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Turn Off the Television
How Turning the TV Off
Can Help You Tune In By Mark Stackpole
Can Help You Tune In
Robert Kesten wants you to turn off your television. This is not too surprising considering he is the executive director of TV-Turnoff Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to encouraging healthy lifestyles, functional families and vibrant communities.
As a part of achieving its mission, TV-Turnoff Network sponsors the annual TV-Turnoff Week in April. "With the average American family having the television on for eight hours and 40 minutes per day, it is essential that we break that bond to the screen and reintroduce ourselves to our family and friends," says Kesten.

TV-Turnoff Network wants to encourage people to use technology more responsibly and reap the benefits of being more active and involved in their own lives. The TV-Turnoff Week and other activities sponsored by the TV-Turnoff Network are intended to be wakeup calls. "Each and every one of us can still make this a better world, just by talking to each other, face-to-face," says Kesten. "I hope, this coming April, that people will discover people once again."
The influence of media viewing is undeniable. "There is 40 years of research showing the influence of TV on all of us, not just kids," says Kathleen Hart, a child and adolescent psychologist at Xavier University in Cincinnati, Ohio. Much of that research has focused specifically on the role of violence on TV and other media such as video games. Repeated viewing of violent acts can desensitize us to them, and, in some cases, may lead to copycat behavior. "With children, this imitation is often done with little or no concern for the consequences of the behavior," says Hart. "So children will imitate violence, sassy language and sexual activity."


