Time for Action – Kids Outdoors

– Posted in: Miscellaneous

Comcast camping adI opened my morning newspaper (yes, dating me…) and felt sick.  Not because of global wars, ebola, climate change, or because the Giants had lost to the Dodgers.

The full page ad on the back of Section A is from NBCUniversal and Comcast, my local cable giant, proudly announcing they are “bringing media and technology together to connect you in more places than you ever thought possible”.  To kids camping in a tent ?!

I am  a professional photographer.  I have been writing here at Gardening Gone Wild for 7 years using the tag ‘The camera always lies”.  I know the power of a photo to tell a story that embellishes text.  Hell, my last post here was on how I photographed a new rose introduction for a corporate client to embellish sales.

But Comcast could not have paid me enough to shoot his ad.  I say this from the bottom of my heart – no amount of money.

This is wrong.  Its obscene.  This is not the image of camping and enjoying the outdoors that should appear anywhere except in derision.

holt_997_042.CR2

Commercial photo shoot promoting herbs.

I know times have changed.  We are connected in miraculous ways: right now as you read this.  I use Comcast every day.  This post is uploaded through their high speed modem in my office that brings the internet to anywhere I sit.  Their cable brings the Giants game to the TV in the house.

I am glad media connects me to more places than I thought possible, but this image is about kids outdoors, and telling families this media absorption while camping is OK.  The caption may say: “What’s possible when Wi-Fi   is in more places ?  –  Front Row – In the Backyard” but that’s not the scene I see.  This is a subtle attack on kids and how they enjoy the outdoors.  Comcast surely doesn’t intend the ad this way and very likely doesn’t get that they don’t get it.  But they got me.

Comcast camping ad

This does not promote healthy entertainment, backyard fun, or family values for any family I know.

Many, many accomplished writers, child psychologists, outdoor advocates, and cultural trend watchers decry pervasive media in the lives of children.

American Academy of Pediatrics Media and Children

Children Now – Media’s Impact

Waldorf – How Media affects children You Tube

I am preaching to the choir here to those who read a gardening blog, and I can’t say it better than the experts, but when I see egregious examples media gone wrong, I think it must be pointed out. I want to take action.  I am an outdoorsman, a gardener, a media person.  I want to contact somebody…

I am sending this post to J.T Ramsay  who, according to Comcast corporate website is “Chief Blogger” and Cory Shields, Executive Vice President, Communications — NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment Group.

I will say:  “Please save the outdoors.  Free children from media anytime, anywhere.” Please take action yourself.

I planned this post, ‘Time for Action’, to be about fall planting, the best time of the year to plant new trees, shrubs, and perennials.  Time to garden.  The morning newspaper change my day.

And now get out into your own garden.  And don’t watch a video about how to do it …  Do it.  Take your kids. Take back the outdoors from the cable company.

holt_409_0218.tif 410-204 Tulip Festival, Skakgit Valley

 

Saxon Holt
Saxon Holt is the owner of PhotoBotanic.com, a garden picture resource for photographs, on-line workshops, and garden photography stories. An award winning photojournalist and Fellow of The Garden Writers Association with more than 25 garden books, he lives and gardens in Northern California. PhotoBotanic - Garden Photography online at www.photobotanic.com. https://photobotanic.com
Saxon Holt

Latest posts by Saxon Holt (see all)

14 comments… add one

Leave a Comment

Nancy dyer September 24, 2014, 4:26 pm

I agree 100% with what you wrote. Kids should be outside enjoying nature not on the computer……they are on it enough…..too much…..inside.

Spread the word Nancy – Saxon

Steve Mullany September 24, 2014, 4:37 pm

The poster photo also shows the remains of a beautiful sunset silhouetted against palms and a bright moon. All unseen by the screen-locked kids in the tent.

I know ! The photographer did an amazingly good job – inadvertently to be sure – to show the insane comparison. – Saxon

Michael Romero September 24, 2014, 6:40 pm

Great post Saxon!

Thanks for stopping by Michael – Saxon

Catherine September 24, 2014, 7:27 pm

That is positively sickening. I agree – as a journo/photographer myself I wonder how anyone could bring themselves to take that shot for a campaign like this.
It reminds me of a famous Oz cartoon by Leunig showing a man and child marvelling at a beautiful sunset on their TV. Through the window of their loungeroom, you can see exactly the same sunset.
When I see this Comcast photo, I feel like calling out in true pantomime style “Behind you!!!!” And it begs an answer to Comcast’s question, doesn’t it? – higher obesity rates, nature deprivation, depression, lack of social skills…..

I am not surprised nor blame the photographer for this. He or she is not the issue and may be oblivious to the harm it does to children. Indeed, as I say in the post, I think it is sad Comcast does not see the sadness in the scene. – Saxon

LInda Lehmusvirta September 24, 2014, 7:30 pm

Right on, Saxon! Unless that dates me, too. lovely pictures (yours) and insightful philosophy on what really matters for the future.

