Teens’ Perception of Normal

whoo hoo last saturday night

About half of teenagers’ social media posts refer to drinking, sex, or violence, according to Megan Moreno, an assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. That discovery, which was reported earlier this year, left Moreno wondering if all that chatter was reality or trash talk. She’s still working on answering that question, but she has found out this: Kids do think that what they see on social media sites is real, and the younger they are, the more they believe it. That’s important, because teenagers are powerfully influenced by the behavior of their peers.

“There is good data that if kids think their friends are drinking, they’re more likely to drink,” Moreno says. “The perception of normal is powerful.”

Moreno doesn’t yet have hard data on how much of the teenage drinking on social media sites is real. She thinks some of it is, some is nonsense, and some is a “gesture of intention”—that is, a teen may be thinking of getting into the drinking scene and is testing the waters by putting up pictures or writing about it.

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About angelgibson

I am a former big ad agency brand planner, running footloose and fancy-free through the streets of New York City. I read all those huge research reports that explain how and why consumers love or are indifferent to particular brands, the types of messaging that make them break out in night sweats, and the ONE thing you are not doing that your customers really wish you would. I read a lot of other stuff too. I write custom reports, design proprietary research, basically help my smart and fabulous clients become even more so.

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