YOUNG WOMEN RESPOND TO PM’S ANNOUNCEMENT TO PILOT THE AGE RATING OF ONLINE MUSIC VIDEOS | Rewind Reframe ]
We at Rewind&Reframe are encouraged by David Cameron’s decision to trial age ratings on online music videos. It is great to see that the government, together with other stakeholders, are beginning to recognise the potential harm some music videos can cause through their – often sexist and racist – content. We are also pleased that Cameron has acknowledged that the internet should not be exempt from the rules followed by offline media, where age ratings are commonly used to alert consumers of their graphic content.
However, we are disappointed that the Prime Minister is describing the age ratings trial as a way “to help parents protect their children from some of the graphic content in online music videos”. Whilst this is an admirable goal, we do not agree with the view that music videos – many of which propagate negative stereotypes of women and people of colour – can only be harmful to children.
As a group of young women, we firmly believe that everyone in society is affected by the stereotypes which underpin sexist and racist behaviours. In particular, young people often find themselves bombarded with media that portray women as passive sex objects, use women of colour as hyper-sexual, exoticised props and portray men as hyper-masculine. Most young people have not been taught in school how to think critically about the media they are consuming and are therefore ill-equipped to question the messages that racist and sexist music videos give out.
Age ratings are certainly a step forward in that they will give parents greater power over their children’s viewing habits. They will also give older viewers more information regarding the content of a video and help them to decide whether or not they want to watch it. We hope that the pilot will spark a broader conversation about the messages that are being sent out by a form of media which is all too often dismissed as harmless. Ultimately, we need to broaden the way we think about the harm that music videos can cause, and empower young people to understand what the music videos they watch every day are telling them about ‘race’, gender, class and sexuality and how to challenge those messages.
“I’d like to ask Mr Cameron – at what age is it acceptable for us to view music videos which depict people of colour as playthings for white people and women as sex toys for men? An age ratings system is a step forward in recognising the harm done by these apparently innocuous videos which subtly underpin our worst prejudices, but we need to open up the conversation and ask everyone to think more critically about what the music videos we consume say about power relations between different groups of people.” – Rowena, age 25
“At first I was a little bit disturbed by the angle Mr. Cameron took when he announced this new pilot scheme. It had a very unsettling classical patriarchal feel to it; of him as the head of the household keeping an eye on what is being watched in his household – which in all fairness is a part of being a parent. For me this is about people, particularly young people, being more conscious about what they are watching. I would like to see the narrative shifted from a focus of parental control to a conversation about agency, media literacy, critical reflection, sexism, racism and the choices we make.” – Pauline, age 24, @ThePauzi
“Cameron’s decision shouldn’t be to do with parents ease it should be to spread awareness and educate followers of these media products about the immorality and inequality in so many mainstream music videos. I am however glad a step has been made in the right direction whether it be for the right reasons yet or not.” – Natasha, age 20, @NatashaKalantar



