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About Jim Liebelt

Jim is Senior Writer, Editor and Researcher for Azusa Pacific University's Center for Youth and Family. Jim has over 25 years of experience as a youth and family ministry specialist, most recently serving as Senior Editor of Publications for HomeWord. He has served over the years as a pastor, author, trainer, instructor and speaker. Jim is a contributing author of culture and parenting articles to Crosswalk.com.

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Jim Liebelt

Senior Editor of Publications for HomeWord

  • Friday, November 20, 2009
    What's Hot? 11/20/09

    Top 10 Increasing Web Searches on Bing 11/20/09

     1. black friday 2009
     2. black friday ads
     3. aolmail
     4. walmart black friday
     5. new moon
     6. target black friday
     7. top chef
     8. thanksgiving recipes
     9. gmail login page
    10. food network

    Source: Bing
    http://www.bing.com/xrank/

    Top 10 U.S. Websites - 11/20/09

     1. Google
     2. Yahoo!
     3. Facebook
     4. YouTube
     5. MySpace
     6. Wikipedia
     7. Windows Live
     8. Blogger.com
     9. eBay
    10. Craigslist.org

    Source: Alexa
    http://www.alexa.com/topsites/countries/US

    iTunes - Top 10 Downloaded Songs 11/20/09

     1. Bad Romance
               - Lady GaGa
     2. TiK ToK
               - Ke$ha
     3. Fireflies
                - Owl City
     4. Half of My Heart (w/Taylor Swift)
                - John Mayer
     5. Replay
               - lyaz
     6. Empire State of Mind
               - Jay-Z
     7. Need You Now
               - Lady Antebellum
     8. Whatcha Say
               - Jason DeRulo
     9. Party in the USA
               - Miley Cyrus
    10. Russian Roulette
               - Rihanna

    Source: Apple iTunes

    Top 10 TV Shows in Prime Time - Week ending 11/15/09

     1. NBC Sunday Night Football
     2. NCIS
     3. Dancing With The Stars
     4. CSI
     5. CMA Awards
     6. Sunday Night Football - Pre
     7. NCIS: Los Angeles
     8. Dancing w/t Stars Results
     9. The Mentalist
    10. Grey's Anatomy

    Source: Nielsen Media
    http://en-us.nielsen.com/rankings/insights/rankings/television

    Top 5 Movies - Week Ending 11/12/09

     1. A Christmas Carol (2009)
     2. Michael Jackson's This Is It
     3. The Men Who Stare at Goats
     4. The Fourth Kind
     5. Paranormal Activity

    Source: Box Office Mojo
    http://www.boxofficemojo.com/weekly/chart/

     

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  • Vampires aside, it's really just a simple love story.

    The reason teenage girls have fallen hard for the Twilight book and film series has to do with its portrayal of a traditional, romantic relationship, new research from the University of Missouri shows.

    In the series, vampire Edward Cullen doesn't want to harm or bite his teen love interest Bella Swan, which means they can't have sex.

    "With teens, we actually found that they appreciated the messages of abstinence," said Melissa Click, an assistant professor of communication who surveyed 4,000 Twilight fans, aged 11 to 70.

    Click and her co-authors' research primarily addresses the reasons behind the teenage-madness for Twilight, a four-book series with two films so far.

    The Missouri research found that many teen girls — who make up the core of Twilight's audience, along with a few moms — are drawn to the story about love beyond the physical.

    "The media environment is saturated with teens in sexual relationships," said Click, who plans to publish the findings next spring in a collaborative book Bitten by Twilight: Youth culture, media and the vampire franchise.

    "(Twilight) does provide something different for girls. I've had girls say to me, 'I'm going to wait for my Edward.' And they think that's really cool."

    Source: Vancouver Sun
    http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/Lack+attracts+teen+girls+Twilight+series+study/2238456/story.html

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  • Thursday, November 19, 2009
    Teen STD Infections Spreading at High Rates

    Latest statistics on chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis show the three highly treatable infections continue to spread in the United States.

