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7th June 2022
01:16pm BST

Speaking to GoodtoKnow, child psychologist Emma Citron explains how she doesn't see a problem with it: "I would say there are worst things to try and stop them from seeing. We need to accept the fact that youngsters are watching inappropriate content already – it’s not ideal but it happens, and I think this is a battle that probably is not worth fighting.
"According to a 2016 study by Middlesex University, about 53 per cent of 11 to 16-year-olds have seen explicit material online, and nearly all of whom (94 per cent) had seen it by 14.
"It’s about getting into a conversation and communicating with our youngsters as in saying “watch this as a comedy show if you really want to but this tells us nothing actually about relationships at all'".
My two cents? It's not the boobs and bums I'd be worried about, more the flagrant gaslighting, the loyalty vacuum and the hero worshiping of some of the most awful men to ever exist.
It's a no from me.Explore more on these topics: