Download Opera GX here operagx.gg/penguinz016 This is the greatest nonsense complaint of All Time Merch moistglobal.com/ I stream every day / moistcr1tikal
Tbh it's always been like this lol. Parents always have allowed children to see things they aren't supposed to see, or miss things that their child is interacting with. Then they get upsettispaghetti.
Snuck my toddler into a nightclub so I could go clubbing last weekend, and I was appalled by the amount of alcohol there was in there (with my own being the exception), and the lack of baby gates on the stairs.
As my mom would used to say, ‘I don’t expect you to be an angel but I expect you to be kind, smart, and act responsibly.’ Parents like this make me grateful for my parents, who were very proactive and were patient when answering my questions about the world. You can’t protect your kids from the world; you can only make sure they have the tools they need to be responsible adults and make informed decisions.
Well said!! My parents have always been very supportive of me and always encouraged me to ask questions. Even though my school was telling me to stop asking questions, my parents taught me to think critically and be informed. They also made sure I wasn't watching anything too terrible online, and if I was, they would sit me down and explain why it's not appropriate.
"You can’t protect your kids from the world; you can only make sure they have the tools they need to be responsible adults and make informed decisions." 100% a b s o l u t e l y
Exactly what I thought! Although there still are boundaries what they should be able too see - which are, largely, already in place or can be set there by monitoring your kid's internet usage, there are certain things you simply cannot protect them from, and therefore have to prepare them. Charly used a very good analogy with the sterile environment. Proverbially and literally - since kids growing up in completely sanitized households are prone to have far more alergies...
As a parent of five, I know it’s more important to raise your kids not to be idiots. If they’re not idiots they can watch slightly edgy stuff without it blowing up thier world
@@MysteryMan199725from personal experience, I do think there’s a lot that mistake discipline with abuse, but a good amount of parents out there don’t discipline their kids because they are “angels” in their eyes
@@icantgetdubs2433 yep lol I've heard that bit too... "oh but he's so innocent, he would never go commit a mass shooting in a shool or murder anyone at all"
I saw reviews for puss in boots by parents saying it was too scary and that the wolf was too inappropriate for a kids movie 😂 I then saw an interview of Antonio Banderas saying that the whole point of the movie was to be able to have an open disscussion with your children about it. Some parents just want their kids to sit still in a corner and never talk, move or ask any questions.
Reminds me of when parents were freaking out about the first Deadpool movie when it came out and complained of how graphic it is. I still remember seeing it with my friends on a Friday night and there were at least three families with their kids. The best part was when the parents got up and left with their children when the strip club scene came on. Do you not know what an R rating is?
same thing w sausage party. it dosent mean its a superhero or animated movie that its automaticaly a kids or family oriented movie. Adults are allowed to like superheroes and cartoons too, and its your responsibility as a parent to check the MPAA rating as its there for a reason.
I'm pretty sure there's literally a line in the opening monologue where he says "some of you parents are already regretting bringing your children to this movie" lol
@@twojointsjay7330there is in the second, not sure about the first one but in the second one he says something like “I’m sure you’re regretting bringing going your kids to this instead of that stripper movie (or whatever the other movie is that isn’t good for kids either) but Deadpool 2 is a family film” Or something like that
@@aaronlane8276 I hate nothing more then seeing little gremlins in a theater. They talk, get on their phones, and kick your seats Edit: they also suck on their straws making that annoying noise when the drink is empty, and they sometimes even take a picture with flash on.
funny story... when I went to go watch avengers endgame.. there was a lady with a crying baby and before the movie started she saught nothing of it as if she is doing nothing wrong... and some someone shouted "get you're fucking kid out here" 😂😂 she was escorted out shortly after it started because her baby didn't stop crying disrupting the whole theatre...
Imagine taking your young child to a library that has an unrestricted pornography section and not monitoring your child to make sure they don’t wander off the wrong direction. Same thing with the internet. If you’re not monitoring what they are doing, you can’t be upset when they are exposed to something you don’t like.
I was actually a little concerned about becoming a hypocrite when I had kids and becoming one of these awful entitled parents expecting the world to bend to my needs. Turns out it's an easy trap to avoid. I let my kids watch pretty much whatever they want, a lot of times I watch with them and we talk about it during and/or after. So many problems are avoided when you treat kids like people. Weird that more parents don't do it.
I have this same take but with eating. People create picky eaters within their kid because they get terrified over completely normal reactions to food. They will do anything but test them as individuals
@@RibbitRibbit191 i do both tbh. like, im not gonna let my kids watch super graphic gore or sex scenes in movies, but something like jurassic park, or whatever, is fair enough.
I remember at the theatre during guardians 3, after Chris Pratt said "Open the fucking door!" this parent rounded up their group of 5 small kids and left the theatre in a very Karen fashion. Leaving while being like "This is a disgrace" and stiff like that. Which is why parents need to pay more attention to content ratings and start being parents.
There are videos online with GTA 5 trolling from years ago when it was released and part of the audio is clearly kids playing online that, you know, shouldn't be playing GTA goddamned 5.
When PG was first introduced, they even allowed nudity and heavy themes, while swearing and graphic violence was reserved for R rating. PG 13 only came around after Raiders Of The Lost Ark.
Modern parenting of not taking responsibility just goes to show the level of entitlement these parents have and are teaching their kids. These types of parents think everyone else around them should watch out for their kids as if they don’t have any responsibility over the kids they are “raising”.
My cousin’s son was kicked off the school bus 3 times within the past 3 months. He can do no wrong as it is always someone else’s fault (he hit a kid and another time didn’t want to sit down). His mom seems the same way as every job she goes to there is an issue. Seems monkey see monkey do
I used to be a preschool teacher, and one thing I always told the parents is that you can't prevent the world from happening to your kids, but you can prepare them for things they may see. The parents I disliked the most were the kind that would complain like this, not to mention they were almost always lazy parents expecting everyone to cater to their every will.
@@zzaarra3940 not a parent, I’m a part of the problem he’s talking about, but so is he. You don’t understand irony and that’s okay, maybe that’ll be in the next UA-cam video that teaches you about life lessons
Massive W to the parents who actually take the time to raise their kids. So many people have kids and then do stupid shit like this with them, and as infuriating as that is, it's refreshing to see people who do their best with their children. Props to y'all, because parenting is hard as hell.
@@Blank-lp4fz No but being online isn’t just being on social media. Lots of kids for instance play Roblox and Fortnite with their friends. I agree kids do not need social media though. I didn’t have any until like middle school at best.
@@Blank-lp4fz With parental supervision kids should be allowed to interact online, it’s important for kids to learn, rather than being dumped in at 18 and not knowing anything
Parents who outsource their responsibilities, whether it's to the Internet, state, TV or other people, lose any right to complain about how their kids turn out. You chose to have them. _You're_ supposed to be responsible for them. A whole lot of people want kids, but they don't actually want to be parents. From what I've seen over the course of my life, most people have no business having children.
My biggest problem with modern parenting is parents trying to restrict kids from seeing anything uncomfortable or bad. Like, kids are humans. They can learn. If you explain to a child “this is bad, don’t be like this person!” More than likely they will understand. Instead, parents don’t want their kids to see it and want to keep them in a little bubble.
I do agree. I think we should be open with kids about certain things. Sheltering and not explaining why something is bad is why the newer generations are so dumb and entitled. Kids need to understand consequences for actions.
i completely agree. sheltering them completely from these things also make it more attractive to them once they do encounter it on their own. since they were never explained why it is bad, the nuances of situation etc. now all they see is something their parents wont allow.
I agree. I told my child that porn is bad and he shouldn’t watch it but he still watches it everyday but I don’t want to shelter him so I’m gonna let him continue this habit because I’m a good woke parent.
@@datshortsguy4744 genuinely when did they say anything like that? and i can tell you right now babying your kids and avoiding teaching them things is BAD. i never learned consent and i got severely traumatized in my first relationship because i didn't know right from wrong.
The movie was dark and disturbing but I’m the best way. It portrayed the horrors that rocket and his friends had to go through and gives his character much more depth and emotion. That said, yes it is disturbing as animals are being tortured but it’s a heavy dose of unfortunate reality in a fictional series.
My mother didn't shield me from many things. She sat with me and explained and helped me understand. The one thing she said no to as a kid was candyman. I watched it anyway with the help of older siblings when she wasn't home. It did have an impact on me. I was too young. She then helped me deal with the consequences. ACTUAL parenting
I took my daughter to see Guardians 3. Was it more than I was expecting? Yeah. But parenting is being able to talk to them about it and contextualize it. She's fine, and if I have to pay for a little therapy down the line then so be it.
@@nickkoch6740you’re not going to have to being a little lenient when parenting lets kids learn what they like and don’t like, child can’t be a pro climber if u don’t let them go on the jungle gym.
Dude got effected from watching something as tame as Candyman as a kid Fat L. I watched the Exorcist as a kid and it literally didn't affect me at all, it was scary yea but that's it not like it stays with you.
meanwhile there are some parents I've seen in person who literally have their 5 year old watch tiktok. AND THEY LEAVE THE TIKTOK APP RUNNING WITHOUT PAUSING IT
As a parent I took my 10 year old to see it. He was taught early what words only grown ups use. He felt all the emotions he should have felt in this movie!! And I was happy with that
I'm a mom of 3, Grandma of 2. There's good and bad in everything you let a child do. It is 100% the parental unit's responsibility to eeeexplaaaain what they're engaging in. That being said, I'm a huge horror fan and everyone in my family seeeems ok🧐
As a parent, I completely agree with you. I set limits on what my child does. I did not let my child use UA-cam kids after I heard about "Elsa gate." I put restrictions and time limits on his devices. I'm aware of what he does online by checking his browser history and actually watching what he does over his shoulder. Kids actually hear and see worse in real life and on news stations. Therefore I don't keep my child in a bubble. I let him know that life isn't all rainbows and sunshine. Bad & awful things happen all the time. It's tough to talk about with our children about difficult subjects, but they need to learn that danger is all around us. To not prepare them for potential dangers is a disservice to their upbringing. Movies like this one that discuss animal abuse can open a dialog for parents to bring awareness of abuse in general. It's terrible to think about, but kids and animals are abused all the time. Kids usually don't even understand that it's abuse if they experience it or see it. I myself was abused as a kid and I didn't even realize it until I became an adult. No one explained to me that if someone touched me in certain ways that I should let a trusted adult know. Something as simple as explaining what I should do could have saved me from being abused multiple times. 5yo's don't instinctually know what to do in abusive situations. We need to teach them to 1st avoid interacting with strangers. 2nd inform trusted adults if a friend or family member behaves inappropriately toward kids. We must make our kids aware of these dangers so that they can protect themselves and ask for help if they ever unfortunately have to deal with such awfulness.
