According to UsMagazine.com Molly Ringwald has some fabu parenting advice that really hit home for team LiLa:
"I don't let my babies watch TV at all since there have been tests done that link it to ADD [because of the rapid editing]," mom to twins Ringwald, 42, tells The Washington Post. "I didn't have a TV for the first four years of my older daughter's upbringing, and now she really just doesn't much care for it."
This is bad news bears for the two women currently attempting to write 50,000 over the course of the next 30 days with 4 kids under the age of five and six measly hours of preschool a week for childcare.
In honor of Molly's exceptional parenting advice we're rewriting a scene from Pretty In Pink to reflect our feelings on the issue:
Molly: What do you want to hear?
LiLa: Tell me!
Molly: What?
LiLa: You think we're bad mothers!
Molly: No, I don't!
LiLa: You're ashamed that we believe that Nick Jr. really IS preschool on demand. You're terrified that your god forsaken nannies aren't nearly as effective at teaching multiculturalism as Dora.
[Lisa hits Molly]
LiLa: Just say it!
[Laura hits her again]
LiLa: Just tell us the truth!
Molly: You don't understand that it has nothing at all do with you. I just can't stand for my kids to watch television shows that I'm not starring in.
[LiLa runs away]
Molly: [wipes a tear] LiLa!!!!
[End scene] *LiLa bows*
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Don't call this a comeback
So it’s been a minute. Or 10. Or truthfully more like 2,102,400. At least we think that’s how many minutes there are in 3 years, but let...
-
So when we got wind that the fantabulous Kody Keplinger was organizing something called Agent Appreciation Day, we knew we were in. Not onl...
-
Since I am the worst tweeter ever, Lisa informed me of the #Speakloudly Twitter campaign that's happening as we speak. It brought b...
26 comments:
OMG. Was that the scene from the dance when Anthony Michael Hall asks if he can have her panties? Oh wait. That's Sixteen Candles. Shit! I'm getting my John Hughes films mixed up here.
So if they can't watch TV that she isn't starring in ... then they can't watch TV, right? She's not acting again is she?
Great stuff! :) And don't feel bad...the tv comes on when I'm trying to get anything accomplished. LOL
HAHA! "We think Nick Jr. really is preschool on demand..." Love. It.
Crap. Is that why my child is the way he is?
I hate when actors say this kind of shizzle!
Um that was me last year kids, tv,nano, great combination lol. Oh don't forget to throw turkey day in the mix. And I wonder why my characters throw themselves off cliffs.
This made my week. Favorite post ever.
(And Nick, Jr. is totally preschool on demand...)
HA! :))) Love the "preschool on demand."
I don't feel quilty . . . too much.
And my son's ADHD has nothing to do with TV. Heck, he doesn't last long before he's off doing something else. He reads longer than he watches TV. :D
Can't say the same about the younger two, though.
I don't believe it. I have a son with autism, and don't blame it on the TV. (and that is another story)
However, moderation is the key. A little tv can be a great educational tool. I had some videos that helped my autistic son start speaking.
When I wrote my first book, I'd allow "movie time" for my kids. And during Beauty and the Beast, or whatever, I'd write like a fiend. I wrote my whole first book that way.
Don't worry, your kids will thank you when they're older and have famous author moms.
Molly is sooo 5 minutes ago.
Who's to say that Scooby Doo does not help my child learn deduction skills? Or SpongeBob doesn't teach my child about under water exploration and being nice to your not so intelligent friends? (Yes, I mean you Patrick Starfish)
And who doubts the joy of Yo Gabba Gabba? Just the name alone is fun.
Don't knock it, Molly. You have no idea what you're missing here.
When my daughter was a baby I breast fed until she was almost a year. I made real food and ground it up for her. I washed all her 100% cotton clothes in no dye/no perfume laundry detergent. I made sure she wore a hat and socks everywhere.
I let her watch all the damn tv she wanted to. Nick Jr. is preschool. Elmo is a great babysitter. The Disney princesses are lifesavers.
She's now (at 5 1/2) reading books and doing math problems, knows big words (like perpendicular and horizontal) and can tell you where every single animal lives in the world and what they eat. There's nothing wrong with tv for kids.
Take that Molly!!!
LOL!!! Nick Jr. is preschool on demand made me snort?
My 3 kids have all watched more TV than “experts” probably think is ok and seem to be just fine. When I discovered episodes of the Power Rangers made my colicky baby stop crying the TV was on a lot. I also gave every Power Ranger DVD we owned to my neighbor once the colic crying stopped for good, and prayed I’d never have to sit through another episode again :) Sometimes you just do what you have to do.
I loved your post so much, that I just went over and preordered Liar Society from book depository!
Why oh why must these actors be so holier than though. I have a sudden urge to find her and smack her upside the head -- after I give Tom Cruise a few first.
Ah, well, her kids don't watch tv but they're probably being raised to believe that there will always be (paid) adults available to play with them or see to their needs every minute of the day. This, too, may cause ADD (or other interesting issues) down the road. I say your kids are lucky to have moms who model a life full of dreams of their own (and, hey, at least Dora's teaching them some Spanish!) :)
Ha! I recognized the hall locker scene from the very first line.
I popped Pretty In Pink in the DVD player the other day because I thought my kids would like it as much as I did.
They thought it was "weird", and I again considered the possibility that they were switched at birth.
I used to watch Nick Jr. all the time, and I think I turned out okay...
I can;t even begin to tell you how much my daughter has learned form Nick Jr. shows. And she's 7 and has no signs of ADHD. most fot eh time when the TV is on, my kids are doing soemthing else too...it's more just background noise.
As I type this my son is engrossed with Monsters Inc..his new fetish. He looks like he's gonna fall asleep. SWEET!!
Yeah, you definitely need TV. Heck, I have one daughter who's almost 6, and we put a movie on every day. And she's still pretty smart. I think. Oh crap...
Wait, Nick Jr ISN'T preschool on demand? Ah, crap. Now I have to go turn off the TV and stop checking blogs and be a mom. Curse you LiLa and Molly. Curse you all.
Ha ha. ;)
How much do you wanna' bet she secretly parks her kid in front of the glowing screen - okay nevermind.
Your re-work was hilarious. :)
Lisa ~ YA Literature Lover
I put PBS on during the day. Nicholas just turned two and he already recognizes and says the alphabet (not that he knows how to same them in order yet) and some of that is me and some of that is SuperWhy. He loves that show. There's nothing wrong with kids watching TV.
Geeze. Seriously, I was deprived of tv when I was a child, and its on like, all the time in my house. I think that method of no tv whatsoever backfires in the end. Plus, my 5 year old knows way more Chinese than I do, and knows more Spanish than I did at that age.
My kids absolutely loved the Elephant Show with Sharon, Lois & Bram when they were little. It was 30 minutes of happiness... for me :)
I hope she's also making her own organic baby food and knitting hemp diapers. It would suck if they bypassed ADD only to get allergies or a troubling arm growing out of their head from hormones and chemicals. It happens. Serious. Ask Gisele. She knows everything.
First off - I tried this with my son. Refused to buy him a video game his entire life. It became like crack to him... still is and he's 24.
Second - You refer to Molly Ringwold as an actress but I beg to differ. Have you seen Secret Life of an American Teenager? Blech.
Post a Comment