A scene from the trailer for season 2 of

Stop Netflix Premiere of ’13 Reasons Why’ on May 18

Share:

The premiere date of the second season of the controversial teen series 13 Reasons Why has been set for May 18, but the American Family Association (AFA, afa.net) says there is still time to stop the show from airing.

AFA has been encouraging families to sign a petition urging Netflix to pull the second season of the series that experts say glorifies teen suicide. Nearly 59,000 have signed the petition.

AFA is also telling the tragic story of the Bright family, whose 14-year-old daughter, Anna, committed suicide just two weeks after binge-watching all 13 episodes of the program.

Several months ago, the Bright family asked AFA to help tell Anna’s story. After hearing the Brights’ plea, AFA President Tim Wildmon had sent a private letter to Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, respectfully asking for a short meeting to discuss AFA’s concerns, but the request was ignored.

Now, AFA continues to work to stop Season Two of 13 Reasons Why, advocating on behalf of the Bright family and many other families of American teenagers.

“Anna Bright was a self-taught artist, musician, writer, photographer, vocalist, beauty queen, cheerleader, scholar and friend,” according to AFA writer Rebecca Davis for AFA Journal. “But on the inside, she was fighting a deep, dark battle of which her parents had no idea and to which her peers paid little attention. She hid it behind her smile and quirky personality. Young people become desensitized to the content in 13 Reasons Why, especially when they binge-watch it, like Anna did. When they immerse themselves in it for 13 hours straight, it becomes their everyday reality, the norm. The influence of media is powerful, especially when it feeds the innate sin in one’s heart.”

Davis further reported that the show’s creative team, among them Pulitzer Prize winner Brian Yorkey and superstar Selena Gomez, claims that 13 Reasons Why is positive in purpose, bringing an anti-bullying message and an awareness of mental illness and teen suicide. However, statistics suggest otherwise.

Citing a study published in JAMA Internal Medicine, The Washington Post reported that “internet searches about suicide were significantly higher than expected” within the three weeks after the release of 13 Reasons Why, according to Davis’ story in AFA Journal. Overall, online suicide queries increased by 19 percent during the first 19 days after season one of the show premiered.

Anna’s father, Joseph, knows now that cultural forces deeply affected his daughter. “What you watch, what you take in, what you listen to is so important, and you need to guard your heart,” he said.

Anna’s mother, Patrice, added, “We know for a fact that our home was invaded by darkness. However anybody wants to look at it, it was a spiritual battle that was lost, but it wasn’t the eternal battle that was lost.”

AFA is sharing the resources below with parents, young people and others:

Share:

Leave a Reply


More Spiritual Content
Top of the Week: The Man in the Red Hat Prophecy Revealed
Amanda Grace and Donné Clement Petruska: Trump Prophecies Fulfilled
Open Season on Jews: Renewed Antisemitism Sparks Global Outcry
Katie Souza, Alan DiDio on the Biblical Truth of Prosperity
Is Donald Trump God’s Chosen ‘Cyrus’ to Rebuild the Temple?
Isaiah Saldivar: Is Your Sickness Spiritual?
Greg Locke Prophecy: The Time of Pouring is Coming
Serpent Spirits, Drop Dead!
Did the CIA Really Find the Ark of the Covenant?
This Is Why Trump’s Appointments Will Not Be Blocked
previous arrow
next arrow
Shadow

Most Popular Posts

Latest Videos
76.2K Subscribers
994 Videos
7.5M Views
Share