We don't expect anything from them other than to provide a little bit of laughter and singing every now and then.
When my two daughters play together, they play all sorts of made-up games. The play school, house, etc. They also play HM. The put on fake hair and big sun glasses with their dress-up clothes. They sing songs. They do shows for us. It's fun stuff. The key point here is that kids mock what they see.
I don't know what, or when, or how, or why, or if my kids will see the vanity fair pics. Maybe the won't, and nothing comes of it. If they do, it's not that the conversation will be awkward, it's that they will barely understand it enough to even explain it or ask a question that captures their response to it. If I'm lucky, they will come right out and ask me, "what's with the pics, dad?" My fear is that they will mock what they've seen and I won't know about it. When, where, how, with whom? I don't have the answers to these questions.
Do I bring it up? Do I make a bigger deal about it than what is even going on in their head? Do I downplay it? Do I spend 5 minutes or an hour? Do we keep watching her shows? Do we hold her up as a liberated teen?
Anyone that thinks they have the right answers to these questions is simply an idiot. Anyone who thinks the 30 minutes a week we spend with HM (and other Disney shows) is too much - have fun in the bubble.
To those without kids, I understand this is just some girl you've heard about a time a two. I wish that were the case with me and my girls right now.
My two daughters (6 and 10) have watched HM for about a year. We have both discs, a karaoke version, some DVDs of the show, etc. I've seen every show that has been made. Probably several times. It's a good show for the girls and it reminds me of the Cosby show, Family ties or any number of shows about a family that I saw growing up. That show and several others (Suite Life, Raven) are fun shows to watch on the weekends (typically when new episodes air). As a family, we watch them. We talk about them. They bring up issues such as obey your parents, doing your homework, not lying, cheating or stealing, the value of charity, etc. We re-quote the funny parts and re-enforce the positive messages. The Cyrus' (for better or worse) have been a small part of our lives, the same way the Cosby family was part of mine growing up.
It was HM and Miley Cyrus that has given me the opportunity to talk about real life and make believe. My kids are very good at pointing out the real person from the character on TV - and Miley is the primary reason for that. My kids know a lot about the Cyrus family. They know that her real name is Destiny Hope Cyrus. Miley is a nickname that her Dad gave her. It is shortened from "smiley" because she smiled a lot. For better or for worse, we've put some trust in the Miley family, the HM brand name, and the Disney channel. We don't expect anything from them other than to provide a little bit of laughter and singing every now and then.
When my two daughters play together, they play all sorts of made-up games. The play school, house, etc. They also play HM. The put on fake hair and big sun glasses with their dress-up clothes. They sing songs. They do shows for us. It's fun stuff. The key point here is that kids mock what they see.
I don't know what, or when, or how, or why, or if my kids will see the vanity fair pics. Maybe the won't, and nothing comes of it. If they do, it's not that the conversation will be awkward, it's that they will barely understand it enough to even explain it or ask a question that captures their response to it. If I'm lucky, they will come right out and ask me, "what's with the pics, dad?" My fear is that they will mock what they've seen and I won't know about it. When, where, how, with whom? I don't have the answers to these questions.
Do I bring it up? Do I make a bigger deal about it than what is even going on in their head? Do I downplay it? Do I spend 5 minutes or an hour? Do we keep watching her shows? Do we hold her up as a liberated teen?
Anyone that thinks they have the right answers to these questions is simply an idiot. Anyone who thinks the 30 minutes a week we spend with HM (and other Disney shows) is too much - have fun in the bubble.
To those without kids, I understand this is just some girl you've heard about a time a two. I wish that were the case with me and my girls right now.

The people arguing with us on this thread continue to fail to realize how unique this girl is in terms of the age group she is targeting.
...at you not being repressed.
I've seen this girl on TV wearing skimpy miniskirts and knee-high boots while prancing around the stage looking like Carmen Electra, Jr.