![]() Give Your Kids a Screen-Free Summer. Plus . . . Ben Shapiro on the new right’s ‘conspiracy problem.’ A new Broadway play about the oldest hatred. All the good don’t die young. And more!
What are your kids going to do when the school year ends? (Animation by The Free Press)
Welcome back to the Weekend Press! Today, Eli Lake has two drinks with Ben Shapiro. Bernard-Henri Lévy is starring in a new play about the Dreyfus Affair, which may be more relevant now than ever. Nicholas Delbanco on overcoming the genius’s curse: early death. Plus: Don’t miss Suzy Weiss’s sit-down with Scooter Braun. And more! But first: a school’s-out special. Summer is fast approaching, which means parents across the country will be faced with the age-old question: What are your kids going to do when the school year ends? Gone are the days when children played outside until dusk, left to fend for themselves in the great outdoors. In its place has come hypervigilant parenting: chaperoned play dates, cell phones tucked into summer camp bags, and endless résumé-building activities. At the other extreme, some parents opt out of oversight altogether: handing their children an iPad and letting them scroll the days away. It’s not hard to see how we got here. A world saturated with technology and alarming headlines can make real life feel riskier than anything behind a screen. The problem is: That perception is entirely backward. Screen time makes kids depressed and anxious, while micromanagement leaves them with no independence at all. So, what’s a modern parent to do? Today, we bring you two pieces answering that question. For years, NPR reporter Michaeleen Doucleff struggled to pry her daughter away from screens as bedtime approached. Eventually, she hit a breaking point, and two summers ago, she eliminated screens entirely—hiding devices and steering her daughter toward biking, crocheting, and other hands-on activities. The results, she writes, exceeded her wildest expectations. Read her piece on how her family embarked upon a screen-free summer—and how you can, too. As for those risk-averse parents who can’t stop micromanaging, primary care physician Charlotte Grinberg has some news for you: If you think a sheltered child is a safer child, think again. “Modern parenting seems saturated with the language of safety and the avoidance of immediate risk,” she writes. But allowing kids to encounter everyday messiness—from scraped knees to shared germs—is the key to building resilience that lasts a lifetime. Second ThoughtThis week, Suzy sat down with Scooter Braun, once one of music’s most powerful kingmakers, who helped define pop culture in the internet age. He reflects on discovering Justin Bieber, discusses how Kanye West’s antisemitic spiral ended their relationship, and reveals exclusive new details about becoming the villain in Taylor Swift’s fairy tale: “I legitimately don’t know her,” he said. And wait till you hear what he says about his new girlfriend. Listen to the episode wherever you get your podcasts, or watch the YouTube vid below. And if you want to keep up-to-date with everything Suzy does, don’t miss her newsletter! |