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Subject: "The Science of Why Your Kids Can’t Resist Frozen (swipe)" Previous topic | Next topic
b.Touch
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Wed Jan-07-15 07:48 AM

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33. "The Science of Why Your Kids Can’t Resist Frozen (swipe)"
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Wed Jan-07-15 07:48 AM by b.Touch

  

          

http://time.com/3656230/why-kids-cant-resist-frozen/

The Science of Why Your Kids Can’t Resist Frozen
Maryam Kia-Keating, Yalda T. Uhls / Zocalo Public Square @ThePublicSquare Jan. 6, 2015

Disney’s Frozen, which earned more than $1.2 billion at the box office, is not only the first “princess” movie to make the list of top 10 grossing animated films, but also the number-one animated film of all time. Its songs and characters are culturally ubiquitous.


Little girls have long been drawn to princesses. But what is it that makes Frozen so much more appealing than previous princess movies—and why does it enrapture young children in particular? As psychologists (who happen to be sisters just like the heroines in the film) and the mothers of princess-loving daughters, we decided to consider this question.

First, a preschooler’s emotional world is reminiscent of Frozen heroine Elsa’s internal struggle: Her emotions are strong, passionate — and seem uncontrollable. Preschoolers too, are driven by their impulses. When Elsa laments that she’s afraid that there’s “no escape from the storm inside of me,” it resonates with young children (and perhaps their patience-tested parents, as well).

Second, preschoolers’ imaginations can make the world a wondrous place filled with the possibility of excitement and adventure. Children respond to stories that employ magical realism, so Elsa—as a superhero with what one of our daughters (Maryam’s) and her friends call “ice powers” (the ability to create a whole castle of snow and ice using only her fingers)—has special appeal. Perhaps because they are so in awe of her magic and power, children are less likely to get caught up in Elsa’s experience of isolation and desperation when she is locked away in her room as a girl and hides herself in a remote castle as a woman.


But with the allure of magic and the sense that anything is possible comes a high potential for terror. Maryam’s daughter particularly liked that there isn’t a witch in Frozen. Though she adores other Disney princess movies, the witch-like characters (like Mother Gothel in Rapunzel) are all too real. The scary parts in Frozen are minimal and temporary, and the villain is an ordinary guy who sings a catchy love song.


Thirdly, Elsa has a genuine connection with her sister, Anna. Despite Elsa’s repeated rebuffs to Anna’s attempts to develop a friendship throughout most of the movie, their bond underscores dedication to family above all. Preschoolers are deeply entrenched in their families and tend to demonstrate a strong in-group attachment, meaning that they favor members within their social circle. Even when Frozen viewers are rooting for Anna to form a relationship with her love interest Kristoff, the love between the sisters is much more appealing. The heroines of Frozen are authentic and real, and no longer solely focused on finding a prince. They preach sisterly love and girl power.

Finally, the sing-along music seals the deal. Maryam’s 4-year-old daughter and her friends love to sing the anthem “Let it Go,” wagging their fingers at each other: “Be the good girl you always have to be!” They stomp in unison, pretending to be Elsa stomping on the ice to create her castle. Even Maryam’s 1-year-old son gets into the act, mimicking their behavior.

When asked what she thought the song was about, Maryam’s daughter smiled and put it succinctly: “It’s about Elsa being happy and free, and nobody bothering her.”


So there it is, the crux of the matter: a universally appealing desire to be happy and free.

Perhaps understanding the perspective of a preschooler can help us appreciate some of what draws us all to this movie: We all feel internal struggles with our impulses. None of us really wants a (too) scary villain. Most of us are pretty loyal to our families, despite their eccentricities and the emotional challenges that we face at times. And all of us want to be happy and free.

Maryam Kia-Keating, Ph.D. and Yalda T. Uhls, MBA, Ph.D. are sisters, psychologists, and, most importantly, moms. Maryam is an associate professor of clinical psychology at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Yalda is a senior scientific researcher at the Children’s Digital Media Center@LA at UCLA and the Regional Director of the non-profit Common Sense Media. They wrote this for Zocalo Public Square.

