PDA

View Full Version : Dirty song lyrics can prompt early teen sex


Troll
08-07-2006, 5:06pm
Dirty song lyrics can prompt early teen sex
Degrading messages influence sexual behavior, study finds

Teens whose iPods are full of music with raunchy, sexual lyrics start having sex sooner than those who prefer other songs, a study found.

Whether it’s hip-hop, rap, pop or rock, much of popular music aimed at teens contains sexual overtones. Its influence on their behavior appears to depend on how the sex is portrayed, researchers found.

Songs depicting men as “sex-driven studs,” women as sex objects and with explicit references to sex acts are more likely to trigger early sexual behavior than those where sexual references are more veiled and relationships appear more committed, the study found.

Teens who said they listened to lots of music with degrading sexual messages were almost twice as likely to start having intercourse or other sexual activities within the following two years as were teens who listened to little or no sexually degrading music.

Among heavy listeners, 51 percent started having sex within two years, versus 29 percent of those who said they listened to little or no sexually degrading music.

'Cool thing to do'
Exposure to lots of sexually degrading music “gives them a specific message about sex,” said lead author Steven Martino, a researcher for Rand Corp. in Pittsburgh. Boys learn they should be relentless in pursuit of women and girls learn to view themselves as sex objects, he said.

“We think that really lowers kids’ inhibitions and makes them less thoughtful” about sexual decisions and may influence them to make decisions they regret, he said.

The study, based on telephone interviews with 1,461 participants aged 12 to 17, appears in the August issue of Pediatrics, being released Monday.

Most participants were virgins when they were first questioned in 2001. Follow-up interviews were done in 2002 and 2004 to see if music choice had influenced subsequent behavior.

Natasha Ramsey, a 17-year-old from New Brunswick, N.J., said she and other teens sometimes listen to sexually explicit songs because they like the beat.

“I won’t really realize that the person is talking about having sex or raping a girl,” she said. Even so, the message “is being beaten into the teens’ heads,” she said. “We don’t even really realize how much.”

“A lot of teens think that’s the way they’re supposed to be, they think that’s the cool thing to do. Because it’s so common, it’s accepted,” said Ramsey, a teen editor for Sexetc.org, a teen sexual health Web site produced at Rutgers University.

“Teens will try to deny it, they’ll say ‘No, it’s not the music,’ but it IS the music. That has one of the biggest impacts on our lives,” Ramsey said.

The Recording Industry Association of America, which represents the U.S. recording industry, declined to comment on the findings.

Benjamin Chavis, chief executive officer of the Hip-Hip Summit Action Network, a coalition of hip-hop musicians and recording industry executives, said explicit music lyrics are a cultural expression that reflect “social and economic realities.”

“We caution rushing to judgment that music more than any other factor is a causative factor” for teens initiating sex, Chavis said.

Healthy home atmosphere
Martino said the researchers tried to account for other factors that could affect teens’ sexual behavior, including parental permissiveness, and still found explicit lyrics had a strong influence.

However, Yvonne K. Fulbright, a New York-based sex researcher and author, said factors including peer pressure, self-esteem and home environment are probably more influential than the research suggests.

“It’s a little dangerous to just pinpoint one thing. You have to look at everything that’s going on in a young person’s life,” she said. “When somebody has a healthy sense of themselves, they don’t take these lyrics too seriously.”

David Walsh, a psychologist who heads the National Institute on Media and the Family, said the results make sense, and echo research on the influence of videos and other visual media.

The brain’s impulse-control center undergoes “major construction” during the teen years at the same time that an interest in sex starts to blossom, he said.

Add sexually arousing lyrics and “it’s not that surprising that a kid with a heavier diet of that ... would be at greater risk for sexual behavior,” Walsh said.

Martino said parents, educators and teens themselves need to think more critically about messages in music lyrics.

Fulbright agreed.

