Local
kids give views on Phoenix DJ
Adeline
Wider
|
Kids at Rockwood
South Middle School took note last month when Phoenix DJ Beau
Doran made a rude phone call to the widow of Cardinal pitcher
Darryl Kile. In letters to the editor, the kids called him
a "jerk" or worse.
Seven-grade students
in teacher Allison Seitz's language arts class often have
discussions about things that show up in the news. Then, they
write editorials or letters to the editor to express their
ideas about the situations.
Young Saint
Louis.com received copies of some of the letters. We've
reproduced some of them in this edition. (To read the letters,
click here.)
In addition, YSL.com
interviewed the letter writers on their views on personal
cruelty. We also asked about the line between funny and cruel
in their own words and actions.
Before we give
their views, some background:
Maggie
Blume
|
DJ Doran is what
some people call a "shock jock" radio announcer.
They are hired to be controversial because their station managers
think that builds a bigger audience.
Last month, the
baseball Cardinals were in Phoenix for a post-season series
with the defending world champion Arizona Diamondbacks. During
the season, Cardinal players said the memory of their star
pitcher helped them play harder.
The Cardinals
invited Kile's widow, Flynn, to be with the team during the
playoffs. Just before the second game, Doran called Flynn
Kile at her hotel. He told her he thought she was "hot"
and asked if she had a date for the game.
Cardinal Manager
Tony LaRussa took exception, calling it crude. He and others
asked the station to discipline Doran. Soon, the incident
was being talked about all over the country.
Melissa
Haley
|
Doran's radio
station responded. First, they got Doran to apologize and
suspended him. Later, as the protests continued, they fired
him.
Twelve-year-old
Adeline Wider admits she listens to some "shock jock"
announcers on St. Louis radio stations. She said some "pranks"
are funny but "sometimes they go too far."
She admits her
efforts to be funny sometimes backfire. "I made what
I thought was a funny comment about a girl's clothes. But,
she thought she was well dressed."
She added that
most of the time she follows her parents' advice on good manners.
She added, "They said, 'If I know it would hurt my feelings,
I shouldn't say it at all.'"
Twelve-year-old
Maggie Blume said, "Being funny is when you are laughing
with someone. Being cruel is when you are making fun of them."
Curt
Singer
|
Maggie thinks
she has a good sense of humor, but admits that sometimes another
person may not think she's funny. "It happens all the
time with my Mom. I try to make jokes but she takes it seriously,"
she said.
Twelve-year-old
Melissa Haley said she learned good manners from her parents.
She said she usually gets instructions before she goes to
someone else's house. "If I don't behave, I have to go
back and apologize to them," she added.
Thirteen-year-old
Curt Singer said cruel is "when someone is sad about
something and you make fun of it." He said he can tell
when he's over the line between funny and cruel.
Curt said he learned
a lot about manners in school. "In elementary school,
they were really big on it with the Manners Matter program."
Melissa
Keating
|
Thirteen-year-old
Melissa Keating also mentioned the Manners Matter program.
"It was pretty cool. People would wait to hear who won
the monthly award. You went to the office and got a medal."
She said she won a monthly good conduct award three times.
She said the secret
to treating others well is thinking before you speak. "Cruel
is when you're rude to someone," she said. To avoid that,
she said, "That's where the whole 'watch what you say'
idea comes in."
Twelve-year-old
Courtney Redman remembered one time when an attempt to be
funny backfired. She said she was at a birthday party sleep-over.
Some girls put clothes that little girls use when they play
"dress up" over one girl while she slept.
"She was
really mad when she woke up," Courtney said. She said
the line between funny and cruel is "when something is
normally funny until that person gets emotionally upset."
Courtney
Redman
|
Teacher Seitz
said the kids were "pretty much split" over what
should be done to DJ Doran after his phone call. "Some
thought he should be fired but others thought he was just
doing what he was paid to do," she said.