• Font Size    
Advertising
E-mail

Close Window E-mail This Page

Teen-On-Teen Girl Fights Sweeping Internet

Required fields are marked with an asterisk(*)



The information you provide will be used only to send the requested e-mail and will not be used to send any other e-mail communications. Read more in our Privacy Policy

Send E-mail

   Print     Share +    Comments (49)

Teen-On-Teen Girl Fights Sweeping Internet

CBS 2 HD Finds More Than 267,000 On YouTube, Speaks To Experts On How This Should Be Handled At Home

NEW ROCHELLE, N.Y. (CBS) ― Two teenage girls went at it. Two adults allegedly watched and another minor videotaped the whole thing in Louisiana. The fight popped up on YouTube more than a week ago. Days later, in Lowell, Mass., local authorities discovered similar videos online and said local educators report about 80 percent of school fights are now girl against girl.

Some experts believe the trend is partly fueled by the Internet.

CBS 2 HD met with members of the cyber safety group "Teenangels" at The Ursuline School in New Rochelle.

"People want attention from it. They want to be on the Internet. They want to be famous and they're willing to go to any cost to do that," said Teenangel Angelina.

 Click Here To Download CBS2's Free iPhone App Now!

We plugged in "girl fight" on YouTube and 267,000 videos popped up. Under them you'll find pages of comments from viewers all over the world.

"That it's funny, laugh out loud, ha ha ha, wow, that guy's just laughing," Angelina read.

"It's really important that parents become informed even parents of younger children need to know this because it's becoming such a widespread phenomenon that parents really need to protect their children, learn about it how can they prevent it," said Teenangel Maggie.

Dr. Jennifer Harstein said kids are exposed to so many violent images these days, parents need to enforce a reality check.

"Know what your kids are looking at, and really open the dialogue to discuss what it is, why it is, how they feel about it. Do they think it's okay? Ask a lot of questions, really probing instead of being punitive and saying 'You better not do this ever.'"

Dr. Harstein said go from there and encourage your kids to report inappropriate videos, letting them know it can be done anonymously.

Cyber experts said it's one of the most effective ways to slow down this dangerous trend.

Twitter 

no image  

(© MMX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

WCBSTV.com Popular Pages

Add Comment

here. here. Need a log in? Register here
  •  * Will not be displayed with comment
  •  * e.g. (http://www.mywebsite.com)
  •  
  • Click here to refresh with new letters

Close Window Login


Close Window Flag Comment


loading...
You need the latest Flash player to view video content.
Click here to download.

Click here to bypass this detection if you already have the latest Flash Player.