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13 Rev. Eur. Stud. 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/rveurost13 and id is 1 raw text is: Review of European Studies; Vol. 13, No.1; 2021
ISSN 1918-7173  E-ISSN 1918-7181
Published by Canadian Center of Science and Education
Watching of Scary TV Shows by Children and Youth, Identification With
Characters, and Resulting Fears and Nightmares
Gila Cohen Zilka & Chen Goldberg2
Bar-Ilan University; Achva Academic College, Israel
2 University of Haifa, Israel
Correspondence: Gila Cohen Zilka, Bar-Ilan University, Achva Academic College, Israel
Received: September 29, 2020  Accepted: October 21, 2020  Online Published: November 23, 2020
doi:10.5539/res.vl3nlpl       URL: https://doi.org/10.5539/res.vl3nlp1
Abstract
The identification of children and adolescents with characters from the television programs they watch is not limited to
the time when they view the program. The connection with the characters continues across the use of various digital
means and in various realms of the children's lives. The purpose of the present study was to examine the connections
between patterns of use of various media, the degree of identification with characters from the programs watched, and the
fears and nightmares experienced by the children after watching these programs. This is a mixed-method study. Two
hundred ninety-six Israeli children and adolescents participated in the study; 45 children and adolescents among those
who completed questionnaires were interviewed. The data were collected in 2017-2018. The data revealed that negative
identification with the show characters was higher among children than in adolescents. Positive identification with the
characters was higher among viewers of scary programs, among those who suffered from nightmares and fears, and
among those who perceived the characters and plot as realistic. It was found that interest in programs involving tension,
drama, and action increases the risk of nightmares and fears after watching these programs.
Keywords: viewing habits, TV programs, identification, wellbeing, television characters
1. Introduction
The identification of children and adolescents with characters from the television programs they watch is not limited to
the time of viewing the shows. Children and adolescents search the Internet for content related to the programs and the
characters, join interest groups that discuss television programs and characters on social networks, and encounter these
characters in other areas, such as marketed products related to television shows and characters, costumes of characters,
items of clothing similar to those worn be the characters, etc. Characters from television shows are featured on various
digital media and in different areas of the children's lives. In this study we examined the connections between patterns of
use of various media, the degree of identification with characters from the programs watched, and the fears and
nightmares that follow the watching of these programs.
2. The Media: A Part of the Children and Youth Environment
Children today are exposed to a large selection of sources and channels of information. Many studies have shown that
the media is playing an increasingly important role in children's lives (Byron, 2008; Livingstone et al., 2012;
Livingstone et al., 2014; Ofcom, 2006; Taylor & Kitter, 2010; Zilka, 2014, 2016a, 2016b). Researchers (Atwal et al.,
2003; Comstock & Scharrer, 2007; Gatfield & Millwood-Hargrave, 2003; Holbert & Stephenson, 2003; Livingstone,
2008, 2007; Millwood-Hargrave, 2007; Millwood-Hargrave & Livingstone, 2006, 2009) have argued that because the
media is part of our living environment, its influence in shaping the personality of a child lies in its interaction with
other environmental factors, which affect each other in different ways. Researchers (Leung, 2013; McQuail, 2010; West
& Turner, 2007; Zilka, 2014, 2017, 2018a, 2018b, 2018c) have found that media consumers are rational, thinking
persons who choose from a variety of media, decide to what they will be exposed, and shape their consumption habits
according to their needs. For example, when children watch a program seeped in violence, it is necessary to find out
what is the children's need, what is their reason for viewing violent content. The children must be offered an alternative
option to the partial and at times negative solution they discover in the various media. Extensive viewing of violent
content may create the impression in children that the world is violent and thus exacerbate their problem.
3. Identification With Characters
Television is a narrative medium that tells stories, in which characters act. The degree of identification with TV

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