Well, you are both in Florida.Wait you were there when I was a kid?
Well, you are both in Florida.Wait you were there when I was a kid?
Well I grew up in Ontario, where were denied the glory of RiD ScourgeWell, you are both in Florida.![]()
Moms thought everything popular with kids back then was a corrupt influence.Why were our mothers like this? If they were trying to save us from this habit it really didn't work.
My mom wasn't as bad with that stuff. She didn't think Pokemon or Transformers were Satanic, she was just a bit on the strict side. She had three young kids, and was trying to keep us all under control so looking back it made sense. Still, "YOU HAVE ONE MINUTE TO PICK SOMETHING" and "YOU'LL GET IT WHEN WE GET HOME" clearly had impacts on me.Moms thought everything popular with kids back then was a corrupt influence.
Just look at all the paranoid mothers who were terrified of their children summoning the Devil just by playing Pokémon. The Satanic Panic was real, and ridiculous. Look up an old video from the '80s called "Deception of a Generation", in which two men try to explain why each and every single major children's toy franchise of the time (including G.I. Joe, My Little Pony, and even Rambo) was inherently satanic. It is laughable at best, ludicrous at worst.![]()
The irony in my case was that watching BTAS was perfectly fine, but MMPR or X-Men were not, despite being way more fantastical (and in MMPR's case, as campy as Adam West Batman) than the more grounded-in-reality BTAS with its gun violence, gang violence, and more realistic darker storytelling.She also thought Batman Returns and Batman Forever were too graphic for me to see in theatres. Batman Returns I get, but Batman Forever? Come on now!![]()
Same. To this day my mom raves about BTAS. I loved Batman as a kid, and watched that show a ton, and my mom enjoyed it. To this day she'll bring it up as one of the best shows we watched when I was a kid. And I'm pretty sure that show had darker subject matter then Batman Forever!The irony in my case was that watching BTAS was perfectly fine, but MMPR or X-Men were not, despite being way more fantastical (and in MMPR's case, as campy as Adam West Batman) than the more grounded-in-reality BTAS with its gun violence, gang violence, and more realistic storytelling.
Oh, not the same for my mom. She's still set in the old "live action is for adults, animation is childish" mindset, despite accepting that there are exceptions, but only a few and they aren't the norm for her.Same. To this day my mom raves about BTAS.
Ahhhh gotcha. My mom loved BTAS, and looking back it's easy to see why. You could totally get into it as an adult. I don't think she's ever gone out of her way to watch it since, but I was watching it on HBO Max last time I was visiting my folks and she got pretty excited over it.Oh, not the same for my mom. She's still set in the old "live action is for adults, animation is childish" mindset, despite accepting that there are exceptions, but only a few and they aren't the norm for her.
I think my mom was okay with us watching BTAS because she grew up with Adam West Batman and probably felt "Batman is Batman. No matter the medium, he's just a silly guy in a goofy-looking suit." So, Batman wasn't considered a negative influence.Ahhhh gotcha. My mom loved BTAS, and looking back it's easy to see why. You could totally get into it as an adult. I don't think she's ever gone out of her way to watch it since, but I was watching it on HBO Max last time I was visiting my folks and she got pretty excited over it.
Yeah, I love how they argue that these guys who are clearly evil, like that hooded guy with the skull face, actually are evil and... should not be opposed? I guess?Moms thought everything popular with kids back then was a corrupt influence.
Just look at all the paranoid mothers who were terrified of their children summoning the Devil just by playing Pokémon. The Satanic Panic was real, and ridiculous. Look up an old video from the '80s called "Deception of a Generation", in which two men try to explain why each and every single major children's toy franchise of the time (including G.I. Joe, My Little Pony, and even Rambo) was inherently satanic. It is laughable at best, ludicrous at worst.![]()
3) feeling like the kid was gonna have used up all the "entertainment" distraction inherent in the new toy while the parent was driving instead of it buying some peace and quiet at home.