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Is your child's "sex education" secretly coming from free, violent online pornography?
Kate Mason and podcast producer Liz Keen, creator of The Reality Of podcast, joins us to uncover the shocking truth that children as young as eight, nine, and ten are accidentally, or intentionally, stumbling upon highly explicit content, citing the average age of first exposure in Australia as 13.
Liz reveals the most dangerous piece of content young people are consuming: the widespread depiction of acts like strangulation that is bleeding directly into real-life teenage sex, often without consent or knowledge of the severe, silent health risks, and argues that parents must overcome their discomfort to provide proactive, non-shaming education before the internet does.
Listen For
5:24 How common is it for young children to be viewing pornography
6:34 What shocking pornographic content are young people actually seeing
11:15 What is the average age that Australian kids are seeing explicit content
28:13 How can parents overcome the awkwardness of talking to their kids about sex and porn
35:48 Is my child seeing porn if I haven't mentioned it to them yet
Leave a rating/review for this podcast with one click
Connect with guest:Liz Keen, Podcast Strategy | Podcast Production | Media Consultant | SXSW Speaker
LinkedIn | Website | YouTube | Instagram | Facebook
Contact Kate:
Email | Website | Kate’s Book on Amazon | LinkedIn | Facebook | X
By Kate Mason, Stories and Strategies5
77 ratings
Is your child's "sex education" secretly coming from free, violent online pornography?
Kate Mason and podcast producer Liz Keen, creator of The Reality Of podcast, joins us to uncover the shocking truth that children as young as eight, nine, and ten are accidentally, or intentionally, stumbling upon highly explicit content, citing the average age of first exposure in Australia as 13.
Liz reveals the most dangerous piece of content young people are consuming: the widespread depiction of acts like strangulation that is bleeding directly into real-life teenage sex, often without consent or knowledge of the severe, silent health risks, and argues that parents must overcome their discomfort to provide proactive, non-shaming education before the internet does.
Listen For
5:24 How common is it for young children to be viewing pornography
6:34 What shocking pornographic content are young people actually seeing
11:15 What is the average age that Australian kids are seeing explicit content
28:13 How can parents overcome the awkwardness of talking to their kids about sex and porn
35:48 Is my child seeing porn if I haven't mentioned it to them yet
Leave a rating/review for this podcast with one click
Connect with guest:Liz Keen, Podcast Strategy | Podcast Production | Media Consultant | SXSW Speaker
LinkedIn | Website | YouTube | Instagram | Facebook
Contact Kate:
Email | Website | Kate’s Book on Amazon | LinkedIn | Facebook | X

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