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So what about the, ahem, racier moments of the show? Like the recent
episode devoted to Madonna, in which a montage set to "Like a Virgin" showed
three couples beginning sexual interludes in which one person was about to
lose said virginity? "We're not living in the '50s," says Morrison. "Kids know about sex. It's out there. For some kids, things will go above their heads, but if questions come up, I think we can create an opportunity for kids to create a dialogue with their parents." In fact, he says, "Glee" can be a parenting tool. That's what Jonathan Smith uses it for. He was one of the parents at New York's Hunter College Elementary School who participated in the recent e-mail discussion over whether "Glee" was appropriate for fifth-graders. "My response was, we use it as an opportunity to discuss the issues as they come up," says Smith, whose sons are 11 and 14. "With our boys, it's sometimes hard to start a discussion on a topic like sex or drug use, or other potentially icky stuff. It's nice when it comes up organically." Smith's sons were big fans of "High School Musical," he says, but grew out of it quickly. "'Glee' has better characters, and more conflict," he says. "Life is messy. I like that they get into some real issues in a messy way."
Unprotected sex, for example. A few parents report having had the unpleasant experience of their tweens asking exactly how one might get pregnant in a hot tub. But both Smith and Bienstock point to the educational potential in the story line of Quinn, the blonde, beautiful, popular cheerleader who gets knocked up, decides to carry her baby and is thrown out of her home by her father. "We've talked extensively about the ramifications of teenage pregnancy," says Bienstock, "and the episode where Quinn's father kicked her out of the house. Bottom line is, even though I have problems with the show, it does raise some issues that we talk about and in that way, it's a positive experience." Will the show get even edgier? Executive producer Brad Falchuk says no. "That hot tub scene, and the Madonna episode -- that's as edgy as it's gonna get," promises Falchuk, who created the show along with Ryan Murphy. Falchuk says he came into "Glee" wanting to create something that his sister-in-law in Syracuse, N.Y., could watch with her 14-year-old daughter
-- together -- "and not feel uncool." "But we didn't know 9-year-olds would like it so much," he acknowledges. "We didn't know the geriatric set would like it so much, either. I wish we knew how we did it." Falchuk says the show hasn't gotten any angry calls or letters about its content. The Parents Television Council, though, recommends the show only for viewers above 16. Falchuk says it's been tempting to get edgier, but the producers keep parents in mind. "We've had moments in script meetings where we say, 'That's really funny, but you know what? That's more than we told people we'd give them,'" he says. The bottom line, he says: "We want to give people something safe they can watch with their kids. Enjoy it! We have your back."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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