Two things have been bugging me lately.
I'm sure some of you have heard about that Football player who made his kids give up their participation trophies. Now I don't want to have this whole debate about how stupid these things are and that no one likes them, but side rant, the ones that rant about it being another sign of how the younger generation is "entitled" are usually Baby Boomers, i.e. the most freaking entitled people of all freaking time. But my main, driving point is this:
If we want to teach kids real life lessons, you don't give trophies for just showing up. No. You don't even give it to the team who wins. If you want that real gut punch of reality, you give the trophy specifically to the most untalented, worst player...maybe even the benchwarmer. Then you say "guess what kids? Hard work don't mean nothing because some idiot managed to be really really lucky in life." You want to give kids a sense of reality, tell them they can only succeed if they were already destined to be successful out of using their parents money or just plain good old dumb luck, and most people who struggle their way through life will work themselves hard into debt. If we're going to give them the life's unfair speech, give them the reason why it's unfair, okay?
Secondly, with all the controversy surrounding Jared from Subway, I keep hearing how he was a fallen hero. WHAT?! How the heck was he a hero in the first place? He was a guy that lost weight that a corporation used to sell their awful microwaved subs. I agree completely with what South Park said here. The company manipulated and simplified his story giving false hope to other fat people so they would be bamboozled into thinking their food is diet food. At best, they're the slightly healthier alternative to fast food, and as offensive as some of their commercials on that subject matter is (slightly out of shape people breaking hammocks with their "tremendous weight") at least those were honest... if you ignore the nitrates, that is. There are people who lost more weight through more grueling means. Heck, those who can endure what Biggest Loser does to them (having jerks yell at them on national television, having the footage be manipulated to make them look bad, wearing ugly clothes and going shirtless on exhibition, and overall dealing with the exploitive nature)... those are bigger freaking heroes to me. Not some guy that ate the lowest calorie thing on the menu.
I'm sure some of you have heard about that Football player who made his kids give up their participation trophies. Now I don't want to have this whole debate about how stupid these things are and that no one likes them, but side rant, the ones that rant about it being another sign of how the younger generation is "entitled" are usually Baby Boomers, i.e. the most freaking entitled people of all freaking time. But my main, driving point is this:
If we want to teach kids real life lessons, you don't give trophies for just showing up. No. You don't even give it to the team who wins. If you want that real gut punch of reality, you give the trophy specifically to the most untalented, worst player...maybe even the benchwarmer. Then you say "guess what kids? Hard work don't mean nothing because some idiot managed to be really really lucky in life." You want to give kids a sense of reality, tell them they can only succeed if they were already destined to be successful out of using their parents money or just plain good old dumb luck, and most people who struggle their way through life will work themselves hard into debt. If we're going to give them the life's unfair speech, give them the reason why it's unfair, okay?
Secondly, with all the controversy surrounding Jared from Subway, I keep hearing how he was a fallen hero. WHAT?! How the heck was he a hero in the first place? He was a guy that lost weight that a corporation used to sell their awful microwaved subs. I agree completely with what South Park said here. The company manipulated and simplified his story giving false hope to other fat people so they would be bamboozled into thinking their food is diet food. At best, they're the slightly healthier alternative to fast food, and as offensive as some of their commercials on that subject matter is (slightly out of shape people breaking hammocks with their "tremendous weight") at least those were honest... if you ignore the nitrates, that is. There are people who lost more weight through more grueling means. Heck, those who can endure what Biggest Loser does to them (having jerks yell at them on national television, having the footage be manipulated to make them look bad, wearing ugly clothes and going shirtless on exhibition, and overall dealing with the exploitive nature)... those are bigger freaking heroes to me. Not some guy that ate the lowest calorie thing on the menu.