1:48 am, Friday, 17 October 2025

WHAT TV CAN TEACH INSTAGRAM ABOUT GROWING UP ONLINE

Sarakhon Report

The PG-13 internet fantasy meets celebrity culture
Vox’s latest culture column argues that America’s fixation on a “PG-13 internet” misunderstands how teens—including those orbiting teen celebrities and influencers—actually learn to navigate risk. The piece suggests network TV, not hyper-moderated feeds, offers a better blueprint: rating systems, time slots, and parental guidance that treat audiences as learners instead of liabilities. In today’s fan economy—where pop stars’ offspring become micro-celebrities overnight—blanket sanitization can push messy conversations off-platform, making them less safe. The argument isn’t anti-safety; it’s pro-literacy.
From para-social to practical media literacy
Applied to celebrity culture, the thesis reframes the influencer household: if you can’t ban fame from the family room, mentor it. Clear labelling, content gradations, and frank parent-teen debriefs may work better than AI filters that routinely miss context. For public figures, it’s also an image strategy: audiences reward stars who model boundaries and media literacy over faux wholesomeness. The column’s takeaway is pragmatic—design for growth, not denial. Instagram and TikTok already borrow TV’s playbook for distribution; the next step is borrowing its respect for audiences learning in public.

08:41:42 pm, Thursday, 16 October 2025

WHAT TV CAN TEACH INSTAGRAM ABOUT GROWING UP ONLINE

08:41:42 pm, Thursday, 16 October 2025

The PG-13 internet fantasy meets celebrity culture
Vox’s latest culture column argues that America’s fixation on a “PG-13 internet” misunderstands how teens—including those orbiting teen celebrities and influencers—actually learn to navigate risk. The piece suggests network TV, not hyper-moderated feeds, offers a better blueprint: rating systems, time slots, and parental guidance that treat audiences as learners instead of liabilities. In today’s fan economy—where pop stars’ offspring become micro-celebrities overnight—blanket sanitization can push messy conversations off-platform, making them less safe. The argument isn’t anti-safety; it’s pro-literacy.
From para-social to practical media literacy
Applied to celebrity culture, the thesis reframes the influencer household: if you can’t ban fame from the family room, mentor it. Clear labelling, content gradations, and frank parent-teen debriefs may work better than AI filters that routinely miss context. For public figures, it’s also an image strategy: audiences reward stars who model boundaries and media literacy over faux wholesomeness. The column’s takeaway is pragmatic—design for growth, not denial. Instagram and TikTok already borrow TV’s playbook for distribution; the next step is borrowing its respect for audiences learning in public.