Saw this on Boing Boing yesterday. Nice to see a teenager standing up for their legal rights. Jules deserves, at the very least, a massive apology for the way he was treated.
Habbo and MTV are now best of friends and will be cross promoting content and working closer together than ever before. Can’t wait to see Habbo’s first ever TV ad.
It’s hard not to think it’s all some kind of elaborate joke, a spoof of those who think that young people genuinely respond to, and use, try-hard yoof-speak. Y’know, like what Tom Watson has done to great effect here and Ali G did, ten years ago.
Sadly, it seems that Oi, Mate, Gimme Some More! has been put together with the best of intentions, but very, very cringey results. It’s an attempt to make Dickens more accessible to young people and, with titles like ‘Da Tale of Two Turfs’, just seems woefully patronising.
I hope I’m wrong but, as far as I can see, the main market for this will be adults wanting a cheap laugh at the expense of how they think modern teenagers communicate. And dats da troof, ma homiez.
David Mitchell makes the phenomenally valid point that how can we expect children/teens (ie, humans during their formative, most likely to LEARN STUFF, years) learn anything from television if they’re only showed things they already know?
Quite right. I learnt the words ‘righteous indignation’ from the Bucky O’Hare opening credit sequence, looked it up, and it became part of my 6 year old vocab. Nerdy, but true. I also learnt a surprising amount of Greek mythology from Ulysses 31.
Fifteen year-old Christian Owens, founder of online advertising network Branchr, was recently named Enterprising Young Brit 2010. The Daily Mail gives the annual award to teen tycoons with startups in the United Kingdom.
Owens founded the startup, which counts MySpace as an advertiser — to give you a sense of the prestige — in January 2009. The company provides small and medium sized businesses with an alternative to Google through its pay-per-click advertising platform.
So it turns out the frighteningly brilliant and popular young adult book series Horrible Histories has steadily taken over the world without me noticing.
Personally I think this is great – Horrible Histories books are certainly the single thing I credit most with my own interest in history. (The Ancient Egyptians used to scoop out dead people’s brains through their noses with long hooks before they mummified them, don’t ya know.)
And, very excitingly, next on the agenda looks to be a virtual world:
Scholastic Children’s Books is developing a virtual world around its “Horrible Histories” line of kids books in partnership with virtual world designer Yomego. Users will be able to explore areas like Rotten Rome, Awesome Egypt, and Terrible Tudor London. The companies are apparently planning a virtual goods store, moderated chat, and live events where users can meet the author. The world is set to go live in Summer 2011.
If they can maintain the perfect mix of humour, grossness and Actual Facts that we all love about HH, this will be incredible. Fingers crossed.
Today’s 16-year-olds could be in their 20s before they get the chance to have their say about what they think at the ballot box in a general election.
So what policies would influence London’s under-18s if they could vote?
Worth a read, although inevitably (suspiciously?) focussed on knives/guns/pregnancy… issues that are still not representative of the majority of UK teens and disproportionately representated in the mee-jah.