Are Children Slaves To The Media?
FEATURES
- Who Is a Mormon? by Christopher D. Cunningham
- 746 Times: What a Word Cloud Revealed About the April 2026 General Conference by Patrick D. Degn
- Broadway’s Last Acceptable Bigotry by Joel Campbell
- An Experiment in Prayer: Ocean to Ice by Mike Loveridge
- Shamar: What It Means to “Keep” the Commandments in Hebrew by Steve Densley, Jr.
- What Joseph Smith Saw in Exodus That We’ve Been Missing by Alvin H. Andrew
- (Re)Discovering Lorenzo Ghiberti’s “Gates of Paradise” at the BYU Museum of Art by John Dye
- “All Things Point Us to the Savior’s Atonement”–Come Follow Me Podcast #19: Exodus 35-40; Leviticus 1; 4; 16; 19 by Scot and Maurine Proctor
- When You Only Have Five Minutes to Get Out by Carolyn Nicolaysen
- When Symbols Become Idols: Remembering What Points Us to Christ by Spencer Anderson
















Comments | Return to Story
Scott HFebruary 12, 2015
Media abuse is often simply a symptom of deeper family relationship problems. These same kinds of problems existed before the era of modern media technologies. It's just that the symptoms presented themselves in different ways. Given that media is so omnipresent in our culture, its usage patterns can provide easily observable insights into family relationship health.
ADD A COMMENT