Sex With Children Cartoon

Sex With Children Cartoon




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By Emily Allen 09:54 BST 12 Jan 2012 , updated 01:43 BST 13 Jan 2012
A sex education video produced by the BBC for children as young as nine has been criticised as being 'like a blue movie' by an MP who said the material is 'shattering the innocence of childhood'.
The video aims to teach children aged between nine and 11 about growing up, the cycle of life, feelings, family life and friendship.
But included in the CD-ROM is an animated video of two cartoon characters making love and a computer-generated sequence showing a couple having sex, accompanied by a graphic explanation.
There is also footage of a naked man and woman, used to demonstrate the differences between the sexes, information about 'wet dreams' and masturbation, and graphic diagrams of genitalia.
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Conservative MP Andrea Leadsom said: 'This material is explicit. It is shattering the innocence of childhood.'
Mrs Leadsom, who has raised the issue in Parliament, including presenting a petition after being contacted by concerned parents last year, said she was embarrassed by the film, adding: 'It was like a blue movie'.
She said: 'Parents don't feel their views are being consulted. My son was shown it four years ago. I was told it was by the BBC and I was told it was called 'Living and Growing' and you just expect if it's by the BBC it will be okay.
'I was utterly shocked by it when I saw it.'
Mrs Leadsom said parents were particularly upset by the computer-generated images of a couple having sex.
She said: 'You see an erection and penetration and that's completely astonishing.'
The other scenes which angered parents was the cartoon of two people making love.
She said: 'It looks bizarre, it's not missionary, the woman is on top and there's a children's voiceover saying something like 'Ooh, it looks like they are having fun.'
'Why is there a young child appearing to watch them?'
She said parents who had contacted her trusted their instincts with regards to their children and felt the footage was 'absolutely wrong'.
She wants sex education films to be given a film-style rating to act as a guide for teachers.
Education minister Nick Gibb promised to look into the matter too. 
The Sex and Relationship Education CD-Rom, produced by BBC Active, goes on to discuss the emotional aspects of relationships including sexual feelings and same-sex crushes as well as marriage. 
In addition, it covers internet safety and how children can keep themselves safe.
The BBC stands by the film, saying it has been put together after consultation with local authorities and experts in education.
BBC Active told the newspaper: 'All our resources provide clear guidance on age suitability.
'They are designed to allow teachers to pick and choose the elements they feel are appropriate.'
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BBC's sex videos for children 'are like porn'
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I can remember it like it was yesterday. I was nine years old and was eating Goldfish crackers while watching The Lion King with my sister. Timon and Pumba had just explained their carefree lifestyle to Simba via a delightfully catchy song with lyrics I could sing along to. It was, by all accounts, an average Saturday. Then, after Timon and Pumba “Hakuna Matata’d” their way off the screen, Nala, the now-grown-up female friend of Simba, entered the scene, hoping to find some delicious food for her starving family. She and Simba hadn’t seen each other since they were kids but eventually recognized one another. After reconnecting, they were both down to clown. They frolicked around the jungle. They tumbled and wrestled. Then, Nala gave Simba a lick that seemed intimate, along with what is arguably the most longing look in the history of cinema.
Could I feel the love? I could. I was surprised by the feeling, but it was undeniable.
What made the moment shocking wasn’t the lion’s stare, but that I’d seen the scene so many times before. Lion King was my animated, subtler Citizen Kane. It had everything a kid could want in a movie. Fantastic songs. Revenge. Nihilistic hyenas. But I’d never really concentrated on the romantic subplot. Like most boys, I thought romance was, at best, an unwanted distraction. I greatly preferred Timon and Pumba’s wacky antics.
But kids grow up and learn to see both the world and animated animals differently. Nala’s eyes called to me. I didn’t know it at the time, but this lioness’s seductive gaze had set me on a long, uncomfortable, and incredibly confusing journey towards sexual awakening.
Regardless of circumstances, a child’s first time feeling anything even closely resembling sexuality is pretty much guaranteed to be an experience fueled mostly by fear, confusion, and isolation. And those three emotions are only amplified when the object of your affection is a cartoon lion. Did she look sexy? Of course. She was a very attractive lion, but that’s beside the point. The point is that I discovered lust in the context of attraction to an animal and that was terrifying. I wondered if I was alone. I wondered if there was something wrong with me.
Had I known a psychologist, I would have asked. Instead, I bottled it up and waited for my twenties. And it turns out I was never alone.
“Children having feelings toward a cartoon character is perfectly normal,” Dr. Kathryn Seifert, a psychologist who has studied and written extensively about child development and sexuality, explained to me when I called to ask her about my childhood lion attraction. “Children liking or having a crush on an imaginary character or a teacher or anyone is perfectly normal.”
This was a relief to hear, but why would a kid have these sort of reactions to a cartoon character? Seifert explained: “Children are not looking for a partner, they are trying to understand relationships … They are curious and learning about relationships and what they mean. It does not mean the same thing for a child to have a crush on someone and an adult falling in love with another person and having adult sexual feelings toward that person.”
Developing sexual feelings and a desire to understand relationships is a perfectly normal part of growing up. These feelings and desires can manifest themselves in a wide variety of forms, including, Dr. Seifert assured me, a seductive lioness.
So, my Nala crush was nothing to be ashamed of. And that’s a good thing, because to this day, I am still flustered by how sexy I found her. It was a real relief to me when Academy Award-winner Eddie Redmayne came out as a Nala lover. Hollywood, as ever, is leading the charge on sexual honesty.
Kids watch cartoons. They watch lovely Daisy Duck and foxy Robin Hood. These cartoons eventually and, almost inevitably, make them feel weird. That’s a bit sad — all that unnecessary stress. It’s especially sad because it’s avoidable. Kids don’t have to walk around worried that there is something wrong with them. As Dr. Seifert explains, starting healthy, open conversations with your kid about sex can help them avoid both an incorrect self-diagnosis and dangerous behavior.
“The best way to talk to children about sexuality is to answer their questions simply and at an appropriate developmental level,” says Seifert. “Don’t assume that early experimentation is abnormal unless it causes problems.”
Everyone discovers sexuality in their own way. Some kids develop crushes on the boy or girl next door. Others fall for the animated lion. And, if your kid falls in the latter category, know that there’s nothing wrong with that. I should know; there’s nothing wrong with me. I don’t light candles before watching Planet Earth. I don’t have complicated feelings about the Royals mascot. Nala and I barely even keep in touch.
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