There comes a time when every college student realizes that the world does not revolve around MTV, dorm parties and 3 a.m. runs to the nearest 24-hour McDonaldโs or IHOP.
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Itโs when you start making friends who ask your opinion about Michael Steele and Chris Matthews; when you get into debates over your preference of MSNBC over FOX news; when you find yourself getting excited about the presidentโs first joint congressional address. When these issues start popping up, you know youโve officially โcrossed overโ into the realm of social maturity.
During my โcrossing overโโcomplete with the addition of coffee to my morning routine and my newfound concern for the nutritional content of the cream cheese on my bagelโI found myself switching from my usual morning ritual of music videos on MTV and reruns of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, to network and cable morning news programs. I thought I was trading in my daily dose of mind-numbing pop culture for the more intellectually stimulating world news. Iโve decided that thereโs not much difference.
Within a week of regularly tuning in to American Mornings on CNN, I watched at least one segment on marijuana for almost three days straight (after President Obama clearly stated that his administration would not be entertaining the idea of legalization). After commercial breaks, the music leading back into the programming included things like โLive Your Lifeโ by T.I. and Rihanna, โRock Starโ by Pink, โGood Lifeโ by Kanye West and even โGot Your Moneyโ by Olโ Dirty BastardโI wish I was kidding. I thought maybe some intern had put an iPod on shuffle and just decided to let the good times roll. Maybe itโs because CNN got all buddy-buddy with Ashton Kutcher during their bet to see who could get the most followers on Twitter or because theyโve got more than 380,000 fans on their Facebook page or because Anderson Cooperโs pretty hot. But it seems to me that theyโre trying too hard to appeal to young viewers. Iโm not mad at them for wanting to revitalize their brand and woo a younger audience, but I draw the line at Olโ Dirty Bastard.
News flash: Young people generally want to grow up. We want our Twitter and our toys, but we also want to be informed citizens of the world. And we donโt necessarily turn to the same places to feed those interests. If I want to see Susan Boyle over and over, Iโll peep her on YouTube. When I tune in to a world news channel, I want world news.
I want my mornings to start with some mention of an election somewhere or some analysis of how the financial crisis is playing out around the globe.
If I want to start my days with ODB singing, โHey, dirty, baby I got your money donโt you worry โฆ I said hey!โโฆ I might as well just keep the channel on MTV.
Jada F. Smith is a senior journalism major at Howard University. She works as a managing editor for the nationโs only daily black newspaper, The Hilltop.
is an intern at The Root and senior journalism major at Howard University.
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