I have a genuine question because I want to be a parent in the future what age do you start to talk with them about things? what age are they able to have some kind of discussion and learn from it? im thinking about 7 or something but I have no clue since I'm just 15
@@morimori33 I'm no parent but I feel like these subject should be addressed as soon as the kid is old enough to understand speech, and before they start going to school. And not just one discussion but brought up regularly so it sticks in their head that if anything like that happens to them they NEED to talk about it.
@@armandpeanutspinou3430 thats what i was thinking too but wondering how to bring it up in a way that will make the young child understand. maybe for death if youre talking about like nature or something
This obsession with shielding kids from everything is just a big self fulfilling prophecy. A parent says they can't handle something mildly violent; so they ban movies with any amount of mild violence, treat it like some kind of serious sin if they ask about them, become infuriated at the idea... so the kid grows up not being able to handle seeing mild violence and has bad reactions to it anyway. So when they have kids they raise their kids to be the same because "kids can't handle that" and we repeat.
i don't think we should be showing kids guts and gore and peoples' faces exploding or anything, but i do agree. for a child to be able to fully understand and comprehend what they watch, maybe having them step out of their comfort zone is a good thing? stepping out of your comfort zone is exactly how a child learns how to turn into a mature adult, to a certain amount obviously. violence is something that does happen in real life, so you can prepare kids and show them exactly why it's not socially acceptable to be violent.
@@manboy4720 Exactly. I think a lot of parents are falling into the idea that kids magically become comfortable with the world at 18. They don't realise that the only reason people are generally better equipped to deal with things at 18 is because of the experiences they had growing up - if you don't let them have those experiences, then you just have an 18 year old with the same tolerance of life as a 9 year old.
@@manboy4720 exactly i grew up as a kid watching saw or the walking dead such and such but at the same time i knew it was fiction but every kid reacts differently and its your job as a parent to tell them that its fake and its morally wrong to do shit you see on tv. Shitty parents like to point fingers but take accountability for what their child sees and you can't shield them from it forever.
I'm still watching the video but I definitely think their should have been a warning about the animal violence and It probably should have been MA15 (Australian rating system) , note that's not a bad thing I just would have appreciated a proper warning for the dark and heavy themes
Meanwhile, in the world we live in now most kids learn about soooooo many words and things they should not around the ages of 10-12 thanks to school that it's honestly just... awful. It'd honestly be atleast somewhat challenging to find a kid who passed the 5th grade and doesn't know at least 3 words linked to nsfw content at this point tbh.....
@@SSD_Penumbra not true they'll hear that in school everyday. It's better to have a generation who's not addicted to social media and traumatized from all the shock content out there. Half the kids in American are practically retarted bc of phones.
@@JPGpack I agree, Swearing is a joke. It’s all about religious beliefs. Swearing isn’t swearing to someone like me who isn’t religious it’s just words
I was surprised at how they'd managed to weave a pro-vegan message into the story while still making it completely natural and part of the overall narrative, rather than just shoe-horning a moral message in. Really a sign of good writing.
These parents have GOT to be the product of bad parenting as well. Cause how else can you explain this cycle of behavior? They didn't have any direction in life, so they resort to being dependent on higher authority to do the things for them. They want everything done for them because they weren't exposed to reality. that's gotta be the reason.
These are most likely the same parents who say "My kids are my world" when grandma has primary custody and the kids are only allowed to see mom once a year
My parents are a great example of this argument. I was raised on horror movies and video games. My parents let me experience what I wanted but were always there to be like a second line of defense. For example I played GOW as a kid and my dad would sit next to me and wait for the Medusa boss and that one scene so that he could play through them for me.
I mean, to be fair, the 'sex' sceen in GOW wasn't even shown visually, it was just various noises off screan that implied what you were doing if I remember correctly LOL
My man, when i was a kid my father bought a second Xbox 360 and one of the games it came with was the relatively new Dead Space. Needless to say it was my second worse nightmare fuel after Halo Combat Evolved 343 Guilty Spark. It was awesome nonetheless.
These parents are snowflakes. I’m 31 and I grew up on Hunchback of Notre Dame, Lion King, and the Fox and the Hound. Those movies exposed me to cruelty and heartbreak.
Some friends of mine refused to let their children watch anything with death in it (at the time they were 7 and 4). I just kept thinking about how utterly confused and crushed these kids were going to be when their dog or cat died.
The F bomb placement was hilarious. It wasn't just thrown in there for a milestone moment. The exchange between Quill and Nebula capped off with "...Open the F
@@mattd5240 yeah and they did it in a pretty good way and not just to throw it in. It actually took me a minute to realize he said because of how casual it was
@@slash6429 and Its not a problem as Long as the kids arent stupid. As Long as They know that Its not real life it should be fine. Both i and a lot of my friends have played gta before we turned 18.
I was guilty of this do you know when I was kid Play Grandtheft auto San Andreas GTA4 including the DLC expansion Saints row two Lollipop chainsaw Resident evil of a video games that were rated m for mature Lucky my parents allowed me to some games I’m allowed to play growing up.
This particular case isn't about children and parents. My girlfriend cried after seeing the rabbit with their legs cut off and kept telling me she couldn't get it out of her head. I had to comfort her for an hour afterwards. She's a functional adult in every aspect, but I wish I had some warning. I knew she loved animals, I never would have taken her. I had to watch the movie on my own later so I could finish it
As a parent, you don’t just have kids for fun. The whole point of raising your children correctly is raise good adults. When you don’t, you get people like this, folks who are just offended by everything and think everyone else needs to cater to them.
Remember when tons of parents took their kids to see Deadpool, and then had the same rage over him saying "fuck" a lot? "I thought he was just gonna kill people. I didn't know he would *swear* , good god!"
@@Naokarma that whole situation gave me a reality check, i was thinking “why the hell are they so pressed about him saying fuck a tiddlywink too much? Theres like, big violence in it, much worse than regular marvel movies.”
You have no idea. When Resident Evil Apocalypse (the second Paul Anderson Resident Evil movie). I to this day still remember seeing a guy bringing his (im assuming) *6 or 7 and 8 or 9 year old boys to see the Resident Evil movie.*
@@TheDarkLink7 I watched Alien on tv with my mom when I was 9. I hid behind the couch a few times during, but the next weekend I couldn't wait to watch the sequel with her. I blame her for getting me into horror/thrillers and sci-fi. And I really really appreciate that she did. We get together at my place every few months to either watch a new movie, or just watch Alien for the 47th time. If she had made me watch one of the Resident evil movies, I probably would have run away from home because she had no taste.
As a dad raising two little girls. I can say without a doubt that my biggest concern is other kids. Other parents are letting their 5-year-olds and 6-year-olds play Roblox and Minecraft and these kids are already talking like Andrew Tate. I was prepared for pedophiles. I remember a middle school girl bragging about her 22-year-old boyfriend or as we called him "Mister Abduction.". This was back in the day of AOL instant messaging.
@@MikeTsBees At least you are aware of your and their surroundings and you're following what's going on on the internet. And care enough to be a good father. Keep up the good work sir!👏🏻👏🏻
@@exazebra even though they're not good films. I will say that they're like the 90's Mario movie or Street Fighter movie. There's something (dare I say) enjoyable about them (gasp..... I know and am sorry to the die hard RE fans. The recent one yeah is better but tbh. I still enjoy them in a weird way). Also if you don't already. I'd suggest the Alien Anthology Blu-ray version. Its really nicely done.
I feel like over time things have gotten better to help prevent kids from seeing things they aren't supposed to see on the internet, I've heard some people tell stories from their childhood about how they saw somebody get beheaded on a liveleak video when they were 8, but I'm hearing these stories get told less and less by people that are younger. the root problem is the lack of proper parenting, but it's getting better.
I also feel like a lesson that more people should have learned after elsagate was to monitor what their kids are watching, it isn't working because now elsagate is actually back, just with different characters that are popular among kids like among us, poppy playtime, and fnf (which isn't even a kids game.) if people just make sure what their kids are watching is safe, then elsagate would have never been a problem, and it wouldn't have came back.
Bravo, Charlie. My parents were relatively cautious with what movies we could or couldn't see when we were younger. And for what it's worth, this was before the PG-13 rating, so PG covered a wide range. What did they do? They saw the movie first! Perish the thought, stop the presses, two parents actually took some initiative! If they thought it was inappropriate for us, they wouldn't let us see it and waited until we were older. If they deemed it palatable for us, then we could go with them. This is why I was a little late to seeing Poltergeist, Excalibur and Raiders of the Lost Ark, yet we did see Airplane and Ragtime in a theater as a family. All five of those movies were rated PG, and all came out when my siblings and I were in the age 7-10 range. The first three had images they thought were too violent or bloody or whatever, but the latter two didn't. The funny thing is that they had no issue with us seeing nudity, which Airplane and Ragtime had, but evidently a man's face melting off his head was a bridge too far. Anyway, my parents were more protective in this area than other parents, and they acted accordingly. Doesn't seem that hard. In an era where more content is viewed on-demand at home, it should be easier than ever. But what do I know, I don't have kids. I can't judge. And yet it's my generation that might be the worst at what Charlie is ranting at here.
Yeah they have no excuse, even without seeing the movie you can now google it and pretty much know every questionable moment that happens in it and judge for yourself if the movie is appropriate. But I guess they dont want spoilers so its best to complain
It's always the people with a really stunted view of the world too. How am I suppose to respect you when you go on a racist tirade everytime you see a black person lol
Ikr I remeber seeing this horror movie Called Midnight meat Train And boy Was It brutal This movie Is by far one of the goriest ones I have ever seen Yet I never knew about It since It went off Like a breeze In the air when it came out and I haven't heard not one controversy From that film considering how It's way worse than plenty of horror films nowadays
My parents certainly let us watch movies that were probably too intense for us. The early Harry Potter films scared the crap out of me because I was five. But the main different is that they helped us process it and blamed themselves if we saw something we couldn't handle.
Yea, I remember being 11 and my friends dad sat down and watched the happening and the strangers with us. He also rented us Freddy vs Jason. We were able to realize this isn’t real life. Even at that age
@@ghoulfriendofyournightares1286 That's another thing, I don't think these parents are watching with their kids. They watching the movie to ignore their kid. I doubt there's any post movie discussions or debates on the best part. They only bring up the kid to justify the parts they don't like.
