Khaleej Times

Parents going viral with ugly hair cut videos shaming kids

-

new york — Russell Fredrick’s middle son was 12 when he wouldn’t quit playing around in class and ignoring his homework, so the barber did what he does best. He picked up his clippers and cut off his fade.

But it wasn’t just any cut. It was a complete shave intended as a form of discipline when other tactics like taking away gadgets failed to work.

“After I shaved him bald, I told him that if things continued I would get more creative with each cut,” said Fredrick, co-owner of A-1 Kutz in Snellville, Georgia. “But I never had to because he straighten­ed up his act.”

Fredrick and his son — one of three — are success stories in a social media trend: parents taking electric razors to the heads of their misbehavin­g tweens and teens to create ugly cuts as a form of punishment, then publicly posting the handiwork on YouTube, Facebook and elsewhere.

After Fredrick put a photo on Instagram of his son’s shave late last year, parents began to approach him for embarrassi­ng, old-man cuts dubbed Benjamin Button specials or the George Jefferson, named for their baldness up top and fringe left on the sides and around the base like the movie and TV characters they’re named for.

He’s done more than 20 since February, free of charge.

“Whenever people come in and ask for it we do it,” said the 35-year-old Russell. “You’ve got to reach these kids before law enforcemen­t has to do the punishing.”

The spate of ugly-cut videos over the last six months or so has lit up debate over public shaming as discipline and fits into a broader trend of parents using social media video to humiliate their kids online, from yelling and screaming to smashing their computers or phones for infraction­s like bad grades or breaking curfew — to outright corporal punishment.

Clinical psychologi­st Claudia Shields of the Chicago School of Profession­al Psychiatry has helped parents find healthy ways of disciplini­ng their children based on behavioral research. She’s far from convinced that public shaming works.

“The most effective ways of changing behavior, as surprising as it may seem, do not involve any form of punishment. I prefer discipline based on positive reinforcem­ent. Many parents think that these are ‘weaker’ forms of punishment, but over and over, we find that this is more effective,” she said.

Much has been made over the recent death of a teenage girl who killed herself in Tacoma, Washington, and a video shared online that shows her father scolding her after her hair was cut short. Police said, however, that the girl’s death appears unrelated to the video and the father didn’t share it on social media himself.

In recent weeks, there’s been a curious, positive backlash to the bad hair videos, with far happier endings than the tears or downcast eyes of the young recipients. Some copycats have put up videos pretending they’re going to do the deed only to hug it out with their sons instead.

“There’s no way in the world I would ever embarrass my son like that,” said Wayman Gresham, a 45-year-old father of four in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

He created one of the parodies with his 12-year-old Isaiah and put it on Facebook on June 6. It’s been viewed there more than 21 million times and shared around the Internet.

“It doesn’t take all of that. Good parenting starts before he even gets to the point of being out of control,” Gresham implores in the video. “Good parenting is letting your child know that you loved him regardless of what they are and who they are and showing them the way by example.”

Gresham criticises the profanity parents used in some of the ugly-cut videos. In a recent interview he added: “I’m not against discipline but I am against humiliatin­g and just snatching the dignity away from a child. If you’re going to discipline your child I think it should be done out of the public eye.” —

 ?? AP ?? Russell Fredrick grooms the hair of an unidentifi­ed boy in Snellville, Georgia. —
AP Russell Fredrick grooms the hair of an unidentifi­ed boy in Snellville, Georgia. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates