Game of Thrones-How old should you be to watch it?

I know this is an old post, but I am kind of shocked! Do parents really monitor what their kids are allowed to watch this much?

Not trying to judge at all, I just grew up very differently so it isn't something I'm used to. I can't talk as a parent, but as someone who was a teenager not too long ago, my parents NEVER monitored what we were watching. I grew up watching movies and TV shows with them that contained violence, gore, sex, etc. and neither of us ever batted an eye. Heck, I was the one who started watching GoT in my family and then got my mom hooked on it, so we started watching it together.

In my opinion, and based off of people I grew up with, parents need to give their kids some space. If you really think they don't know about these things already, they most likely do. While GoT is more violent and sexual than most shows, these are things teenagers need to know about. The kids I knew in high school whose parents tried to shelter them or control what they watched/did were usually more naive and also the ones who acted out and did more risky things to rebel. They also did not feel like they could talk to their parents about certain important topics because of situations like this.

I really believe the reason I am so comfortable talking to my mom about ANYTHING is because my parents were never concerned about exposing us to topics like this a kids. Had they tried to keep me from watching or learning about these kinds of topics, I definitely would not be as comfortable talking to them about my relationship or sex or violence.

IMO, all extreme views are usually unhealthy. I agree that teens need to know about sex and violence, but what's wrong with doing gradually? Is it necessary to expose them to something as extreme as GOT at such a young age?

As for giving kids some space...I have a cousin who wouldn't let her 14 year old see "The day after tomorrow". This child was brilliant and quite mature, but her mother...oh, her mother had been a wild child so she kept the daughter on a short leach. I felt so bad for her. Now, that's not giving a child space. I would not put GOT anywhere near that category
 
IMO, all extreme views are usually unhealthy. I agree that teens need to know about sex and violence, but what's wrong with doing gradually? Is it necessary to expose them to something as extreme as GOT at such a young age?

As for giving kids some space...I have a cousin who wouldn't let her 14 year old see "The day after tomorrow". This child was brilliant and quite mature, but her mother...oh, her mother had been a wild child so she kept the daughter on a short leach. I felt so bad for her. Now, that's not giving a child space. I would not put GOT anywhere near that category

I agree, and I think I may have worded it wrong is saying what I meant was giving them space with GoT. I guess I just believe that a high school aged child should be more than able to handle watching things of this nature. While maybe they haven't seen these violent and sexual things before, they definitely should know about them already. As sad as it is, the things they portray in the show (violence, rape, etc.) are things that go on at many high schools nowadays. Although they may not be to the extent of the show, we hear these stories on the news all the time. Is it wrong? Of course. But you can't deny it and you can't hide from it. Any younger, sure I can understand not allowing to watch. But high school, really!? I would much rather my children be watching these shows while they are at home and able to ask me questions about it than not be exposed to it until college when they are away from me. Again, I probably just think this way because of how I was raised and how easy going my parents were.
 
OOOO A zombie thread. You know what that means. But because this is a game of thrones zombie thread, we decided to poll some very special zombie creators , the white walkers.

We asked 10 white walkers whether children should watch game of thrones.
6 out of 10 of them said we should bring them to a certain altar and let them watch.
3 out of 10 white walkers said they would pack up the kids and head as far south as possible.
One out of 10 asked us who we were rooting for. All the white walkers listened intently. So naturally I answered The white walkers of course. Every last human in the show deserves it. While they were cheering and carrying on, we thought it prudent to end the survey and leave.
 

Old enough that they can read the books WITHOUT a dictionary! ;)

Ooooh, that could be setting the bar a bit low!

My daughter read (and re-read, multiple times) the Lord of the Rings trilogy when she was in senior kindergarten and saw Peter Jackson's Fellowship of the Ring in the theatre when she was five.

But, I'd have drawn the line at letting her either read or watch the Game of Thrones at that age.

Gotta have some parenting standards, after all! :rotfl2:
 
Ooooh, that could be setting the bar a bit low!

My daughter read (and re-read, multiple times) the Lord of the Rings trilogy when she was in senior kindergarten and saw Peter Jackson's Fellowship of the Ring in the theatre when she was five.

But, I'd have drawn the line at letting her either read or watch the Game of Thrones at that age.

Gotta have some parenting standards, after all! :rotfl2:

I use the dictionary example because I was a very advanced reader. In Kindergarten the others were sounding out "Cat in the Hat" and I was made to sit in the corner silently and read my National Geographic magazines.
By fifth grade I was plowing through the "People of...." series by Kathleen and W. Michael Gear. By sixth grade I had devoured everything Stephen King up to his current publishing. Seventh grade I started digging into Charles Dickens.

Without doubt I was exposed to ... .interesting situations... that I often had to ask my mother about. I learned pretty quickly that asking questions resulted in whatever book series it was being taken away from me. So I defaulted to carrying a thesaurus and a dictionary with me so I didn't have to have awkward conversations with adults.