A parent is not just someone who has kids, a true parent has the best interests of their children at heart and strives to give them a better life every day.
Or more simply: "We (the parents) have kids because we are ready for the responsibilities as a married couple and to giving into the future our works" vs "Yeah we just have kids because, like, others people were having them and we don't want to be 'those odd one out couples' and stuffs, ya knows." Speaking from what i've seen and heard.
This kinda reminds me of when parents complained on why they chose such a cute little animation style for the R Rated film Sausage Party to have their kids watch in Horror completely by themselves
my parents never tried to shield away inapropriate things from me, it was always 'this is not for you and if you watch it/play it and get scared you cant complain, deal?' and it worked fine, they always explained the difference between reality and entertainment so i knew how to interpret stuff and all. the only forbidden thing was alcohol and stuff to the point that i am an adult and cant drink if my family is present lol
That's good parenting. My parents were strict, but let me watch rated-R movies if they could properly explain the "bad" stuff. I learned a lot about right and wrong, reality vs entertainment, life and death, the physical and social downsides to drinking, when swearing is ok, how credit cards work, and how to empathize with people who have gone through terrible things. Lessons that prepared me for the real world.
Same I’ll be 24 this September and I grew up fine. Grew up with toys from the early 2000’s and I vividly remember the whack a mole floor mat game with the foam hammer I think. But in these days just imagine how these kids will be like in the future.
Had a parent in my theater who brought their like 4 year old. The kid started throwing a tantrum cause the animal stuff was scary for them. The parents kept telling him to shut up like its his fault hes scared of something. Eventually someone told them to leave the theater cause their kid obviously wasnt down with it, they left but they left mad at their 4 year old for being scared
The parents took their 4-year-old son to see Guardians of the Galaxy 3, it's pretty hypocritical and ironic for them to get mad at their child for crying over the dark scenes shown in the movie.
@@CarurossTheSecond218 It really does fuck up a kid for their life because they feel completely useless for their entire life when the people that are supposed to be one of the biggest influences treat you like dirt because someone forgot to pull out one night.
Reminds me of a parent/parents who brought a baby into the theater. It was wailing loudly than the movie. Everyone was groaning and someone shouted to get the baby out. This lasted for a few minutes before everything finally settled down and watched the movie as if nothing had happened.
Both of my older siblings are new parents and they keep in of the rating when showing their boy video games, movies and etc. They only don't want their kid have a potty mouth but they always keep in mind that what they see and hear from the media is inevitable; therefore they TEACH him to not repeat the behaviour that is deemed bad and teach him the consequences of doing it like it's not hard to be a role model for a children just don't be lazy. Glad Charlie made good points
those parents are the same parents who are burning and banning books... fvcking right wing trump loving evangelical nazis. same parents who thought 'James and the Giant Peach' was inappropriate for kids cuz a couple actors had to play multiple roles and some playing opposite sex... oh no!!! this is the result of the return of religious right wing zealots who want to control the entire world cuz they wanna raise lil Chazs & karens to be lil uppity conservative khunts
@@nxtsu7124 i remember walking out of the theater with my mom and my sister after watching toy story 4 and she said some of the scenes were "scary" and "disturbing". To make it worse, I'm 13, and my sister is 17.
The 1988 Tom Hanks film "Big" also drops the big, stinky f-bomb and it's rated PG. Weird that parents would be angry that a PG13 film would have that included.
It's really upsetting to me when I'm in the theater at Rated R or Heavy PG-13 movies and there are kids in the theater who are clearly distressed by what's going on during the trailers/during the movie. Parents gotta do better
I was watching Scarface, Goodfellas, Casino, Terminator by 7 years old, literally just solidified my love for high quality movies since I got a head start compared to most kids and made me more grateful for my parents later in life
My parents took my brother and I to the Eric Bana Hulk movie when we were about 4 and we were TERRIFIED lmfaoo my mom had to take us to the park nearby 😭😭😭
I watched Jaws when it was rereleased in the theater a few months ago and it was the worst theater experience I've ever had. A group of about 12 people came in at the beginning and talked and laughed loudly over the first 20 minutes until being escorted out by an employee. After the movie wrapped up, a mom in the front row stood up with her two kids who couldn't possibly be over the age of 7. They were crying and she had to carry one out of the room. Just goes to show parents have learned nothing in the past 48 years.
Parents blaming everything on everything but them is a tale as old as time.. “video games made my 8 yr old kid violent not me letting my kid play games” “I took my 12 year old to a rated R film and it was too violent for them” “alcohol made my kid have problems before they were born”
@@3mer4ld_p1tch It's a chicken and egg problem. Does the kid play violent video games because they're already violent? Or did they become violent because they played violent video games? As of now, we have no evidence to suggest a causal link like the latter.
People need to understand the science of desensitization. There are always things that will make everyone uncomfortable and they vary depending on each and every person. One of the main elements of parenting is making sure to desensitize your kid at a good and healthy pace to all kinds of things. Shielding them from everything that scares them will only make matters worse when they become an adult
both my little cousins are 1 and can't do absolutely anything without their tablet. Literally being potty trained while watching cocomelon on their mom's phone. Wish parents were more involved instead of shoving videos in their kids faces when anything gets even slightly difficult
Thing is the kid gets addicted to it also, so when you take away their phone/tablet or make them take a break, they get upset and just want it back because thats the new norm for them
It was so refreshing growing up with parents who weren’t entirely hands off but also not overbearing hands on. They helped me understand and learn and it helped them understand what was too much for me or when they would need to step in to explain and teach.
@@patrickhanlon2325 cause friends and school mates parents were overbearing and controlling. And i have the hindsight of looking back on it now after seeing how some of my friends and school mates turned out
Funny, I had both, my parents didn’t teach me anything, but they got mad when I didn’t know how to wash dishes, but never taught me how, unsaid expectations were high. They constantly broke my boundaries and ordered stuff, but never cared to teach/help.
It was the same for me. I used to (and still do) play a lot of online shooter games that had a lot of toxic people but my parents didn’t shield it from me, explained why some things happen and keep the worst parts away from me while still letting me have freedom
How tf do you know it was “refreshing” growing up with that if that was the only style of parenting you have? Stop over-using the word refreshing, buddy
millenials are basically two separate generations, there's the ones that were raised like it's still the 50's and were allowed to go outside by themselves, didn't have phones until they were teenagers, and maybe saw scary movies and edgy gore animations on newgrounds, and then there's the coddled ones that were driven everywhere by soccer moms, and were basically raised by a VCR and disney channel, it creates a stunted person, and gen z is going to be much worse
@@doltBmB As part of Gen Z, I completely agree with your last statement and I’m sad seeing 3/4 of everybody else being fucking idiots. I swear my generation is full of an overwhelming amount of dumbasses and will be a cause of the end of the world.
@@doltBmB Absolutely an accurate take! As a millennial I can vouch for being the first generation you just described, and I have TONS of friends who were the latter.
@@doltBmB not is going to be, IS. they weren't taught that the world doesn't revolve around them because their parents were to busy not being in their lives.
It always makes me laugh whenever parents cry about swear words in anything because those same parents are the ones constantly cussing in front of their kids.
I'm 34 and my dad is 77 this year; he hates when we cuss around him (particularly because we aren't men), and so he and my sister constantly go back and forth at the fact he expected us not to cuss when he and my mother have sworn like sailors around us since we were babies. He's lucky I waited until I was 16 to do so.
I don't think parents are aware that their kids are exposed to even worse language and violence in school. I hear kids between ages 5-10y swearing like sailors and I see them being violent on the playground near my home. This movie is tame in comparison to how kids actually behave.
We as a society have been kind enough to make it more than easily accessible for any concerned parents to find out what is in a movie before showing it to their kids or even having to watch it themselves. If they don't even bother to look, it's on them.
What would you expect from a Disney marvel movie? I mean people have been decapitated from light sabers.. Anakin killed those children.. I mean, kids who seen that wouldn't know what happened, but it did happen. If anything, this isn't a big deal at the slightest
I remember as a kid, maybe 5 or 6 my family was movie hopping and my parents saw Starship Troopers and were like "Oh lets watch this!" Me and my brother have never heard of it or saw commercials for it so we asked what it was about and they said it was like Star Wars, and my brother loved Star Wars (I didn't like it only because the scene where the pilots get shot down screaming always made me really sad) so we went in....OMG if i didn't like bloodless scenes of pilots dying I DEFINITELY did not like watching people getting impaled and losing body parts by giant aliens. Because we were movie hopping my family couldn't find seats where we could all sit together so my parents sat in like...the middle row area where it wasnt too close nor too far and my brother and I were in the shitty area where we were definitely too close and off to the side...which meant being close up to all the gorey bits and me constantly covering my eyes. I'm honestly surprised that my parents were completely okay with us watching the movie or maybe they forgot we were there idk lmao... As an adult now I still don't think i can bring myself to watch Starship Troopers....
Hell, I'd go as far as to say the sentence starts once you *plan* on having the kid in the first place. Assuming you don't back out before the conception, anyway.
The amount of children and the subsequent exodus of them with the disgusted parent within the first 20 minutes at the opening night for "DEADPOOL" was an experience lol. Like did they not know it was rated R???
I wasn't expecting a trailer for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 airing durring a family friendly Puss N' Boots movie to have a sex scene with Rocket Racoon in the movie theater opening previews. Do whatever protest of this movie you want, as it should have a worse rating than Deadpool, to be very honest. Although it seems from the movie rating that the scene didn't make it ino all of the MCU/HBO theater locations.
@@diamondchargedgaming9399 The trailer that aired in theaters is different than the trailer they air on UA-cam. it has some kind of weasel cuddling with Rocket. Also I'm confused why they even put Adam Magnus in the movie trailer if he's not even in the film (the website is blocking Adam's last name)
This same situation with Guardians happened to Puss in Boots The Last Wish where parents complained it was too dark and violent for a PG film. It is so stupid
This is exactly why my wife and I decided not to have kids, because we know we won't have the time or energy to constantly monitor them. also, the internet even scares me sometimes lol
@@Niikkos Can't tell if this is bait or not, but hell, I'll bite because this comment is just confusing. Are you implying the selfish behaviour here is choosing to not have a kid?
@@NiikkosNo dude, it’s more selfish to choose to have a kid completely knowing you are unprepared to put in the time and energy to raise them properly. That’s how you create neglect related trauma in the next generation. Do not have a kid if you don’t want one, or are unprepared to raise one.
