Tag: Nick News

  • Nick US explores the perils of living in an online world

    Nick US explores the perils of living in an online world

    MUMBAI: 25 million American kids have been — or are — online. The number is big but even more startling is that, according to recent data gathered by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, 71 per cent of teens online have received personal messages from someone they don’t know, 45 per cent have been asked for personal information from a stranger; 34 per cent have had unwanted or unsolicited exposure to inappropriate images; 20 per cent have received a sexual solicitation over the Internet, 30 per cent have considered meeting in person someone they met online, while 14 per cent have actually done so.

    Approximately one million kids have received an aggressive sexual solicitation: someone asking to meet in person, calling on the telephone or sending snail mail, money or gifts. Yet fewer than one in five kids who have experienced any of the above, have told a parent or guardian.

    Now US broadcaster Nickelodeon has announced that on 10 December its show Nick News with Linda Ellerbee explores the problem and looks at solutions in Online and In Danger? How to Protect Yourself in the Virtual World. Kids and experts such as The National Center for Missing and Exploited Children president and CEO Ernie Allen, and WiredSafety founder Parry Aftab weigh in on social networking sites, and the ways predators try to get at kids.

    Cyber cops explain what they do, what ‘grooming’ is, and how online predators are groomed themselves. The show visits with The TeenAngels, 13-18 year-old volunteers trained in online privacy and security. They visit schools, and run a website, spreading the word — from kids to kids –about how to live, learn, and play safely online.

    Ellerbee says, “For a lot of kids, the virtual world is their playground, recreation center, arcade, and mall. Going online isn’t something they do, it’s somewhere they are. The goal of this show is not to scare kids offline or encourage parents to unplug computers, but to help kids better understand and use this evolving technology, and show them ways to
    protect themselves in the process.”

    Around 65 per cent of all teens have visited some kind of social networking site such as MySpace, Facebook or Xanga, according to a CBSNews.com poll. In the special kids explain why they go on these sites, what types of information they’re posting, and other ways they use the Internet. They also tell stories of close encounters or actual experiences with online abuse.

    Nick News is celebrating its 15th year. It claims to be the longest-running kids’ news show in television history, and has built its reputation on the respectful and direct way it speaks to kids about the important issues of the day. Last year it won the Emmy for Outstanding Children’s Programming for its show.

  • Nick News explores the perils, pitfalls and pratfalls of adolescence

    Nick News explores the perils, pitfalls and pratfalls of adolescence

    MUMBAI: Who can forget braces, sweaty palms and awkward school dances? Adolescence? Arrrgh! Just as tweens head into a new school year, the next installment of Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: The Worst Years of My Life? Surviving Middle School, on Nickelodeon, delves into all the slings and arrows of Middle School.

    Ellerbee listens to kids, and some Middle School survivors including Comedy Central’s Jon Stewart, Cynthia Nixon (Sex and the City), Megan Mullally (Will & Grace), Taylor Hicks (American Idol), skateboarding star Tony Hawk, and Grammy Award-winning singers Jewel and Nelly Furtado, about that speed bump on the way to adulthood called Middle School, and what it takes to live through it.

    “Whether you call it Middle School or Junior High, it’s more than a place. It’s a time, a sometimes hilarious, often painful and always challenging time. You’re too young to be a grownup but you’re not quite a kid anymore. In this episode, we give kids on the Middle School frontline, and some well-known ex-kids, an opportunity to speak out, to remind all kids that when it comes to Middle School, you’re not crazy, you’re not alone, and this too shall pass,” said Ellerbee.

    Nick News discusses issues that kids encounter during this time: the fluctuating hormones; the realities of puberty (What is it like to be you in a brand new package?); the social insecurities (I must fit in somewhere!); the necessity of keeping up with increasingly harder school work; the pitfalls of renegotiating the relationship with your parents (They used to be so normal. When did they change?); and facing the difficult choices that no one else can make for you. The simple truth is: you’re too young for this and too old for that.

    Nick News also conducted an online poll on nicknews.com, in which kids were given the opportunity to share what they think is the hardest part of adolescence. For a majority of kids physical changes are the most difficult part of growing up with 19 per cent of respondents listing body changes as the hardest part of adolescence, followed by school work (14 per cent), fitting in (12 per cent) and romance (12 per cent). Other adolescent hardships making the list were feeling embarrassed a lot (10 per cent), peer pressure (nine per cent), parents (seven per cent), pressure to succeed (seven per cent), being comfortable with themselves (six per cent) and temptation to take risks (three per cent).

  • ‘Nick News’ with Linda Ellerbee turns 15

    ‘Nick News’ with Linda Ellerbee turns 15

    MUMBAI: The Emmy, duPont and Peabody award-winning Nick News with Linda Ellerbee, the longest-running and most-watched kids’ news show in television history, celebrates 15 years on Nickelodeon in May 2006.

    Informed by a philosophy that ignorance is not bliss, that kids deserve and need information about the world and events that shape it, Nick News has covered major world events and other issues that affect kids in a way that no show on television ever has, earning the respect of parents, educators and, most important, kids.

    To celebrate this milestone, Nickelodeon will air Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow – Celebrating 15 Years of Nick News on 28 May.

    The half-hour, commercial free special is a retrospective of 15 of Nick News’ most compelling stories over the last decade and a half, and a fast-forward to meet some of the players and see what their life is like today, when they’re grownups. It shows how Nick News — and kids-have never shied away from talking, in no-nonsense language, about the crucial issues of our time-war, AIDS, terrorism, natural disasters, gay parenting, homelessness, racism, genocide-and how kids have responded by working to change their world for the better.

    “No other show gives kids the opportunity to speak their minds on important issues quite like Nick News. Nick News and Linda Ellerbee present stories about issues in a manner that empowers kids and enables them to take action. The show provides a great way for kids to initiate a dialogue with their parents. Nickelodeon is proud that for the past 15 years, we have been able to offer our audience a unique outlet like Nick News to help them do that,” said Nickelodeon Television president and MTVN Kids and Family Group head Cyma Zarghami.

    “I am the luckiest journalist in television. We tried to teach kids about life. Instead, they taught me what life is all about. I look forward to my continuing education on Nick News,” said Nick News host and executive producer Ellerbee.

    A sneak peek of Nick News with Linda Ellerbee: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow – Celebrating 15 Years of Nick News will be broadcast on TurboNick, Nickelodeon’s broadband video service on Nick.com, two weeks before the on-air special.