TV3 Asks Kiwis to Have Their Say on Our Teens
Wednesday 27 November, 2013
TV3 Asks Kiwis
to Have Their Say on Our Teens: the Vote Debates
‘Teenagers Have Never Had It So Good’
Today’s world is full of opportunities for Kiwi teens, but with opportunities come risks. Two New Zealanders – Lorde and Lydia Ko – have topped Time Magazine’s 2013 list of the world’s most influential teenagers. But back home, the Roast Busters story has called into question whether our teens are really coping with the pressures of modern life.
This month, two teams led by Duncan Garner and Guyon Espiner will argue the moot ‘Teenagers have never had it so good’ in TV3’s national debate programme The Vote, screening at 8.30pm next Wednesday night. Broadcaster and lawyer, Linda Clark is again the referee, charged with keeping the debaters in line and on topic.
The coming generation are smarter, more tolerant and will live longer than any generation before them. Today’s teens today don’t have to go to war, don’t have to hide their sexuality or beliefs, are getting a better education, are more likely to travel and anyway, the world is just a mouse click away. The world really is their oyster. And let’s be honest, teenagers have always pushed the boundaries.
Is it harder or easier to be a teenager these days? Sir Peter Gluckman, the Prime Minister’s Chief Science Advisor, says there’s been a fundamental change in the past two generations – social changes have been rapid and dramatic, social boundaries are more fluid; the influential role of parents, teachers and community groups have been replaced by celebrities and friends; the internet and new social freedoms have put immense pressure on teens to make good personal choices; drugs, alcohol, credit cards and cheap cars have made risky behaviour easier to risk.
What’s happening to our teenagers? Do we need to worry? The world has changed so much in just a generation, are they struggling with the pressures of modern life?
A coin toss has decided Guyon Espiner will argue ‘Teenagers have never had it so good,’ with Duncan Garner arguing AGAINST the moot. Joining Duncan and Guyon next week are six panellists:
FOR – Led by Guyon
Espiner
• Sam Johnson entered local politics in 2010,
and is best known for founding the Volunteer Army after the
devastating Christchurch earthquakes. He's collected a stack
of youth awards since then, including the Sir Peter Blake
leadership award, and in 2012 was named Young New Zealander
of the Year. Sam believes tools such as the internet enable
teenagers these days to access opportunities their
predecessors wouldn't have dreamed of, and that the benefits
of being a teenager today far outweigh the
negatives.
• Tim O'Connor is the Headmaster of Auckland
Grammar School, and has been involved with secondary
education since 1990. He has represented Manawatu in hockey
and umpired at an international level, and was awarded a
Woolf Fisher Fellowship in 2007. Tim's philosophy centers
around the importance of education and achievement, and he
believes teenagers today have a huge advantage as they are
digital natives and are provided with unparalleled
opportunities to find their niche in the world.
• Guy
Williams was a teenager himself until just a few years ago,
and reckons he knows a thing or two about being young. He
grew up in Nelson, and has been a comedian with TV3 since
2010, working on shows such as Jono and Ben at Ten, and 7
Days. Guy thinks teenagers often get a bad rep in the media,
and that by and large they're actually a pretty good bunch
of people.
AGAINST – Led by Duncan
Garner
• Rose Matafeo is one of New Zealand’s young
comedic talents. The 21-year-old won the 2013 Billy T Award,
and is a full time writer for TV3’s Jono and Ben at Ten.
Not long out of the teenage years herself, Rose believes
that with increasing access to everything online we’re
seeing a “re-wiring of young minds”, and it’s becoming
harder for the youth of today to form their own
opinions.
• Jacinda Ardern is No. 6 in Labour’s
Shadow Cabinet and the spokesperson for Children,
Corrections, Police and Arts, Culture and Heritage. In 2007
Jacinda was the second woman to be elected President of
ISUY, the largest international political youth organisation
globally, and improving the welfare of teens today has been
an on-going focus of her career. She believes that
teenagers today are forced to become very resilient in the
face of social media, which exacerbates an already
incredibly difficult stage of life.
• Greg Fleming left
a career in finance to be the General Manager of Parenting
with Confidence (now Parents Inc.) before founding the
independent think tank Maxim Institute in 2001. A recipient
of the Sir Peter Blake Emerging Leader Award, Greg is now
the CEO of the Venn Foundation, a charity that provides
contexts for young adults to engage with the ideas and
culture that shapes them and their world. A father of five,
he believes it’s a scary time to be a teen; with the
internet anything is possible and because of that, the rules
are never clear.
The Vote is competitive current affairs – a monthly series of entertaining and informative national debates on the big issues facing New Zealanders. The debates take place in theatres with audience participation and voting, but the opinion that matters most is that of the audience watching at home.
Viewers
are encouraged to vote for free at www.TheVote.co.nz, via Twitter
@TheVoteNZ and Facebook at The Vote NZ. Viewers can also
text their vote by texting ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ to 3920 at
a cost of 20 cents per
text.
ends