No I didn't have the emotional experience to understand what the characters were going through until many years later, but I definitely understood the implications and the historical context! And my mother realized that she could not control my content but she COULD control the system of values I was taught. I like to think the values stuck with me, but my interest in a LOT of franchises & series with graphic content appeal to me less and less.

Personally I feel that the Torture Gore genre has done more damage to society's psyche than any violent war scene or sexual encounter. Really how could one even begin to call the "Saw" movie franchise entertainment? YMMV!
 
Never mind. Old thread that I likely already responded to.
 
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I use the dictionary example because I was a very advanced reader. In Kindergarten the others were sounding out "Cat in the Hat" and I was made to sit in the corner silently and read my National Geographic magazines.
By fifth grade I was plowing through the "People of...." series by Kathleen and W. Michael Gear. By sixth grade I had devoured everything Stephen King up to his current publishing. Seventh grade I started digging into Charles Dickens.

Without doubt I was exposed to ... .interesting situations... that I often had to ask my mother about. I learned pretty quickly that asking questions resulted in whatever book series it was being taken away from me. So I defaulted to carrying a thesaurus and a dictionary with me so I didn't have to have awkward conversations with adults.

No I didn't have the emotional experience to understand what the characters were going through until many years later, but I definitely understood the implications and the historical context! And my mother realized that she could not control my content but she COULD control the system of values I was taught. I like to think the values stuck with me, but my interest in a LOT of franchises & series with graphic content appeal to me less and less.

Personally I feel that the Torture Gore genre has done more damage to society's psyche than any violent war scene or sexual encounter. Really how could one even begin to call the "Saw" movie franchise entertainment? YMMV!

My mileage doesn't vary much from yours, on this topic.

I think, however, that GofT is fine for your typical sixteen year old. Possibly a couple years younger, depending on the child. But it would not be fine for a five year old, regardless of whether they could read the books or not.

The thing that made the Lord of the Rings acceptable to me was the moral clarity of the story. There is good and evil and the distinction between the two is very clear. Her kindergarten teacher disagreed, telling me that the child should not be reading stories with adult characters. Then she went up to the sixth grade classroom to find a more "appropriate" book. She came back with "The Afternoon of the Elves", and gave it to my daughter. Unfortunately, she clearly hadn't read the book herself, and was just going off the fact that it was a Newbery winner. Sad to say, it had no elves and was actually about child abuse and mental illness and it made my daughter cry. Buckets. I was highly irritated with her teacher, because the truth was my daughter could happily handle epic fantasy battles, but she was in NO way ready to contemplate her mother having to be sent away to a mental institution.

GofT is a gorgeous piece of storytelling, and definitely not "Torture Gore". But it also spends a great deal of time exploring morally grey areas, and most of the characters are complex and not easily defined as either good or evil, which is what in my opinion makes it inappropriate for children (far more than the fact that it contains violence or sex).

(Best "ridiculously early reader" moment? When my daughter suddenly exclaimed at her Grandma's breakfast table, while reading an Anne Macaffrey novel, "Oh, so THAT's what an orgasm is!" She was eight. :laughing:)

I don't agree with the idea, however, that society's psyche has been damaged by movies. I've seen what passed for entertainment, historically speaking, and it hasn't changed much. Heck, people used to create implements of creative torture, claiming they were used in medieval times, and would charge folks admission to their "museums". Very popular entertainment in the 1800's! (Edit: For example, there's no evidence the Iron Maiden was ever used. http://www.medievalists.net/2016/03/why-medieval-torture-devices-are-not-medieval/)
 
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No. I'm 69 years old and when I watched the first two episodes the graphic sex scenes made me extremely uncomfortable. Maybe a generational thing.
 
No. I'm 69 years old and when I watched the first two episodes the graphic sex scenes made me extremely uncomfortable. Maybe a generational thing.

I doubt it. My mother-in-law (same age as you) quite enjoyed GofT, while my daughter doesn't care for it.

I think it's more of a personal taste thing, than a generational thing.
 
I use the dictionary example because I was a very advanced reader. In Kindergarten the others were sounding out "Cat in the Hat" and I was made to sit in the corner silently and read my National Geographic magazines.
By fifth grade I was plowing through the "People of...." series by Kathleen and W. Michael Gear. By sixth grade I had devoured everything Stephen King up to his current publishing. Seventh grade I started digging into Charles Dickens.

Without doubt I was exposed to ... .interesting situations... that I often had to ask my mother about. I learned pretty quickly that asking questions resulted in whatever book series it was being taken away from me. So I defaulted to carrying a thesaurus and a dictionary with me so I didn't have to have awkward conversations with adults.