“A healthy home atmosphere is one that allows a child to investigate what pop culture has to offer and at the same time say ‘I know this is a fun song but you know that it’s not right to treat women this way or this isn’t a good person to have as a role model,”’ she said.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/14227775/?GT1=8404

nds76
08-07-2006, 5:45pm
Somehow I think this article makes a lot of sense.

tonyme
08-07-2006, 5:48pm
that is so true... i am a teenage boy and i dislike these offensive novelty songs... i prefer music as a joyful and enjoyable art... not some sex inspiration and violent addiction :mad: that's why i say that i am a devoted Shania fan... her music is what music is supposed to feel like;)

tonyme
08-07-2006, 5:52pm
Somehow I think this article makes a lot of sense.
of course it does! have you ever listened to an Eminem or 50 Cent song without offensive sexual references?! and all of the listeners are mostly teenagers my age! :mad:

shaniatfan
08-07-2006, 8:44pm
Wow, never really thought of it, but it does make sense and probably is true... I don't listen to music like that, i mostly listen to country, light rock, and some pop but non have sexual lyrics in them, like rap and R&B does and some pop....

Alex
08-08-2006, 12:47am
That's ponch! my little own words:p I just dislike this kinda music, weird, fake. I kee`p my country way :[

eilleen333
08-08-2006, 4:26am
I think this makes sense...
My friends listen to that kind of music, and they have diffrent boyfriends every week. I never listen to that kind of stuff, and I'm way more mature than they are. I don't do stupid things. I think about it first.
But it's also the videoclips that cause these problems. In the video's they represent women as some kind of toys you can play with, and whom you can "throw away" if you want someting else.

tonyme
08-08-2006, 4:33am
I think this makes sense...
But it's also the videoclips that cause these problems. In the video's they represent women as some kind of toys you can play with, and whom you can "throw away" if you want someting else.
that is so true:mad: a lot of the recent music videos are offensive and contain shocking material... that's really sad :(

jgb 15
08-08-2006, 4:55am
Well the music industry has lost it's legacy we all have lost the heart of the music and this generation needs more than a bump and grind music video. We need a music intervention.

You can still be an artist and have some taste at the same time. I think it can be done alot better.

UllaCountryGal
08-08-2006, 9:32am
This is so true and I totally agree with everything you have all said. But music isn't always the reason for premature teen sex. Maybe I just live in a weird country or something, but here teens as young as 13 are having sex. Here the legal age for having sex is 14. When I was around that age, I knew a lot of people my age that were having sex. I wasn't one of them though. Kids here start doing this out of. I mean you need to find yourself something to do that is not expensive. It costs less for these kids to buy a pack protections together than going to the cinema and see a film. Here it's not the music that is the biggest factor in pushing young teens to have sex, it's boredome and having nothing to do. I think it is just looked at as a normal part of life. But then again we have a very high rate of teen abortions here.

The music doesn't help the situation either. I look into a record store and what I see mostly of new stuff, is rap, r'n'b and pop music. I've seen Christina Aguilera, and those girls all(I'm not very up-to-date with all the names). They are not what I would call good role-models for girls. And the guys such as Snoop Dog and 50 cent are not good role models for boys. Where are the wholesome role-models. There are a lot of cool more wholesome role-models Anastacia for instance. She is not like the others. Yeah she wears revieling clothes but it's not about always the clothes. It's morea about how you present yourself and portray yourself with your behaviour. Same goes with Kylie Minogue. These are just examples and only reflect my opinion and what is going on in my mind. But people are ready to venture into listening to other genres, there are singers in country music for example; Shania Twain, Faith Hill, etc. and males, such as Keith Urban.

Another thing I'd like to add. Sexy and sexy are not always the same thing. Just as sexual and sexual are not always the same thing either. A wholesome and "good"(as in being a good rolemodel) singer can do a sexy or a sexual song. But sexy doesn't have to be dirty, rauncy and vulgar. It can be some sweet thing that is just sexy or sexual in a good way.

here ya go. I've vented on this subject.