I will never forget this OG Gamestop employee back in 2010. I was 10 with my mom and I wanted to get GTA San Andreas. We are at the checkout with it and she says "Rated M!? Is there any prostitutes in it?? If so I'm not getting it for you!!".. I said no nervously looking at the Gamestop dude, that legendary man who I wish I could shoutout said nothing. I went on to play GTA SA for years and even went on for it to be my first platinum trophy in 2018 on ps4. Where ever you sir thank you, you made my childhood. (If you were gamestop employee by the north east mall in the 2010s who sold me the game my prayers go out to you brother) I miss how gamestop was back in the day..
The F-Bomb moment was hilarious. I didn't even remember the moment until people started freaking out about it. I was like, "when did that happen?" and then saw the scene again and laughed. The parents are probably freaking out now that their kid "might" repeat it. Just be a good parent.
I can relate. I saw it with my brother (granted, he’s 23) and after the movie I was laughing about how they used the first f-bomb in an MCU movie and he didn’t even realized they said it. Then he started laughing when he remembered lol
The one time Disney learned what an actual PG-13 rating means, they suddenly piss off every Karen parent imaginable *EDIT* I'm not counting No Way Home because that was basically a Sony movie with Marvel characters sewn in the plot. Also it's Sam fucking Raimi.
@@rickygforce4217 Disney allowed Gunn to do his thing it's not like they had absolutely nothing to do with the movie. If they wanted him to remove it he would've had to have removed it.
I’m glad my parents were chill. The first video game I remember playing was Mortal Kombat Deception. They did well in protecting me though from the weird shit online and whatnot but thank god they weren’t THAT protective
Star Wars was probably what started making PG more for kids. The Original Trilogy was borderline G-rated, and was in fact rated U in the UK and Malaysia, and G in the Philippines. And then Shrek also came along with making the PG rating more marketable for actual kids’ movies, before Disney started copying them with making films PG when they could have been G.
And it’s so infuriating to see people that clearly don’t know how to and can’t handle raising kids properly acting as if theyre superior than you all because they have kids
If there's one thing I learned growing up, it's that the internet and kids is a very dangerous combination. My parents tried their best to block what they could, but 12 year old me had tor
My parents tried to shield me from “evil”. It made my life sooo much harder for no reason. You can’t protect your kids forever. Talk to them. Tell them why you think what you think.
how exactly did it make it harder for you? I guess it's a stupid question but I'm just really curious about what the general real effect of that is in the kid's mind
@@eterty8335 my parents did it too. You become very sheltered and you don’t learn alot of things that you should know at specific ways. It often leads to really embarrassing moments or bullying. For example I had no idea what a condom was up until grade 8 because I was so sheltered, during sex Ed I had to ask what it was and what it was for and that was hung over my head for quite some time. Little things like that
@@eterty8335 Well no one really taught me sex and internet safety because they thought I didn’t need to know. As a result I couldn’t verbalize what happened to me when I was groomed or molested or sexually assaulted. I didn’t have any social skills going into school when a boy groped me. I had no friends so I completely invested my time into the people who groomed me and genuinely thought I loved them. Sheltering your kids only means they won’t learn from you. Not that they just won’t ever learn.
@@eterty8335 example, when I was 15, I didn't know that putting a penis Inside a vagina is sex, hence when I talk to my friends about it, the teacher comes down to me pretty fast.
I find it amazing that people complain about a single "fuck" when the ones complaining are exactly the type to chew out a worker that caught them switching price tags calling the worker every vile name under the sun in front of their kids
Whenever there was a pg-13 movie coming out that my brothers and I wanted to see, my dad would go see it first to make sure that it was appropriate for us.
Parenting has really become giving children access to inappropriate stuff and then getting mad at them for finding it
@Don't Read My Profile Picturek
It has been that for ever now.
Some parent's just love to pretend like parent.
Lol it really has. I remember getting in trouble for playing halo CE at 5 years old, guess who bought me the game in the first place
Parents when we tell them that they're responsible: 😠
Tbh it's always been like this lol. Parents always have allowed children to see things they aren't supposed to see, or miss things that their child is interacting with. Then they get upsettispaghetti.
Snuck my toddler into a nightclub so I could go clubbing last weekend, and I was appalled by the amount of alcohol there was in there (with my own being the exception), and the lack of baby gates on the stairs.
@@terrapin_valtameri wow
we need to boycott immediately... assemble the troops! lol
I doubt they had baby changing facilities too
@@fossilizedbones1555hope he didn't get access to the embalming fluids, they should be behind child proof locks.
@@myview5840 Kid got all into the embalming fluid. The government should step in to make sure they are locked up properly.
As my mom would used to say, ‘I don’t expect you to be an angel but I expect you to be kind, smart, and act responsibly.’ Parents like this make me grateful for my parents, who were very proactive and were patient when answering my questions about the world. You can’t protect your kids from the world; you can only make sure they have the tools they need to be responsible adults and make informed decisions.
Well said!! My parents have always been very supportive of me and always encouraged me to ask questions. Even though my school was telling me to stop asking questions, my parents taught me to think critically and be informed.
They also made sure I wasn't watching anything too terrible online, and if I was, they would sit me down and explain why it's not appropriate.
"You can’t protect your kids from the world; you can only make sure they have the tools they need to be responsible adults and make informed decisions."
100% a b s o l u t e l y
Exactly what I thought! Although there still are boundaries what they should be able too see - which are, largely, already in place or can be set there by monitoring your kid's internet usage, there are certain things you simply cannot protect them from, and therefore have to prepare them. Charly used a very good analogy with the sterile environment. Proverbially and literally - since kids growing up in completely sanitized households are prone to have far more alergies...
@Chad Sealey We need more people like you and your parents in this world. Respect+ 💪👍✊
Very well said 🫡
As a parent of five, I know it’s more important to raise your kids not to be idiots. If they’re not idiots they can watch slightly edgy stuff without it blowing up thier world
Best advice thanks 😂
5? damn man, you've got the patience of a saint.
@@dimyell if he can handle them AND raise them properly, he's a total chad
imma be just like you total role model
I agree 💯
As a parent, there is nothing more infuriating than dealing with other parents who don't parent their own kids.
you can so easily see how a lot of parents today mistake abuse with discipline... therefor pretty much avoid entirely is what it seems like
Agreed! It's infuriating
DITTO its so incredibly irritating.
@@MysteryMan199725from personal experience, I do think there’s a lot that mistake discipline with abuse, but a good amount of parents out there don’t discipline their kids because they are “angels” in their eyes
@@icantgetdubs2433 yep lol I've heard that bit too... "oh but he's so innocent, he would never go commit a mass shooting in a shool or murder anyone at all"
These types of parents have always been a problem. They want absolute control over their kids lives but want everyone else to do the work.
@Don't Read My Profile Picture dude shut up
Damn bro triple kill on the bots 😂
daddy issues? I am sorry.
Facts. They act like they care but in reality they don't give a single fuck
And this is how a kid came across a Thomas video with the word kill in it.
I saw reviews for puss in boots by parents saying it was too scary and that the wolf was too inappropriate for a kids movie 😂
I then saw an interview of Antonio Banderas saying that the whole point of the movie was to be able to have an open disscussion with your children about it.
Some parents just want their kids to sit still in a corner and never talk, move or ask any questions.
@@theveganduolingobird7349 oh god that is too many parents.
They were literally trashing one of the reasons everyone loved that movie so much
Modern parents when they discover kids movies arent all 90 minutes of keys jingling
@@bouclechocolat the Markiplier scp livestream moment comes to mind . That dude knows how to keep attention to himself and it shows
This is my 6 year old’s favorite movie!
Reminds me of when parents were freaking out about the first Deadpool movie when it came out and complained of how graphic it is. I still remember seeing it with my friends on a Friday night and there were at least three families with their kids. The best part was when the parents got up and left with their children when the strip club scene came on. Do you not know what an R rating is?
same thing w sausage party. it dosent mean its a superhero or animated movie that its automaticaly a kids or family oriented movie. Adults are allowed to like superheroes and cartoons too, and its your responsibility as a parent to check the MPAA rating as its there for a reason.
I'm pretty sure there's literally a line in the opening monologue where he says "some of you parents are already regretting bringing your children to this movie" lol
Did they not see the movie was rated R? What is wrong with people?!
Scary world we live in when people are that fucking stupid 🤓
@@twojointsjay7330there is in the second, not sure about the first one but in the second one he says something like
“I’m sure you’re regretting bringing going your kids to this instead of that stripper movie (or whatever the other movie is that isn’t good for kids either) but Deadpool 2 is a family film”
Or something like that
I can get behind the whole “Don’t bring your kids to see Guardians 3”
Having a theater with no kids sounds like a good time 😎
I hope that I don’t see kids in a theater when the movie is rated PG-13 or R.
@@aaronlane8276 I hate nothing more then seeing little gremlins in a theater. They talk, get on their phones, and kick your seats
Edit: they also suck on their straws making that annoying noise when the drink is empty, and they sometimes even take a picture with flash on.
funny story... when I went to go watch avengers endgame.. there was a lady with a crying baby and before the movie started she saught nothing of it as if she is doing nothing wrong... and some someone shouted "get you're fucking kid out here" 😂😂 she was escorted out shortly after it started because her baby didn't stop crying disrupting the whole theatre...
Sunglasses emoji meaning I’m cool and winning 😎😎😎
There was a reddit post a while back where there were a bunch of changed diapers in a movie theatre for endgame
still convinced %80 of the world’s problems can be traced to horrible parenting
Agreed
It’s 80% not %80🤓
Real
100% of the worlds problems are caused by people having children
@Don't Read My Profile Picture Okay I won't
Imagine taking your young child to a library that has an unrestricted pornography section and not monitoring your child to make sure they don’t wander off the wrong direction. Same thing with the internet. If you’re not monitoring what they are doing, you can’t be upset when they are exposed to something you don’t like.
I was actually a little concerned about becoming a hypocrite when I had kids and becoming one of these awful entitled parents expecting the world to bend to my needs. Turns out it's an easy trap to avoid. I let my kids watch pretty much whatever they want, a lot of times I watch with them and we talk about it during and/or after. So many problems are avoided when you treat kids like people. Weird that more parents don't do it.
These "parents" see kids as blow-up dolls/property. You do not. That simple.
I have this same take but with eating. People create picky eaters within their kid because they get terrified over completely normal reactions to food. They will do anything but test them as individuals
Either that or limit what they can access a little
Either that or limit what they can access a little
@@RibbitRibbit191 i do both tbh. like, im not gonna let my kids watch super graphic gore or sex scenes in movies, but something like jurassic park, or whatever, is fair enough.