    "Chlamydia and gonorrhea are stable at unacceptably high levels and syphilis is resurgent after almost being eliminated," said John Douglas, director of the division of sexually transmitted diseases at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    "We have among the highest rates of STDs of any developed country in the world," Douglas added in a telephone interview.

    The CDC's latest study on STDs found:

    * 1.2 million cases of chlamydia were reported in 2008, up from 1.1 million in 2007.

    * Nearly 337,000 cases of gonorrhea were reported.

    * Adolescent girls 15 to 19 years had the most chlamydia and gonorrhea cases of any age group at 409,531.

    Syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhea can all be treated with antibiotics but untreated can cause pelvic inflammatory disease, infertility, ectopic pregnancy and can infect newborns.

    Source: Reuters
    http://www.reuters.com/article/domesticNews/idUSTRE5AF14A20091116

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  • Wednesday, November 18, 2009
    Where's Your Kid?

    I was doing my regular news surfing this morning and came across a new iPhone application, iCurfew, that boasts a simple interface, allowing kids to check in with their parents via email, sending Mom or Dad an un-editable link that maps their precise location.

    The app utilizes the iPhone's GPS capabilities to generate a link with precise coordinates - and when parents receive the email, they click on the link and a map is displayed with the location of the phone.

    A positive aspect of this application is that it doesn't spy on the kid and generate the email automatically, but rather depends on the kid to identify their location (which generates the link) and then send the email.

    My mind immediately wanders over to some lousy ways this application could be used by parents which could damage trust between them and their kids.

    Also, I'm thinking that because many kids today are extremely tech saavy, if using iCurfew, they could pretty easily figure out ways to circumvent the purpose (the kid leaves their phone with a friend at the movies, who sends the check-in email, while the kid goes somewhere else, for example.) And, it seems reasonable to think that kids will come up with hacks to the application to send a false location.

    So, in terms of a parent's overall goal of keeping track of one's kids, iCurfew, might not be a good option, especially for those who are having problems and trust issues with their kids.

    But, in some circumstances, where parents and kids have an overall healthy relationship it might be a positive tool, not only for keeping track of where kids are, but helping to build accountability and responsibility in a teen's life.

    The app also has some other benefits outside of the primary purpose of checking in. For example, helping parents with precise information on where to pick up their kid, and where to meet one another, let's say when on a shopping trip at a big mall.


    In fact, I'm thinking of all of the uses it might provide for me in connecting with my wife. Like sending her my location when I'm out fishing local rivers on my own. Could provide some piece of mind for both of us. Seems like it would be well worth the $0.99 to download and use it myself.


    The application is only available for use on the iPhone.

    Source: HomeWord / Center for Youth and Family at APU

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  • Tuesday, November 17, 2009
    Students Drink More Living in Coed Dorms

    Found this interesting piece... something that parents with teens approaching the college years should keep in mind. For college students, rates of drinking and sexual activity are higher when they live in coed dorms.

    In the past 30 years, coed college dormitories have gone from rare to routine, with nearly all students who live on campus now sharing housing with members of the opposite sex.

    But a new study suggests that the shift may have had unintended results.

    It finds that students in coed dorms are far more likely than those in single-sex dorms to drink alcohol regularly - and nearly 2½ times as likely to drink to excess on a weekly basis.

    More than 90% of college dorms today house both sexes, generally separated by floors or building wings, say the study's authors - yet very little research has accompanied the change.

    The new findings, they say, suggest that colleges searching for ways to reduce binge drinking and other entrenched behaviors may consider whether the social pressures of coed housing are making matters worse.

    These students were more likely to say they'd had a sexual partner in the past year and more likely to think it's all right "for two people to get together for sex and not necessarily expect anything further," the study says.

    They were also more likely to say they drink alcohol at least weekly and far more likely to say they drink excessively on a regular basis - 41.5% reported weekly binge drinking. Among students in single-sex housing, the figure was 17.6%.

    Source: USA Today
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2009-11-17-coed17_ST_N.htm

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