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The Link Between Bullying and Suicide

2 Apr

As we saw in the Tyler Clementi case, sometimes drawing a direct line is hard. Emily Bazelon looks at the new documentary Bully and is shocked to find one of the main character’s mental health history missing:

http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/04/the-link-between-bullying-and-suicide/255315/

"Bully" Makes Controversial Debut

1 Apr

POSTED: Saturday, March 31, 2012 – 9:13pm

UPDATED: Sunday, April 1, 2012 – 11:08am

Last week “The Hunger Games” had one of the biggest openings in movie history.

The futuristic film, about teens forced to fight each other to death, carried a PG-13 rating.
This week a new documentary about real life teen bullying, called “Bully”, is opening amidst controversy about its rating.
“Bully” spotlights five families dealing with a problem the U.S. Department of Education
says impacts one in three middle and high school students.

But profanity in “Bully” prompted an “R” rating from the Motion Picture Association of America.
That prevents a large portion of director Lee Hirsch’s target audience, kids under 17, from seeing the film unless accompanied by a parent.
“The Canadian Ratings board gave the film a PG, precisely because they wanted kids to be able to see it. The MPAA has taken a difference stance,” notes Entertainment Weekly senior editor Thom Geier.
Petitions and appeals failed to change that stance, and Hirsch refused to edit out the profanity, so “Bully” is being released unrated.
That means individual theater chains have to decide whether to show it.

Hirsch hopes audiences receive “Bully”‘s message, regardless of the film’s rating.
“Bully” debuts in New York and Los Angeles this weekend, and around the country in mid-April.
Many theaters are opting to treat “Bully” as an R-release, but so far, Cinemark, the nation’s third largest theater chain, is adhering to its policy of not screening unrated films.

 

http://www.ketknbc.com/news/bully-makes-controversial-debut

WWE star John Cena facing off against The Rock, bullying

31 Mar

NEW YORK — Most people wouldn’t dare call chiseled WWE superstar John Cena any names, let alone “a bowl of Fruity Pebbles.”

But in the lead up to their WrestleMania 28 “Once in a Lifetime” match Sunday in Miami, that’s exactly what The Rock told Cena he looked like.

Instead of getting upset, Cena said he turned the situation around by contacting the cereal maker, now he’s on “three million boxes of the stuff.”

While it was done in typical WWE trash-talk fashion, Cena says the pressure can get to you.

“I’m one of those guys that gets cheered, but also gets booed. Those who don’t like me, severely don’t like me,” Cena told the Associated Press on Friday. “Usually your first instinct is to lash out at these people. … but I believe you always need to turn a negative into a positive.”

Heavily involved in the Be-A-Star anti-bullying campaign, Cena is not just a voice for the cause, he also says he was a victim.

According the former WWE Heavyweight champion, he was bullied as a kid because he loved rap and wore hip-hop clothing in a town where it wasn’t popular. He started lifting weights to protect himself.

“By the time I was 15, I was a built kid, and the comments didn’t come so often, and the people making fun of me sort of fell by the wayside,” Cena said.

While most of it was talk, Cena doesn’t see much of a difference when it comes to hurtful remarks.

“The introduction of social media pretty much gives everyone a voice, but unfortunately, people choose to use that voice in a negative way,” Cena said.

Cena wants young people to know that not everyone is going to like you for who you are: “The best way to get back at them is to put a smile on your face and do whatever you can to succeed.”

While he’s in the business of physical confrontations and verbal assaults, he said insults still affect you. He also wants victims to know that, so Cena refuses to block anyone or edit his Twitter account.

“There’s a lot of negative stuff on there and some of it is personal,” he said. “When you’re a kid that feels that everything is coming down on you, you can look and see that this truly does happen to everybody.”

The former WWE heavyweight champion also addressed the role of judging people by the clothes they wear, namely the recent debate over hoodies.

Cena doesn’t feel they make a negative statement, saying: “I’ve never seen clothing as a problem.”

Trayvon Martin’s death has sparked a debate about whether hooded sweatshirts present a negative image. While Cena didn’t speak specifically about the case, he said that what people wear isn’t the main concern: ‘It’s the demeanor.”

Seventeen-year-old Martin was shot and killed in Sanford, Fla., last month by a neighborhood watch volunteer who has claimed self-defense and has not yet been arrested.

The Be-A-Star foundation co-founded by the WWE and The Creative Coalition.

___

Online:

www.wwe.com/

http://www.azcentral.com/ent/celeb/articles/2012/03/31/20120331wwe-star-john-cena-the-rock-bullying.html

‘Bully’ Film Released Without Rating

31 Mar

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