I remember at the theatre during guardians 3, after Chris Pratt said "Open the fucking door!" this parent rounded up their group of 5 small kids and left the theatre in a very Karen fashion. Leaving while being like "This is a disgrace" and stiff like that. Which is why parents need to pay more attention to content ratings and start being parents.
Should have told them "welcome to real life, good fucking riddance"
those same parents cuss out their children using any fowl language against their children for forgetting to take out the trash
There are videos online with GTA 5 trolling from years ago when it was released and part of the audio is clearly kids playing online that, you know, shouldn't be playing GTA goddamned 5.
@@rrratproductions1857 Or like beating their ass for missing the bus to school
In that case it wouldn't have helped because they clearly didn't want to guide just hope their kids don't see what they don't want them to see.
I miss the time when parents actually considered “PG” as “parental guidance recommended” instead of “Perfect for kids”
Perfect for Gkids
When PG was first introduced, they even allowed nudity and heavy themes, while swearing and graphic violence was reserved for R rating. PG 13 only came around after Raiders Of The Lost Ark.
@@TwistVisuals remember watching gremlins, and being surprised such a dark movie was rated PG.
@@TwistVisuals they allowed nudity but no swearing?
@@XxPeaceNinjaxX Perfect for Gids*
Every kid deserves a parent, but not every parent deserves a kid
Modern parenting of not taking responsibility just goes to show the level of entitlement these parents have and are teaching their kids. These types of parents think everyone else around them should watch out for their kids as if they don’t have any responsibility over the kids they are “raising”.
My cousin’s son was kicked off the school bus 3 times within the past 3 months. He can do no wrong as it is always someone else’s fault (he hit a kid and another time didn’t want to sit down). His mom seems the same way as every job she goes to there is an issue. Seems monkey see monkey do
@@leeannvan1422 the shit apple doesnt fall far from the shit tree
I used to be a preschool teacher, and one thing I always told the parents is that you can't prevent the world from happening to your kids, but you can prepare them for things they may see. The parents I disliked the most were the kind that would complain like this, not to mention they were almost always lazy parents expecting everyone to cater to their every will.
I love balls
and they get mad and all denial when you point out that they're the ones at fault. I hate those kinds of parents too
"their every will" does make sense, but it's "their every whim" (impulse, as opposed to will).
@@2DReanimation thank you, I was struggling at the end lol
@Logan any link or any proof?🤔
Imagine a world where "Parental Guidance" confuses parents...
well now we don't have to because we are living it. yay us
Beetlejuice was PG and he dropped the F bomb while grabbing his junk while sexually harrasing an underager. This was when PG13 had been out for years
Imagine a world where a UA-camr on the internet all day tells other people to parent properly
@@youraveragejojoenjoyer2368 imagine a world where you don't know how to parent your own child so you complain on the internet 😂
@@zzaarra3940 not a parent, I’m a part of the problem he’s talking about, but so is he. You don’t understand irony and that’s okay, maybe that’ll be in the next UA-cam video that teaches you about life lessons
Massive W to the parents who actually take the time to raise their kids. So many people have kids and then do stupid shit like this with them, and as infuriating as that is, it's refreshing to see people who do their best with their children. Props to y'all, because parenting is hard as hell.
I’m not a parent but when I am my kids will not own cell phones or be allowed to use social media until they are 16
@@craigmeyer6957Socially isolating them is a surefire way to make them hate you and stunt their growth socially
@@DeathnoteBB children don't need social media, they need social hangouts.
Actually no one need social media.
@@Blank-lp4fz No but being online isn’t just being on social media. Lots of kids for instance play Roblox and Fortnite with their friends. I agree kids do not need social media though. I didn’t have any until like middle school at best.
@@Blank-lp4fz With parental supervision kids should be allowed to interact online, it’s important for kids to learn, rather than being dumped in at 18 and not knowing anything
Parents who outsource their responsibilities, whether it's to the Internet, state, TV or other people, lose any right to complain about how their kids turn out. You chose to have them. _You're_ supposed to be responsible for them.
A whole lot of people want kids, but they don't actually want to be parents. From what I've seen over the course of my life, most people have no business having children.
Dear offended parents: Don't act like YOU didn't watch movies with worse content when you were a kid. We've ALL done it.
But we didn't take our kids to it
@@josepha3805 ???
@@paimonisfood4986 I don't take my kids to R-rated movies.
@@josepha3805 Adults today have seen worse shit in their childhoods
@@josepha3805 In the end kids can't stay sheltered forever.
My biggest problem with modern parenting is parents trying to restrict kids from seeing anything uncomfortable or bad. Like, kids are humans. They can learn. If you explain to a child “this is bad, don’t be like this person!” More than likely they will understand. Instead, parents don’t want their kids to see it and want to keep them in a little bubble.
I do agree. I think we should be open with kids about certain things. Sheltering and not explaining why something is bad is why the newer generations are so dumb and entitled. Kids need to understand consequences for actions.
i completely agree. sheltering them completely from these things also make it more attractive to them once they do encounter it on their own. since they were never explained why it is bad, the nuances of situation etc. now all they see is something their parents wont allow.
i dont think traumatising your child is a good idea
I agree. I told my child that porn is bad and he shouldn’t watch it but he still watches it everyday but I don’t want to shelter him so I’m gonna let him continue this habit because I’m a good woke parent.
@@datshortsguy4744 genuinely when did they say anything like that? and i can tell you right now babying your kids and avoiding teaching them things is BAD. i never learned consent and i got severely traumatized in my first relationship because i didn't know right from wrong.
PG 13:*exists*
Parents: I see no danger
The movie was dark and disturbing but I’m the best way. It portrayed the horrors that rocket and his friends had to go through and gives his character much more depth and emotion. That said, yes it is disturbing as animals are being tortured but it’s a heavy dose of unfortunate reality in a fictional series.
It had a happy ending too
Yeah, Rocket’s backstory is reminiscent of an overly intense PETA ad.
This movie gave me Made in Abyss vibes. Another story about transhumanism with a villain who is starved for passion and power.
My mother didn't shield me from many things. She sat with me and explained and helped me understand. The one thing she said no to as a kid was candyman. I watched it anyway with the help of older siblings when she wasn't home. It did have an impact on me. I was too young. She then helped me deal with the consequences. ACTUAL parenting
I took my daughter to see Guardians 3. Was it more than I was expecting? Yeah. But parenting is being able to talk to them about it and contextualize it. She's fine, and if I have to pay for a little therapy down the line then so be it.
w mom
@@nickkoch6740you’re not going to have to being a little lenient when parenting lets kids learn what they like and don’t like, child can’t be a pro climber if u don’t let them go on the jungle gym.
Dude got effected from watching something as tame as Candyman as a kid Fat L. I watched the Exorcist as a kid and it literally didn't affect me at all, it was scary yea but that's it not like it stays with you.
meanwhile there are some parents I've seen in person who literally have their 5 year old watch tiktok. AND THEY LEAVE THE TIKTOK APP RUNNING WITHOUT PAUSING IT
As a parent I took my 10 year old to see it. He was taught early what words only grown ups use. He felt all the emotions he should have felt in this movie!! And I was happy with that
Glad to know he enjoyed it👍
a 10 year old cussing is not the end of the world lol. its funny as hell.
I probably sweared more in elementary school than I do now
@@TiocfaidhArLa34 I can guarantee you 6th graders curse like sailors the moment anyone older than 16 isn't around
@@irregulargamer1352 I am 16. however I will be a retiree by the time I figure out what your fucking point is.
I'm a mom of 3, Grandma of 2. There's good and bad in everything you let a child do. It is 100% the parental unit's responsibility to eeeexplaaaain what they're engaging in. That being said, I'm a huge horror fan and everyone in my family seeeems ok🧐
As a parent, I completely agree with you. I set limits on what my child does. I did not let my child use UA-cam kids after I heard about "Elsa gate." I put restrictions and time limits on his devices. I'm aware of what he does online by checking his browser history and actually watching what he does over his shoulder.
Kids actually hear and see worse in real life and on news stations. Therefore I don't keep my child in a bubble. I let him know that life isn't all rainbows and sunshine. Bad & awful things happen all the time.
It's tough to talk about with our children about difficult subjects, but they need to learn that danger is all around us. To not prepare them for potential dangers is a disservice to their upbringing.
Movies like this one that discuss animal abuse can open a dialog for parents to bring awareness of abuse in general. It's terrible to think about, but kids and animals are abused all the time. Kids usually don't even understand that it's abuse if they experience it or see it. I myself was abused as a kid and I didn't even realize it until I became an adult. No one explained to me that if someone touched me in certain ways that I should let a trusted adult know. Something as simple as explaining what I should do could have saved me from being abused multiple times. 5yo's don't instinctually know what to do in abusive situations. We need to teach them to 1st avoid interacting with strangers. 2nd inform trusted adults if a friend or family member behaves inappropriately toward kids.
We must make our kids aware of these dangers so that they can protect themselves and ask for help if they ever unfortunately have to deal with such awfulness.
I have a genuine question because I want to be a parent in the future what age do you start to talk with them about things? what age are they able to have some kind of discussion and learn from it? im thinking about 7 or something but I have no clue since I'm just 15
@@morimori33 I'm no parent but I feel like these subject should be addressed as soon as the kid is old enough to understand speech, and before they start going to school. And not just one discussion but brought up regularly so it sticks in their head that if anything like that happens to them they NEED to talk about it.
@@armandpeanutspinou3430 thats what i was thinking too but wondering how to bring it up in a way that will make the young child understand. maybe for death if youre talking about like nature or something
This obsession with shielding kids from everything is just a big self fulfilling prophecy. A parent says they can't handle something mildly violent; so they ban movies with any amount of mild violence, treat it like some kind of serious sin if they ask about them, become infuriated at the idea... so the kid grows up not being able to handle seeing mild violence and has bad reactions to it anyway. So when they have kids they raise their kids to be the same because "kids can't handle that" and we repeat.
i don't think we should be showing kids guts and gore and peoples' faces exploding or anything, but i do agree. for a child to be able to fully understand and comprehend what they watch, maybe having them step out of their comfort zone is a good thing? stepping out of your comfort zone is exactly how a child learns how to turn into a mature adult, to a certain amount obviously. violence is something that does happen in real life, so you can prepare kids and show them exactly why it's not socially acceptable to be violent.
