Ban the use of Addictive Techniques from Childrens Media

Nowadays, producers of Children’s content spend more time devising ways to abuse childrens dopamine receptors than ensuring they are creating quality, constructive content.

There is a plethora of research backing the fact that the addictive techniques they abuse (rapidly changing scenes and camera angles, bright flashing colors sequences and so on) are detrimental to developing brains and are powerful contributors toward lifelong behavioral diorders.

Due to the damaging effect this has on our youth, something needs to be done to curb these practices and to hopefully return to a time where producers of childrens media once again need to depend on the quality of their content instead blending deceptively addictive psychiatric techniques into their video editing.

I don’t have the complete answer, but at minimum a warning should be required at the beginning of every episode advising that the addictive techniques are utilized in the production of said content or, even better, would be to require retroactive edits to remove the techniques from existing content.

This is easily within rights of the first ammendment as it doesn’t require any change in what is said, only the techniques used to present it.

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And adults