No I didn't have the emotional experience to understand what the characters were going through until many years later, but I definitely understood the implications and the historical context! And my mother realized that she could not control my content but she COULD control the system of values I was taught. I like to think the values stuck with me, but my interest in a LOT of franchises & series with graphic content appeal to me less and less.

Personally I feel that the Torture Gore genre has done more damage to society's psyche than any violent war scene or sexual encounter. Really how could one even begin to call the "Saw" movie franchise entertainment? YMMV!
I loved Stephen King in 6th grade, missed some school because I'd be up all night reading! One downside of being an early strong reader is that I would pronounce things wrong, because I would read words numerous times before hearing and speaking them. To this day, the name Nathaniel sounds like Nathan-ale. I also read all of my mom's library books (Wifey, all of the Jackie Collins books, good old 1970's smut), and my dad's Sherlock Holme's collection. Books were my internet.
 
Once kids start attending high school they are exposed to way more sex then many on this thread would like to know about. There is probably not a lot in GofT that is not in high school.

So shooting a prostitute with a bow and arrow is in high schools? Incest? Rape? Games of Thrones is much more about sexual violence than it is about sex. I stopped watching it with the Ramsey Bolton torture scenes. There is no chance I could have handled it at 16, none. But I was sensitive and extremely bothered by things.
 
So shooting a prostitute with a bow and arrow is in high schools? Incest? Rape? Games of Thrones is much more about sexual violence than it is about sex. I stopped watching it with the Ramsey Bolton torture scenes. There is no chance I could have handled it at 16, none. But I was sensitive and extremely bothered by things.

I haven't heard of a bow and arrow shooting at a high school but rapes happen surprisingly often. There has been two in the three years my daughter has attended high school. A nearby high school had a teacher fired who was letting students have sex in the closet in the classroom. My daughters Latin teacher was fired for having a multi year affair with a student. At the middle school level my son had to get a new social studies teacher because he was arrested for nearly beating his wife and children to death. The kids all found the arrest record on the Sheriff page and spent a lot of time talking about the teacher. I live in what would be considered a well to do area with good schools. I imagine that high schools located close to gang areas see much more sexual violence and just plain violence.

My point is that to just blindly forbid your teenage kids from seeing a show is not solving a problem. You should have a frank discussion with your kid about what is right and what is wrong, the difference between movie sex and real life sex, etc. Your house is not the only place your child will have access to content you forbid. Don't bury your head in the sand.

A quick Google finds that there has been at least one bow and arrow attack at a college in Wyoming. My daughter will be taking a couple classes at a nearby college during her senior year in high school. So there is a chance a high school kid witnessed the bow and arrow attack. Not a prostitute but I have never been one to understand how one murder can be worse than another just because of a characteristic of the victim.
https://www.theatlantic.com/nationa...and-arrow-school-shooting-now-upon-us/320965/
 
It is just strange to respond to each one with a cut and paste of the exact same thing. I don't think I have ever seen anything quite like it.

Not clear but very simple.

Yeah, that was weird.
 
I've read all the books but won't watch the show. I've seen a few episodes and the sex scenes are just too much. I would never ever consider watching it in public- and I'm not a priss. Like others have said, very graphic HBO sex!
 
I've read all the books but won't watch the show. I've seen a few episodes and the sex scenes are just too much. I would never ever consider watching it in public- and I'm not a priss. Like others have said, very graphic HBO sex!

I devoured the first three books and watched the first three seasons before the Ramsey Bolton stuff just grossed me out too much to continue. However, I follow what happens on the show through message boards and I youtube the scenes I'd like to see. It's the way I feel most comfortable doing it at this point. The violence was just too much for me.
 
I haven't heard of a bow and arrow shooting at a high school but rapes happen surprisingly often. There has been two in the three years my daughter has attended high school. A nearby high school had a teacher fired who was letting students have sex in the closet in the classroom. My daughters Latin teacher was fired for having a multi year affair with a student. At the middle school level my son had to get a new social studies teacher because he was arrested for nearly beating his wife and children to death. The kids all found the arrest record on the Sheriff page and spent a lot of time talking about the teacher. I live in what would be considered a well to do area with good schools. I imagine that high schools located close to gang areas see much more sexual violence and just plain violence.


Holy smokes...for real?! We live in an average area and that's way different than what my high school was like. :eek:
 
Holy smokes...for real?! We live in an average area and that's way different than what my high school was like. :eek:

For real.

Individual schools and especially school districts do their best to keep the stories off the front page and cover up the problem.

Kids are exposed to adult concepts at an early age. A blanket I forbid you from watching GofT is not the answer.

https://www.boston.com/news/nationa...ports-of-sexual-assaults-at-schools-across-us

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/soray...assaults-happen-before-college_b_7090492.html

https://www.usnews.com/news/article...schools-are-failing-victims-of-sexual-assault
 



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