@@manboy4720 Exactly. I think a lot of parents are falling into the idea that kids magically become comfortable with the world at 18. They don't realise that the only reason people are generally better equipped to deal with things at 18 is because of the experiences they had growing up - if you don't let them have those experiences, then you just have an 18 year old with the same tolerance of life as a 9 year old.
@@manboy4720 exactly i grew up as a kid watching saw or the walking dead such and such but at the same time i knew it was fiction but every kid reacts differently and its your job as a parent to tell them that its fake and its morally wrong to do shit you see on tv. Shitty parents like to point fingers but take accountability for what their child sees and you can't shield them from it forever.
There was a great black mirror episode addressing this
I'm still watching the video but I definitely think their should have been a warning about the animal violence and It probably should have been MA15 (Australian rating system) , note that's not a bad thing I just would have appreciated a proper warning for the dark and heavy themes
The phrase "ask your parents' permission before going online" probably saved my childhood and should be used again
Nah dude, that raises a generation who can't handle an f-bomb in a pg-13 movie.
Meanwhile, in the world we live in now most kids learn about soooooo many words and things they should not around the ages of 10-12 thanks to school that it's honestly just... awful. It'd honestly be atleast somewhat challenging to find a kid who passed the 5th grade and doesn't know at least 3 words linked to nsfw content at this point tbh.....
@@SSD_Penumbra not true they'll hear that in school everyday. It's better to have a generation who's not addicted to social media and traumatized from all the shock content out there. Half the kids in American are practically retarted bc of phones.
Honestly we should just start swearing in everything
@@JPGpack I agree, Swearing is a joke. It’s all about religious beliefs. Swearing isn’t swearing to someone like me who isn’t religious it’s just words
I'm 28 and I'm still heartbroken by Rocket's backstory.
I don't cry about anything but that stuff there it scares me
Everyone is
same, I was rooting for rockets friends to have maybe survived and just got separated :(((
I was surprised at how they'd managed to weave a pro-vegan message into the story while still making it completely natural and part of the overall narrative, rather than just shoe-horning a moral message in. Really a sign of good writing.
I'm 69 and support Macedoniaaaaa!!!!!!
These parents have GOT to be the product of bad parenting as well. Cause how else can you explain this cycle of behavior? They didn't have any direction in life, so they resort to being dependent on higher authority to do the things for them. They want everything done for them because they weren't exposed to reality. that's gotta be the reason.
These are most likely the same parents who say
"My kids are my world" when grandma has primary custody and the kids are only allowed to see mom once a year
Live laugh love 🤢🤮
@@GeologicalNerd Exactly
ME. LITERALLY MY LIFE. EXCEPT THEY NEVER SEE ME AND PROBABLY LIE😭😭😭😭
but im glad they don't see me and I hate when they say stuff like that
You can't say that when you're not even caring for your children
My parents are a great example of this argument. I was raised on horror movies and video games. My parents let me experience what I wanted but were always there to be like a second line of defense. For example I played GOW as a kid and my dad would sit next to me and wait for the Medusa boss and that one scene so that he could play through them for me.
I mean, to be fair, the 'sex' sceen in GOW wasn't even shown visually, it was just various noises off screan that implied what you were doing if I remember correctly LOL
@@aphelion4616 Nah, I'm talking about the hot springs level...
Absolutely based father playing GOW with his BOY
"Hey son, let me play a bit" -Alpha Dad
My man, when i was a kid my father bought a second Xbox 360 and one of the games it came with was the relatively new Dead Space. Needless to say it was my second worse nightmare fuel after Halo Combat Evolved 343 Guilty Spark. It was awesome nonetheless.
These parents are snowflakes. I’m 31 and I grew up on Hunchback of Notre Dame, Lion King, and the Fox and the Hound. Those movies exposed me to cruelty and heartbreak.
Some friends of mine refused to let their children watch anything with death in it (at the time they were 7 and 4). I just kept thinking about how utterly confused and crushed these kids were going to be when their dog or cat died.
The F bomb placement was hilarious. It wasn't just thrown in there for a milestone moment. The exchange between Quill and Nebula capped off with "...Open the F
*click*
Now what do I do?...🤔
Just open the f-ing door!!!🤣🤣
They finally used the f word?
@@mattd5240 yeah and they did it in a pretty good way and not just to throw it in. It actually took me a minute to realize he said because of how casual it was
"You'll get your rent when you fix this DAMN DOOR!"
Omg I didn't even notice, I was wondering afterwards when it was meant to be have said haha.
Parents these days really coming up with every excuse for their children's problems except themselves
@Dont-Read-My-Profile-Picture.0you messed up the bot lol
I seen kids under 18 playing GTA.
@@slash6429 and Its not a problem as Long as the kids arent stupid. As Long as They know that Its not real life it should be fine. Both i and a lot of my friends have played gta before we turned 18.
@@mathiaschristensen8387 I was talking about how parents don't see the problem with kids playing the game,but has a problem with a PG-13 movie 😑
I was guilty of this do you know when I was kid Play Grandtheft auto San Andreas GTA4 including the DLC expansion Saints row two Lollipop chainsaw Resident evil of a video games that were rated m for mature Lucky my parents allowed me to some games I’m allowed to play growing up.
This particular case isn't about children and parents. My girlfriend cried after seeing the rabbit with their legs cut off and kept telling me she couldn't get it out of her head. I had to comfort her for an hour afterwards. She's a functional adult in every aspect, but I wish I had some warning. I knew she loved animals, I never would have taken her. I had to watch the movie on my own later so I could finish it
“That’s the cutest f’ing thing I’ve ever seen in my life”
“A-ACK!”
As a parent, you don’t just have kids for fun.
The whole point of raising your children correctly is raise good adults. When you don’t, you get people like this, folks who are just offended by everything and think everyone else needs to cater to them.
“Depicting deplorable/horrible violence is *okay* as long as you don’t use any naughty language” - Kyles Mom, head of the M.A.C.
So do we blame canada for this ?
Remember when tons of parents took their kids to see Deadpool, and then had the same rage over him saying "fuck" a lot? "I thought he was just gonna kill people. I didn't know he would *swear* , good god!"
WEEEEEEEEEEEELL
@@Naokarma that whole situation gave me a reality check, i was thinking “why the hell are they so pressed about him saying fuck a tiddlywink too much? Theres like, big violence in it, much worse than regular marvel movies.”
@@kobra6660yes we do
I can't imagine bringing a small human into this world and then expecting the whole world to do the parenting for me.
You have no idea. When Resident Evil Apocalypse (the second Paul Anderson Resident Evil movie). I to this day still remember seeing a guy bringing his (im assuming) *6 or 7 and 8 or 9 year old boys to see the Resident Evil movie.*
@@TheDarkLink7 I watched Alien on tv with my mom when I was 9. I hid behind the couch a few times during, but the next weekend I couldn't wait to watch the sequel with her.
I blame her for getting me into horror/thrillers and sci-fi. And I really really appreciate that she did.
We get together at my place every few months to either watch a new movie, or just watch Alien for the 47th time.
If she had made me watch one of the Resident evil movies, I probably would have run away from home because she had no taste.
As a dad raising two little girls. I can say without a doubt that my biggest concern is other kids. Other parents are letting their 5-year-olds and 6-year-olds play Roblox and Minecraft and these kids are already talking like Andrew Tate. I was prepared for pedophiles. I remember a middle school girl bragging about her 22-year-old boyfriend or as we called him "Mister Abduction.". This was back in the day of AOL instant messaging.
@@MikeTsBees At least you are aware of your and their surroundings and you're following what's going on on the internet. And care enough to be a good father. Keep up the good work sir!👏🏻👏🏻
@@exazebra even though they're not good films. I will say that they're like the 90's Mario movie or Street Fighter movie. There's something (dare I say) enjoyable about them (gasp..... I know and am sorry to the die hard RE fans. The recent one yeah is better but tbh. I still enjoy them in a weird way). Also if you don't already. I'd suggest the Alien Anthology Blu-ray version. Its really nicely done.
I feel like over time things have gotten better to help prevent kids from seeing things they aren't supposed to see on the internet, I've heard some people tell stories from their childhood about how they saw somebody get beheaded on a liveleak video when they were 8, but I'm hearing these stories get told less and less by people that are younger. the root problem is the lack of proper parenting, but it's getting better.
I also feel like a lesson that more people should have learned after elsagate was to monitor what their kids are watching, it isn't working because now elsagate is actually back, just with different characters that are popular among kids like among us, poppy playtime, and fnf (which isn't even a kids game.) if people just make sure what their kids are watching is safe, then elsagate would have never been a problem, and it wouldn't have came back.
That kind of stuff is getting rare, true. But now the battle is with short-form content.
Bravo, Charlie. My parents were relatively cautious with what movies we could or couldn't see when we were younger. And for what it's worth, this was before the PG-13 rating, so PG covered a wide range. What did they do? They saw the movie first! Perish the thought, stop the presses, two parents actually took some initiative!
If they thought it was inappropriate for us, they wouldn't let us see it and waited until we were older. If they deemed it palatable for us, then we could go with them. This is why I was a little late to seeing Poltergeist, Excalibur and Raiders of the Lost Ark, yet we did see Airplane and Ragtime in a theater as a family. All five of those movies were rated PG, and all came out when my siblings and I were in the age 7-10 range. The first three had images they thought were too violent or bloody or whatever, but the latter two didn't. The funny thing is that they had no issue with us seeing nudity, which Airplane and Ragtime had, but evidently a man's face melting off his head was a bridge too far.
Anyway, my parents were more protective in this area than other parents, and they acted accordingly. Doesn't seem that hard. In an era where more content is viewed on-demand at home, it should be easier than ever. But what do I know, I don't have kids. I can't judge. And yet it's my generation that might be the worst at what Charlie is ranting at here.
Yeah they have no excuse, even without seeing the movie you can now google it and pretty much know every questionable moment that happens in it and judge for yourself if the movie is appropriate. But I guess they dont want spoilers so its best to complain
These kinds of parents are, not even joking, the living example of "You had ONE JOB"...
@Don't Read My Profile Picture Uhhh... That's fine, I wasn't going to anyways
@Joseph #Biden2024 But did he?
Try not to reply it doesn't go anywhere with em. I would recommend just reporting for spam.
This place kind of infested.
@@lefishe5845 Don't worry my man, I'm reporting them to the best of my abilities
Parents like these are the equivalent to parents who are so entitled to the idea of “older = deserves more respect and is always right”
My dad's like that and i hate it
My mother is like that. I cannot stand her.
