Chattanooga Times Free Press

Celebritie­s at Kids’ Choice Awards praise marches

- BY NICOLE EVATT

LOS ANGELES — The power of the youth rallies against gun violence across the U.S. this weekend impressed many of the celebritie­s who turned out at the Kids’ Choice Awards.

Stars including former couple Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon voiced their support for the hundreds of thousands of teenagers and their supporters who spent Saturday marching for gun control.

“We were with them in spirit,” Carey said as she arrived that night to the annual event with ex-husband Cannon and their twins, Moroccan and Monroe.

“Oh, it’s so amazing. Absolutely! I want them to see that as well,” Cannon said, pointing to his son perched on his shoulders.

The Kids’ Choice Awards in Los Angeles featured host John Cena and others getting doused with green slime, as is tradition, along with performanc­es and awards.

Before the ceremony, stars praised the kids and teens who participat­ed in the rallies in the kind of numbers seen during the Vietnam era. They were called to action by a new corps of leaders: student survivors of the high school shooting in Parkland, Fla., that left 17 people dead on Feb. 14.

The demonstrat­ion in Los Angeles was the first protest for 15-year-old Jenna Ortega. The “Jane the Virgin” actress was deeply moved by the atmosphere.

“We are kids. We have so much ahead of us. We have these full lives to live that these other people have already lived,” she said. “We have so much hope, so many dreams. So when situations like school shootings happen, they’re killing those dreams along with them and our future activists and politician­s.”

Ortega said the prevalence of mass shootings has made her scared to go to public places.

“I’m only 15! It shouldn’t be like that. And school is supposed to be a place for love, where you learn, where you grow, not die. And that’s the saddest thing,” she said.

Disney Channel actress Skai Jackson spoke at the Los Angeles rally and said teenagers still have power, even if they aren’t old enough to vote.

“We still have a voice, and that change needs to be done,” she said. “And I know even my friends, they want to feel safe when they go to school, and they shouldn’t be scared.”

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