Superheroes Movies Set Bad Example, Says Psychologist

Logan Westbrook

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Feb 21, 2008
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Superheroes Movies Set Bad Example, Says Psychologist



Apparently it's not just videogames that are setting a bad example for kids, superheroes must shoulder some of the blame as well.

To most people, superheroes would be a pretty good bunch to emulate, but psychologist Dr. Sharon Lamb of the University of Massachusetts says that modern superheroes, especially those found in movies, aren't as good role models as you might first think.

Speaking at the annual convention of the American Psychological Association, Lamb said that modern superheroes were too much like action heroes: sarcastic, aggressive, and violent. "When not in superhero costume," she said. "These men, like Iron Man, exploit women, flaunt bling and convey their manhood with high-powered guns."

Lamb said that the superheroes of the past were much better role models for young people, referencing Superman and the original Green Lantern as particularly good examples, because they had been invented to fight for social justice during the rise of fascism. Lamb added that when these older heroes were out of their costumes, they were real people with real problems and vulnerabilities, and this was much better than modern heroes who she said only thought about themselves.

I can't help but feel that Lamb doesn't quite get superheroes. While modern tales are certainly more violent than those of the thirties and forties, that's just the result of changing standards over the years. Similarly, the very overt moral messages of older comics would just seem mawkish and insincere now. The characters are more nuanced now, and less "pure," but the core concept - extraordinary people going out of their way to help others - remains the same.

Source: The Telegraph [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/7941690/Superheroes-send-out-wrong-message-to-boys.html]


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ultimateownage

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Feb 11, 2009
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Wait, who ever thought a superhero was a good role model? That's a stupid idea, what kind of role model is that? Iron Man is a good role model because he teaches kids that murder is okay, has long has the person he is murdering is immoral? Wolverine teaches kids that it's okay to kill people if they are threatening you, even if they are doing it out of fear of you?
 

Svenparty

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Jan 13, 2009
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I think Dr.Lamb should go back to Rapture....If anything the genre needs more bling flaunting women exploiting and manhood conveying superheroes(Usually it's only villians like Charlie Sheen) .
 

JourneyThroughHell

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Sep 21, 2009
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This is one of the stupidest things I've heard all week. I mean, come on. They can at least try to come up with believable crap.
Seriously, "superheroes were much better in your time"? That's fairly pathetic.
 

ironlordthemad

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chemicalreaper said:
What is it with these idiots going after everything they can possibly blame. If this woman is of an older generation, isn't she partly to blame for not properly raising the current generation?

Especially if she was a kid / teen in the 60's and 70's -- that was all about youth rebellion.

Stop blaming awesome stuff for societies problems. It's bad parenting, apathy, and political figureheads who are to blame.
Can I hug you chemicalreaper? I feel like I owe you at least 1 hug for putting my point accross before I could do it. Its like people who blame lady gaga for over sexualising the youth of today. Its not lady gaga's fault, its the parents fault for letting them listen to her.
 

II2

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Svenparty said:
I think Dr.Lamb should go back to Rapture....If anything the genre needs more bling flaunting women exploiting and manhood conveying superheroes(Usually it's only villians like Charlie Sheen) .
Ninja'd!

Was going to say something about Sophia Lamb and her damn utopian super heroes. ;)
 

Svenparty

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II2 said:
Svenparty said:
I think Dr.Lamb should go back to Rapture....If anything the genre needs more bling flaunting women exploiting and manhood conveying superheroes(Usually it's only villians like Charlie Sheen) .
Ninja'd!

Was going to say something about Sophia Lamb and her damn utopian super heroes. ;)

"Ryan saw the individual as a HERO, a noble survivor. And Rapture was his paradise; a shrine to the supremacy of the self. The result? Slavery, genocide, chaos. Now that the tyrant is dead we are a true collective, a single family." -Dr Lamb


This proves that she is the same person because she rejects the idea of the Hero
 

Rarhnor

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I actually agree with Dr. Lamb.

Todays heroes, DO come off more selfish and exploiting. It is indeed very easy to look back at the older days, and see better suited rolemodel. Back then, they WERE infact created to BE rolemodels, instead of an icon.
 

Casual Shinji

Should've gone before we left.
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Jul 18, 2009
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Dr. Lamb is actually a pretty good name for a super hero.

...To the Copyright-mobil!
 
Jun 7, 2010
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i think the modern superhero she described is wrong but could be applied to tony stark in the first iron man film.

also, a young kid doesn't want to be tony stark, clark kent or peter parker. they want to be iron man, superman and spiderman. so i think her point is pretty much irrelevent and seems to be fuelled by the same paranoia that makes uneducated 40 year old mothers assume that video games cause school shootings.
 

stabnex

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She's probably being paid to say it by the same people who are attacking McDonalds for their Marvell toys.
 

Woodsey

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HOLY SHIT!

You mean to say superhero films present (mostly male) characters who are inherently flawed, who are therefore relatable in some way to the majority of the audience?

Quick, someone stop children viewing these films before they realise that everyone's got issues!
 

Frequen-Z

Resident Batman fanatic.
Apr 22, 2009
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Pff, it's not Batman's fault I'm a social recluse with people problems who fights crime.
 

Kialee

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God forbid we teach our children to dress up in brightly-colored Spandex uniforms and punch animal-themed supervillains in the groin!
 

Jack and Calumon

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Dec 29, 2008
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Super heroes are not the reason for Chav culture in England. I want to blame football, but that would be predictable, so instead I'll blame the rap music. Actually, that's a little predictable too with N-Dubz and Tinchy Strider acting hard in front of a camera and on a mic, so instead I'll blame archaic art, as that might have something to do with this if you spent enough time linking it with other things.

For example, I can link any topic you throw at me with food. It's easy, which is why I don't take too many reports too seriously.

Calumon: I thought people wanted to be the hero, not the person? I don't want to work for a shouty man with a moustache in a newspaper in a smelly flat.
 

Zeromaeus

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Rarhnor said:
I actually agree with Dr. Lamb.

Todays heroes, DO come off more selfish and exploiting. It is indeed very easy to look back at the older days, and see better suited rolemodel. Back then, they WERE infact created to BE rolemodels, instead of an icon.
Now they're made to be more human, more believable. Not to mention perfection is boring. ONly a hero with flaws can become compelling.
 

Outright Villainy

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Woodsey said:
HOLY SHIT!

You mean to say superhero films present (mostly male) characters who are inherently flawed, who are therefore relatable in some way to the majority of the audience?

Quick, someone stop children viewing these films before they realise that everyone's got issues!
Exactly. Any super hero that could be umambiguously called a "Role model" is guaranteed to be boring as fuck, and completely unrelatable to anyone remotely human.

Gah, this role model thing always pisses me off...