And those parents wonder why their kids don’t visit
well old people should be wiser in theory
It's always the people with a really stunted view of the world too. How am I suppose to respect you when you go on a racist tirade everytime you see a black person lol
Its so stupid that these people are more traumatized by single curseword than hundreds of scenes where people get shot beaten and/or killed
Ikr
I remeber seeing this horror movie
Called Midnight meat Train
And boy Was It brutal
This movie Is by far one of the goriest ones I have ever seen
Yet
I never knew about It since It went off Like a breeze In the air when it came out and I haven't heard not one controversy From that film considering how It's way worse than plenty of horror films nowadays
these parents are the reason why films don't give us risky PG 13's
My parents certainly let us watch movies that were probably too intense for us. The early Harry Potter films scared the crap out of me because I was five. But the main different is that they helped us process it and blamed themselves if we saw something we couldn't handle.
Yea, I remember being 11 and my friends dad sat down and watched the happening and the strangers with us. He also rented us Freddy vs Jason. We were able to realize this isn’t real life. Even at that age
@@yyeezyy630I'd be concerned if you didn't at that age 💀
I grew up watching Tales from the Crypt with my mom and I came out alright.
@@ghoulfriendofyournightares1286 That's another thing, I don't think these parents are watching with their kids. They watching the movie to ignore their kid. I doubt there's any post movie discussions or debates on the best part. They only bring up the kid to justify the parts they don't like.
Bruh how young are you? Lol
A parent is not just someone who has kids, a true parent has the best interests of their children at heart and strives to give them a better life every day.
Or more simply: "We (the parents) have kids because we are ready for the responsibilities as a married couple and to giving into the future our works" vs "Yeah we just have kids because, like, others people were having them and we don't want to be 'those odd one out couples' and stuffs, ya knows."
Speaking from what i've seen and heard.
Beetlejuice said fuck in a PG movie
“I’m not your father. Any man can have a child, but a father would have been there to raise you and see you grow up.”
Idealists disgust me.
Or to relate it back to guardians of the galaxy, “he may have been your father boy but he ain’t your daddy.”
Like Deadpool didn't swear every 5 seconds 💀
This kinda reminds me of when parents complained on why they chose such a cute little animation style for the R Rated film Sausage Party to have their kids watch in Horror completely by themselves
my parents never tried to shield away inapropriate things from me, it was always 'this is not for you and if you watch it/play it and get scared you cant complain, deal?' and it worked fine, they always explained the difference between reality and entertainment so i knew how to interpret stuff and all. the only forbidden thing was alcohol and stuff to the point that i am an adult and cant drink if my family is present lol
Good parents
That's good parenting. My parents were strict, but let me watch rated-R movies if they could properly explain the "bad" stuff. I learned a lot about right and wrong, reality vs entertainment, life and death, the physical and social downsides to drinking, when swearing is ok, how credit cards work, and how to empathize with people who have gone through terrible things. Lessons that prepared me for the real world.
Same I’ll be 24 this September and I grew up fine. Grew up with toys from the early 2000’s and I vividly remember the whack a mole floor mat game with the foam hammer I think. But in these days just imagine how these kids will be like in the future.
European?
@@moleedaboi Not just Europe, Asians and brown people as well.
Had a parent in my theater who brought their like 4 year old. The kid started throwing a tantrum cause the animal stuff was scary for them. The parents kept telling him to shut up like its his fault hes scared of something. Eventually someone told them to leave the theater cause their kid obviously wasnt down with it, they left but they left mad at their 4 year old for being scared
The parents took their 4-year-old son to see Guardians of the Galaxy 3, it's pretty hypocritical and ironic for them to get mad at their child for crying over the dark scenes shown in the movie.
I feel bad for kids who have parents with a “you’re an inconvenience for me” attitude.
That’s why I went and seen it on a Monday at 1:30 pm I knew there would be kids acting a fool
@@CarurossTheSecond218 It really does fuck up a kid for their life because they feel completely useless for their entire life when the people that are supposed to be one of the biggest influences treat you like dirt because someone forgot to pull out one night.
Reminds me of a parent/parents who brought a baby into the theater. It was wailing loudly than the movie. Everyone was groaning and someone shouted to get the baby out. This lasted for a few minutes before everything finally settled down and watched the movie as if nothing had happened.
Both of my older siblings are new parents and they keep in of the rating when showing their boy video games, movies and etc. They only don't want their kid have a potty mouth but they always keep in mind that what they see and hear from the media is inevitable; therefore they TEACH him to not repeat the behaviour that is deemed bad and teach him the consequences of doing it like it's not hard to be a role model for a children just don't be lazy. Glad Charlie made good points
As a parent myself here's a pro tip...cover their eyes at the really bad parts or just don't go.
This is literally like parents talking about how Death from Puss in Boots was “too scary” for the kids watching
Or parent talking about Future diary crazy Yandry girl Was Too psychotic and Typical discord slang parent use for excuse.
He was definitely scary, but if they think that he's TOO scary, they'd have a stroke from rage watching Coraline.
those parents are the same parents who are burning and banning books... fvcking right wing trump loving evangelical nazis.
same parents who thought 'James and the Giant Peach' was inappropriate for kids cuz a couple actors had to play multiple roles and some playing opposite sex... oh no!!!
this is the result of the return of religious right wing zealots who want to control the entire world cuz they wanna raise lil Chazs & karens to be lil uppity conservative khunts
It may be too scary for an individual child but to apply that to every child is ridiculous
It wasn’t even that scary. I would not be scared of puss and boots bleeding as a kid and i hate blood.
Walking out of the theater, I instantly knew that this was gonna be one of those movies where parents would complain over the disturbing scenes.
and yet the Little Mermaid remake still shows in theaters.
@@cainster 💀
@@cainster 😭
@@nxtsu7124 i remember walking out of the theater with my mom and my sister after watching toy story 4 and she said some of the scenes were "scary" and "disturbing".
To make it worse, I'm 13, and my sister is 17.
@to39394 grilled cheese obama sandwich.
The real annoying part is that companies actually cave in to their demands, like grow a pair, tell them to not be lazy parents
Less kids less money
The 1988 Tom Hanks film "Big" also drops the big, stinky f-bomb and it's rated PG. Weird that parents would be angry that a PG13 film would have that included.
It's really upsetting to me when I'm in the theater at Rated R or Heavy PG-13 movies and there are kids in the theater who are clearly distressed by what's going on during the trailers/during the movie. Parents gotta do better
I was watching Scarface, Goodfellas, Casino, Terminator by 7 years old, literally just solidified my love for high quality movies since I got a head start compared to most kids and made me more grateful for my parents later in life
My parents took my brother and I to the Eric Bana Hulk movie when we were about 4 and we were TERRIFIED lmfaoo my mom had to take us to the park nearby 😭😭😭
I watched Jaws when it was rereleased in the theater a few months ago and it was the worst theater experience I've ever had. A group of about 12 people came in at the beginning and talked and laughed loudly over the first 20 minutes until being escorted out by an employee. After the movie wrapped up, a mom in the front row stood up with her two kids who couldn't possibly be over the age of 7. They were crying and she had to carry one out of the room.
Just goes to show parents have learned nothing in the past 48 years.
Parents blaming everything on everything but them is a tale as old as time.. “video games made my 8 yr old kid violent not me letting my kid play games” “I took my 12 year old to a rated R film and it was too violent for them” “alcohol made my kid have problems before they were born”
Playing video games, in general, won't make you violent; the kid in your first example was probably abused.
Socrates was sentenced to death for "corrupting the youth".
@@3mer4ld_p1tch You don’t need to be abused to be violent unfortunately.
@@wildfire9280 true, you could have a condition
@@3mer4ld_p1tch It's a chicken and egg problem. Does the kid play violent video games because they're already violent? Or did they become violent because they played violent video games? As of now, we have no evidence to suggest a causal link like the latter.
People need to understand the science of desensitization. There are always things that will make everyone uncomfortable and they vary depending on each and every person. One of the main elements of parenting is making sure to desensitize your kid at a good and healthy pace to all kinds of things. Shielding them from everything that scares them will only make matters worse when they become an adult
It was rated PG in my local cineplex, so I think I have a reason to be a little shocked.
both my little cousins are 1 and can't do absolutely anything without their tablet. Literally being potty trained while watching cocomelon on their mom's phone. Wish parents were more involved instead of shoving videos in their kids faces when anything gets even slightly difficult
I’m fr in the same exact situation with my cousin..
Thing is the kid gets addicted to it also, so when you take away their phone/tablet or make them take a break, they get upset and just want it back because thats the new norm for them
It was so refreshing growing up with parents who weren’t entirely hands off but also not overbearing hands on. They helped me understand and learn and it helped them understand what was too much for me or when they would need to step in to explain and teach.
How was it refreshing if that was all you knew haha ?
@@patrickhanlon2325 cause friends and school mates parents were overbearing and controlling. And i have the hindsight of looking back on it now after seeing how some of my friends and school mates turned out
Funny, I had both, my parents didn’t teach me anything, but they got mad when I didn’t know how to wash dishes, but never taught me how, unsaid expectations were high. They constantly broke my boundaries and ordered stuff, but never cared to teach/help.
It was the same for me. I used to (and still do) play a lot of online shooter games that had a lot of toxic people but my parents didn’t shield it from me, explained why some things happen and keep the worst parts away from me while still letting me have freedom
How tf do you know it was “refreshing” growing up with that if that was the only style of parenting you have? Stop over-using the word refreshing, buddy
"Get the fuk in the car!" Man I lost it watching that scene.
I’m glad my parents aren’t stupid.
The weirdest part is that most of these parents are literally millennials who should have a better grasp of the internet and things like this😭
millenials are basically two separate generations, there's the ones that were raised like it's still the 50's and were allowed to go outside by themselves, didn't have phones until they were teenagers, and maybe saw scary movies and edgy gore animations on newgrounds, and then there's the coddled ones that were driven everywhere by soccer moms, and were basically raised by a VCR and disney channel, it creates a stunted person, and gen z is going to be much worse
@@doltBmB you forgot the millenials that were raised by the internet before it was so squeaky-clean sanitized like it is today
@@doltBmB As part of Gen Z, I completely agree with your last statement and I’m sad seeing 3/4 of everybody else being fucking idiots. I swear my generation is full of an overwhelming amount of dumbasses and will be a cause of the end of the world.
@@doltBmB Absolutely an accurate take! As a millennial I can vouch for being the first generation you just described, and I have TONS of friends who were the latter.
@@doltBmB not is going to be, IS. they weren't taught that the world doesn't revolve around them because their parents were to busy not being in their lives.
