I am a loyal viewer to your show and have enjoyed spending time watching it with my 11 year old daughter for quite some time now. Excuse me if this letter rubs off as harsh and demanding, but I would like to get straight to the point with the hopes that the matter be taken care of as soon as possible. A couple of nights ago I was in the kitchen preparing dinner for my daughter as she sat in the living room watching your television show. As I stood in the kitchen my daughter came up behind me and asked what does this putrid word used to describe an African American means.
After I cooled my initial anger over the derogatory word down I calmly asked her who she heard such a remark from. I assumed she heard it from another kid at school so I reached for my pocket to grab my phone with a trigger happy finger ready to call whoever the young child’s …show more content…
I suggest we teach our children in such a way that promotes and spreads that positivity and bring to an end the negativity; that stop begins with the removal of the foul material your show has put forth from off the air. As it stands at this moment this episode adds unnecessary roadblocks in the aspiration to adequately educate kids. With the abundant amount of diversity we are confronted with we have the golden opportunity to “benefit from one another's wisdom and experiences” no matter the color of one’s skin and background (Gonzalez-Mena and Tobiassen). So again I urge you to remove this particular episode of negative commentary from viewing so that we are able to directly affect are children attitude on ethnic differences in a positive manner.
Works Cited
Gonzalez-Mena, Janet, Dora Pulido-Tobiassen. “Teaching Diversity: A Place to Begin.” Beta.scholastic.com. Scholastics Inc, n.d. Web. 06 Jan 2017.
Van Ausdale, Debra, Joe R. Feagin. The First R: How Children Learn Race and Racism. Lanham: Roman & Littlefield Pub, 2001.