Ten Questions for Pod Show Hosts Interested to Advocate
for Teen Girls' Rights on Social Media
Now they are
targeting smartphones and social media. On January 6th two large investors in
Apple demanded that the technology company must help parents curtail their
children’s iPhone use, citing research into the links between adolescent
social-media habits and risk factors for suicide, such as depression. Old and
new media abound with reports about phones’ addictive, mind-warping properties.
On the school run, parents compare tactics for limiting screen time. The Economist.
Jan. 11, 2018
I am excited and ready to enter a new phase of internet marketing. Excellent
mentor ship brings me into the exciting world of
iPod shows and broadcasting.
Social Media is alive and well; Tweets still twitter; YouTube
videos shine and sing; Facebook shouts out a worldwide audience; but, nothing can
compare to having a conversation with a
smart iPod show host or hostess for an hour to explain the premise of my new
e-book called Teen Girl Faces Time in the Sand.
I am now ready to make my entrance on this world-wide stage
in awe of this opportunity with the sincerest hope that any information I can
share will help teen girls to view that their personal offline time is as
important, if not more important, than being plugged into an alternate reality. I believe there is no other common antidote to this extreme
cell phone and Selfie conditioning except a deep personal mindset that My Time
is precious, respected and protected as explained in the story.
Here are ten questions I will be answering:
- You are an educator for 24 years. What changed from when you first started to decades after?
- How has social media robbed teen girls from the normal rites of passage between child and adult?
- There have been studies done on the development of the brain in adolescents. How does the adolescent brain process differently than the adult brain?
- In your book, there are many learning points. What would you say is the number on learning point in the story that can help teens change their internet habits?
- What is the main reason teen girls don't want to give up their internet time?
- Why do you use symbols as main characters, as antagonist vs protagonist?
- You talk about a superpower to manage time. What is the superpower tool to make smart choices versus decisions or habits?
- How can parents help their teen daughters to reduce their social media time?
- How is it possible that fake Selfies can affect our deeper cultural values?
- What lesson plans help to practice some of the new ideas or concepts in this story?
I look forward to talking with any persons, or referrals, who may be interested in these topics. No teenage girl could write a
story like this, but a long traditional lifeline can offer resources to cope
with such drastic societal changes. Who else can advocate on behalf of teenage
girls to prevent their exploitation on the internet? They will not just “grow
out of it” but pass this sub-culture as young mothers to their children. I believe we should try to find a common
denominator for every teen girl to find her true Self and find a place to be a real Somebody in her real world.
What kind of questions would you ask? What bothers you about the teenage sub-culture?
Please request my One Page Expert Sheet and Media Review.
Please request my One Page Expert Sheet and Media Review.
I look forward to talking with you. Together, we can continue to find a timely solution.
Sincerely,
Annemarie Berukoff
833 471 4661
New Kindle e-book: Teen Girl Faces Time in the Sand
Excerpt: You understand that the future only appears as a
vision and today is the only time you have to react to anything. What if you
had the power to connect to the future to help direct your present actions to
fulfill that future? I wonder what kind
of choices you'd make ….would they be the same."
But what if there is some kind of super power tool to help
make better choices to take you into adulthood?
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