It always makes me laugh whenever parents cry about swear words in anything because those same parents are the ones constantly cussing in front of their kids.
Bingo.
The same ones recording their 3 year old saying "damnit" for tiktok, laughing the entire time likes its so cute.
I'm 34 and my dad is 77 this year; he hates when we cuss around him (particularly because we aren't men), and so he and my sister constantly go back and forth at the fact he expected us not to cuss when he and my mother have sworn like sailors around us since we were babies. He's lucky I waited until I was 16 to do so.
I don't think parents are aware that their kids are exposed to even worse language and violence in school. I hear kids between ages 5-10y swearing like sailors and I see them being violent on the playground near my home. This movie is tame in comparison to how kids actually behave.
The fact they’re are on TikTok, Facebook and Twitter, means they’re not watching their kids at that moment.
It's like a parent getting mad at the city because the power outlets have too much voltage and their toddler might stick a fork in it
For real
We as a society have been kind enough to make it more than easily accessible for any concerned parents to find out what is in a movie before showing it to their kids or even having to watch it themselves. If they don't even bother to look, it's on them.
What would you expect from a Disney marvel movie? I mean people have been decapitated from light sabers.. Anakin killed those children..
I mean, kids who seen that wouldn't know what happened, but it did happen. If anything, this isn't a big deal at the slightest
I remember as a kid, maybe 5 or 6 my family was movie hopping and my parents saw Starship Troopers and were like "Oh lets watch this!" Me and my brother have never heard of it or saw commercials for it so we asked what it was about and they said it was like Star Wars, and my brother loved Star Wars (I didn't like it only because the scene where the pilots get shot down screaming always made me really sad) so we went in....OMG if i didn't like bloodless scenes of pilots dying I DEFINITELY did not like watching people getting impaled and losing body parts by giant aliens. Because we were movie hopping my family couldn't find seats where we could all sit together so my parents sat in like...the middle row area where it wasnt too close nor too far and my brother and I were in the shitty area where we were definitely too close and off to the side...which meant being close up to all the gorey bits and me constantly covering my eyes. I'm honestly surprised that my parents were completely okay with us watching the movie or maybe they forgot we were there idk lmao... As an adult now I still don't think i can bring myself to watch Starship Troopers....
Parents are more disturbed by the scenes than the damn kids
"Being a parent is a life sentence. From the day that kid is born until the day you die and then some." - Christopher Titus
Hell, I'd go as far as to say the sentence starts once you *plan* on having the kid in the first place. Assuming you don't back out before the conception, anyway.
@@ThisguySLYou're absolutely right.
The amount of children and the subsequent exodus of them with the disgusted parent within the first 20 minutes at the opening night for "DEADPOOL" was an experience lol. Like did they not know it was rated R???
I wasn't expecting a trailer for Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 airing durring a family friendly Puss N' Boots movie to have a sex scene with Rocket Racoon in the movie theater opening previews. Do whatever protest of this movie you want, as it should have a worse rating than Deadpool, to be very honest. Although it seems from the movie rating that the scene didn't make it ino all of the MCU/HBO theater locations.
@@GamerOfPhones ???????
@GamerOfPhones Bro are you alright? There is no sex scenes in the movie at all.
@@diamondchargedgaming9399 The trailer that aired in theaters is different than the trailer they air on UA-cam. it has some kind of weasel cuddling with Rocket. Also I'm confused why they even put Adam Magnus in the movie trailer if he's not even in the film (the website is blocking Adam's last name)
@@GamerOfPhones there is no sex scene in the movie is you good
Honestly I was kinda surprised at the amount of gore in it for the rating but they can sort of get away with it because the characters are aliens haha
This same situation with Guardians happened to Puss in Boots The Last Wish where parents complained it was too dark and violent for a PG film. It is so stupid
This is exactly why my wife and I decided not to have kids, because we know we won't have the time or energy to constantly monitor them. also, the internet even scares me sometimes lol
Nah bro, just admit you and your wife are selfish (not a bad thing), lol. Life is easier when you are honest.
@@Niikkos maybe... but it's also not a must to have children. This planet is overcrowded as is
@@Niikkos Can't tell if this is bait or not, but hell, I'll bite because this comment is just confusing.
Are you implying the selfish behaviour here is choosing to not have a kid?
@@Niikkos how is not having a kid selfish?
@@NiikkosNo dude, it’s more selfish to choose to have a kid completely knowing you are unprepared to put in the time and energy to raise them properly. That’s how you create neglect related trauma in the next generation. Do not have a kid if you don’t want one, or are unprepared to raise one.
I laughed for a solid 10 minutes when Star Lord said "open the fucking door" lmfao I felt his frustration with his team
it was the most perfect use of the word. Amazing delivery
He used his single alloted potty mouth pass and used it well
The PG stands for Parental Guidance, so Parents still gotta guide their own kids
I THOUGHT IT MEANT IT WOULD GUIDE PARENTS TOWARDS GOOD MOVIES FOR THEIR KIDS /s
I will never forget this OG Gamestop employee back in 2010. I was 10 with my mom and I wanted to get GTA San Andreas. We are at the checkout with it and she says "Rated M!? Is there any prostitutes in it?? If so I'm not getting it for you!!".. I said no nervously looking at the Gamestop dude, that legendary man who I wish I could shoutout said nothing. I went on to play GTA SA for years and even went on for it to be my first platinum trophy in 2018 on ps4. Where ever you sir thank you, you made my childhood. (If you were gamestop employee by the north east mall in the 2010s who sold me the game my prayers go out to you brother) I miss how gamestop was back in the day..
The F-Bomb moment was hilarious. I didn't even remember the moment until people started freaking out about it. I was like, "when did that happen?" and then saw the scene again and laughed. The parents are probably freaking out now that their kid "might" repeat it. Just be a good parent.
Same dude. I still don't even know when it happens tbh
These parents should hang around their kid’s school more. Even in elementary I guarantee they have heard the f word before.
It’s hilarious because it was improvised and they just left it in because it was so funny
I can relate. I saw it with my brother (granted, he’s 23) and after the movie I was laughing about how they used the first f-bomb in an MCU movie and he didn’t even realized they said it. Then he started laughing when he remembered lol
My whole theater laughed at that scene
The one time Disney learned what an actual PG-13 rating means, they suddenly piss off every Karen parent imaginable
*EDIT* I'm not counting No Way Home because that was basically a Sony movie with Marvel characters sewn in the plot. Also it's Sam fucking Raimi.
This is the first and only time I’ll ever say this but… good job, Disney!
Credit goes to James Gunn, not Disney. Any other director and you know it would've been a glorified PG film lol
@@rickygforce4217 Disney allowed Gunn to do his thing it's not like they had absolutely nothing to do with the movie. If they wanted him to remove it he would've had to have removed it.
@@ZachBobBob James Gunn actually tries to resist Disney unlike other directors
@@Mroresident32303 Resist? The directors work with Disney and Marvel it's not like they're fighting against them. They're all on the same team.
I’m glad my parents were chill. The first video game I remember playing was Mortal Kombat Deception. They did well in protecting me though from the weird shit online and whatnot but thank god they weren’t THAT protective
If i see my kid watching violent anime then I'll just check if it gives him nightmares or not
9:50 ah yes my favorite movie, guardians and the galaxy volume 13
the "parental guidance" part of PG13 just translates to "for kids" for parents now
Which is basically what they turned PG into, when they created PG13 in the first place.
@@DDd-gm8uz yeah kinda the same thing with gaming when they made the E 10+ esrb rating back in the mid 2000s
@@therealsteel1634 Fun fact: Jaws is PG.
Star Wars was probably what started making PG more for kids.
The Original Trilogy was borderline G-rated, and was in fact rated U in the UK and Malaysia, and G in the Philippines.
And then Shrek also came along with making the PG rating more marketable for actual kids’ movies, before Disney started copying them with making films PG when they could have been G.
@@HydraSpectre1138 cars 2 is PG while the other cars movies are G
The PG-13 level in Guardians really had a late 80s-early 90s PG-13 vibe with the subject matter and violence.
These are the same people who took their kids to see Deadpool and got mad when it wasn’t kid friendly
You nailed it Charles. Being a good parent is exhausting and tests a person’s communication and patience to its breaking point.
If it's that hard for you, you should probably seek therapy.
And it’s so infuriating to see people that clearly don’t know how to and can’t handle raising kids properly acting as if theyre superior than you all because they have kids
Funny how parents are fine having children watch people beat each other up and die, but when a swear word is said suddenly things aren’t ok
"South Park: Bigger, Longer, and Uncut" in a nutshell.
If there's one thing I learned growing up, it's that the internet and kids is a very dangerous combination. My parents tried their best to block what they could, but 12 year old me had tor
5:18 in Thor Ragnarok they also show a guy getting vaporized
Wow, it's almost like being a parent is a FULL-TIME JOB
This is exactly why I plan on being a house-husband...
It gets “part time” with school though….
But clearly these “parents” Are the sped kids.
@@TheMinecraftHype agreed
The internet has made being a lazy parent really easy
My parents tried to shield me from “evil”. It made my life sooo much harder for no reason. You can’t protect your kids forever. Talk to them. Tell them why you think what you think.
how exactly did it make it harder for you? I guess it's a stupid question but I'm just really curious about what the general real effect of that is in the kid's mind
My parents did the same and it made my life harder in some ways but they did at least teach me what was right
@@eterty8335 my parents did it too. You become very sheltered and you don’t learn alot of things that you should know at specific ways. It often leads to really embarrassing moments or bullying. For example I had no idea what a condom was up until grade 8 because I was so sheltered, during sex Ed I had to ask what it was and what it was for and that was hung over my head for quite some time. Little things like that
@@eterty8335 Well no one really taught me sex and internet safety because they thought I didn’t need to know. As a result I couldn’t verbalize what happened to me when I was groomed or molested or sexually assaulted. I didn’t have any social skills going into school when a boy groped me. I had no friends so I completely invested my time into the people who groomed me and genuinely thought I loved them. Sheltering your kids only means they won’t learn from you. Not that they just won’t ever learn.
@@eterty8335 example, when I was 15, I didn't know that putting a penis Inside a vagina is sex, hence when I talk to my friends about it, the teacher comes down to me pretty fast.
I find it amazing that people complain about a single "fuck" when the ones complaining are exactly the type to chew out a worker that caught them switching price tags calling the worker every vile name under the sun in front of their kids
Whenever there was a pg-13 movie coming out that my brothers and I wanted to see, my dad would go see it first to make sure that it was appropriate for us.