  

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Okayparents: Do your kids keep singing that Frozen song "Let it go"? [View all] , DavidHasselhoff, Tue Jan-06-15 04:04 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
Not anymore.
Jan 06th 2015
1
THAT'S what that shit is?
Jan 06th 2015
2
lmao
Jan 06th 2015
3
RE: THAT'S what that shit is?
Jan 07th 2015
34
NIGGA, she got ME singing it
Jan 06th 2015
4
the cold never bothered me anyway....
Jan 06th 2015
18
she got a sing along book box for christmas...
Jan 06th 2015
5
this is the exact toy that made me post this. My niece got this toy and
Jan 06th 2015
6
last week, we went to the Children's Museum of Manhattan
Jan 06th 2015
7
I LOL'd at ten minutes straight. It really may have been 3 min
Jan 07th 2015
27
      nah, she sang the full song 3 times
Jan 07th 2015
36
           In key?
Jan 07th 2015
41
           Frozen will be done by then...
Jan 07th 2015
44
                sorry to break this to you, chief
Jan 08th 2015
47
RE: Okayparents: Do your kids keep singing that Frozen song "Let it go"?
Jan 06th 2015
8
Do you want to build a snowman?
Jan 06th 2015
9
      RE: Do you want to build a snowman?
Jan 07th 2015
24
      It doesn't have to be a snowman...
Jan 07th 2015
31
my daughter has finally stopped.
Jan 06th 2015
10
she's still does sometimes
Jan 06th 2015
11
Y'all heard that Pinata Song on Clarence, though?
Jan 06th 2015
12
She moved on to Bruno Mars, Youngblood Hawk, and Fall Out Boy
Jan 06th 2015
13
Now it's all about the French version.
Jan 06th 2015
14
lol my homegirl just sent me a video of her daughter singing it, she
Jan 06th 2015
15
A bunch of little white girls just randomly performed it for me
Jan 06th 2015
16
I must have been an asshole in a previous life…
Jan 06th 2015
17
we made a guy sing that song as ransom
Jan 06th 2015
19
I'm telling yall, that Frozen movie got subliminal messages in it.
Jan 06th 2015
20
It works on puppies too https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ezz2NqvlORY
Jan 06th 2015
21
Shit my daughter loves the opening song to BATB
Jan 06th 2015
22
to me, Frozen's biggest deficiency is that there's no real climax
Jan 07th 2015
35
"Beauty and the Beast" is also 24 years old.
Jan 07th 2015
29
finally? Disney BEEN on that lol
Jan 07th 2015
46
yes over and over again
Jan 07th 2015
23
that song hard AF lol. watched it for the first time over winter break.
Jan 07th 2015
25
that's what i'm saying! something ain't right.
Jan 07th 2015
26
couldn't it just be really appealing to kids?
Jan 07th 2015
30
i wonder if there's a difference in little boys/girls reactions'
Jan 07th 2015
39
      "Frozen" is def. primarily a girls' property
Jan 07th 2015
40
It's the white "And I Am Telling You"
Jan 07th 2015
37
      #30. Great minds, etc.
Jan 07th 2015
38
      seems more like it would be the kids "And I Am Telling You"
Jan 07th 2015
42
      this might be more important
Jan 18th 2015
52
           he's of Filipino descent
Jan 20th 2015
57
      LMAO
Jan 20th 2015
55
Frozen Director Now Apologizes to Parents for ‘Let It Go’
Jan 07th 2015
28
My power flurries through the air into the ground!
Jan 07th 2015
32
Why hasn't someone done a Twerk remix of this song is beyond me
Jan 07th 2015
43
Not anymore.....I DO! SMH
Jan 07th 2015
45
Yep, but I sing all the other songs from the movie
Jan 08th 2015
48
Even "Fixer-Upper"?
Jan 08th 2015
49
That one had to grow on me
Jan 08th 2015
50
      there's so many words
Jan 08th 2015
51
           lol
Jan 20th 2015
53
Me any my daughter do duets of "Love is an Open Door"
Jan 20th 2015
54
      mannnn...my wife and i sing this too often.
Jan 21st 2015
61
we watched part of it at Christmas, lil girl knew all the words
Jan 20th 2015
56
Dawg, she's a Broadway star.
Jan 20th 2015
58
      oh i know she's a big deal, but THIS song is a lil different
Jan 20th 2015
60
My mom got my daughter a Ilsa doll for Christmas...
Jan 20th 2015
59

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