Thanks Linda – spread the word – Saxon

Gayle Madwin September 24, 2014, 7:39 pm

I kind of wonder whether the photographer did that intentionally – intentionally subverting Comcast’s message despite accepting money from them. It’s hard to understand how a professional photographer could create a photograph that makes such a powerful statement about the insanity of what’s being advertised and not even notice what kind of statement it’s making.

Well the photographer certainly did a good job of showing the insanity and I would love to think it intentional but more likely there was a crew on site with ad execs and assorted stylists who helped create the photo, oblivious (with blind eye perhaps) to the contradiction. – Saxon

Carole September 24, 2014, 8:23 pm

How will we save the world if children aren’t a part of it?
“Every child should have mud pies, grasshoppers, water bugs, tadpoles, frogs, mud turtles, elderberries, wild strawberries, acorns, chestnuts, trees to climb. Brooks to wade, water lilies, woodchucks, bats, bees, butterflies, various animals to pet, hayfields, pine-cones, rocks to roll, sand, snakes, huckleberries and hornets; and any child who has been deprived of these has been deprived of the best part of…education”
-Luther Burbank

Thanks Carole that quote is a keeper. – Saxon

Lisa at Greenbow September 25, 2014, 6:36 am

I so agree with you. It is sad that children have no real life now. So few go out of doors to experience life as it should be.

Several folks on my Facebook page pointed out that at least the kids are outdoors instead of inside watching the screen, and maybe that is a tiny, tiny victory for some kids, but the overall unintended message of the ad is encouraging the media not the outdoors “as it should be”. Thanks Lisa – Saxon

Lisa - Ontario September 25, 2014, 8:07 am

this is so incredibly sad. We used to see it all the time when we went to camp grounds. People would even bring their satellites. Now we have a cottage and the electronics are not allowed out of the vehicle to go in the outdoors or the cottage itself.

We must get used to this sort of thing I suppose. When I hike in some out wonderful State Parks nearby, I am stunned by the number of young people walking miles from the trailhead with music blaring out of some portable device. – Saxon

commonweeder September 25, 2014, 8:09 am

We also have to influence the young families around us who often think they are doing the best thing when they give their very young children every electronic advantage. Some even feel the outdoors is dangerous somehow. It is amazing to wonder how we got ourselves to this place.

Well I think the media put us in this place, scaring us that the outdoors is dangerous and the indoors is more entertaining. Indeed it is the parents who need to figure ways and find precious time to spend with their precious children out of doors. A garden is a great start isn’t it ? – Saxon

Jean Marsh September 25, 2014, 9:03 am

Yay… perfect, and I couldn’t agree more, But parents also MUST take responsibility for the way their children spend their time – and the temptation to allow electronics to “baby-sit” is really the bigger problem here I think.

The electronic babysitter is certainly the bigger problem. Not news to this Waldorf parent. But the fact that this ad’s image celebrates the electronic hypnotism in a tent seems over the top. – Saxon

Doug September 26, 2014, 11:32 am

I was appalled and disgusted by Comcast’s ad. I was going to write about it, but you did a great job, so I’m linking to this!
(basically what I wrote on FB, except changing the pronoun)

Cynthia, aka Gaia gardener September 28, 2014, 4:17 pm

I totally agree, Saxon! I worked part time as a naturalist for many year and, about 20 years ago, started to see elementary school kids visiting our nature center that didn’t know the difference between a wasp and a beetle. All bugs scared them silly, no matter how cool or innocuous.

There’s a great book out by Richard Louv, Last Child in the Woods, which discusses this issue and has some excellent suggestions. With grown kids (and no grandchildren…yet), I wasn’t sure that I wanted to read it, but I was very glad I did. It’s become a classic for a reason.

Thanks for this post. We ALL need to help get kids back outside and exploring, where they belong.

Jeff Morgan October 1, 2014, 7:43 pm

You are so right. i CAN REMEMBER WHEN i CAMPED OUT IN THE BACKYARD OF MY BEST FRIEND’S HOUSE, AND WE WANTED TO BRING DOWN A LONG EXTENSION CORD AND LUG OUT HIS b&w tv. wHEN HIS DAD FOUND OUT WHAT WE WERE DOING, HE PUT A STOP TO IT AND LIMITED US TO A BATTERY OPERATED RADIO AND A FLASHLIGHT. hE SAID IF WE WANTED BOOKS OR GAMES, THAT WAS OK, BUT CAMPING DIDN’T INCLUDE WATCHING TV. gREAT POST!

[shareaholic app=”recommendations” id=”13070491″]

1 Shares
Share
Tweet
Pin1
Share