Parents shouldn’t have to guess what’s going on
Having cameras follow you around in high school would have been kind
of fun -- for a high school student.
It also could have given parents an idea of some of the issues
their kids deal with, even if just a small percentage.
Regardless, they won’t be coming to the campus. The school board
pleased naysayers on Feb. 4 by ending any deal with MTV -- the cable
TV channel that made its name showing music videos but has become
just as renowned for its reality and shock programming.
School board members said they decided not to sign because of
contract changes they had asked for in negotiations that weren’t
made, giving them the feeling that they didn’t have enough control.
Too late.
Some parents contended the board was not open with its intentions
and that they didn’t find out until about two weeks ago that a
contract was about to be signed. Some students said the negotiations
with MTV had been common knowledge since the fall.
The problem is, there shouldn’t be a question of when who knew
what. The school board should have been extremely vocal from the
beginning about what exactly MTV wanted and what they were hoping to
negotiate for.
And guess what? Perhaps we’ve been played. MTV has been doing this
a long time -- they know how communities work. It likely occurred to
them that the further along they got in their contracts, the less
likely the district would be to back out, not to mention the students
they could get to sign the contracts to participate.
If they were afraid that MTV wouldn’t enter negotiations unless
the public was kept out of the loop, that should have been a good
sign to the school board that the parents they were supposed to be
representing might have been what MTV feared.
Why would they fear parents? Because parents are protective of
their kids -- even at the cost of fame and money.
Next time, when all that money is dangled in front of you (albeit
for a good cause), take a good hard look at what they’re hoping for
in exchange.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.