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Beware the Ides of March: A Look at ABC Family’s “Cyberbully” (2011)

Meaghan Rath, Kay Panabaker, and Emily Osment star in ABC Family’s “Cyberbully” (2011)

Et tu Brute? It’s a made-for-television movie where the acting is actually good and it deals with an all too common topic: cyberbullying. In the 2011 movie produced by ABC Family, Cyberbully takes a look at an ancient problem in a modern forum: backstabbing. Today, being March 15th, is the “ides of march.”  Julius Caesar was assassinated by his confidants Gaius  Cassius Longinus and Marcus Junius Brutus when he was stabbed in the back (literally.) Coincidentally, the story of Cyberbully also deals with two friends who do their own form of backstabbing online.

When I was in middle school, and even high school, cyberbullying was not as prevalent. It existed, but not to the extreme that it does nowadays. I was even the victim of some not-so-nice comments online in its early days. Sites like Facebook, Myspace, and Twitter weren’t even created yet. I don’t know what I would do if I were a teenager in this day and age. Our society has made it easier to keep in  contact people, yes, but also to share too much information and do a massive amount of  harm. Bullying has gone beyond the schoolyard of movies like A Christmas Story and replaced bare fists with the stroke of a keyboard. I never get too one-sided in my reviews or arguments and try to play devil’s advocate whenever I can, but bullying, in any form, is not okay. As someone who was bullied growing up, I can relate to the feelings of hopelessness and extreme sadness.

What gets to me most is the fact that situations like these are completely, 100% avoidable. Older generations in our society chock it up to just part of growing up, sometimes citing that “I was picked on as a kid and I turned out fine.” They might even see it as a right of passage. And when I speak of older generations, I am specifically citing things that were said by my grandfather’s generation and he is around 85.  Why does this back-stabbing and hatred NEED to exist at all? It doesn’t. I know that people feel the need to bring others down in order to bring themselves up, but bullying is never a solution to one’s self-esteem issues. And what happens to the bullies once they grow up? Do they become our bosses? wives? husbands? Yes.

This current generation of teens need to think twice before posting harmful videos and bullying escapades online, because those videos might come back to stab them in their own backs. It could have an impact on future employment, spouses, and other relationships, even legal consequences. We need to have an open discussion about how we can change all these negative things into something positive and really try to help the next generation of bosses, wives, and husbands to become more respectful, accepting, and kinder human beings. We need to teach them to use the internet for good and not harm. We need to use the internet to get a positive message out there.  Cyberbully (2011) is available to stream on Netflix and I think it is a must-watch for anyone with a teenager.

The following clip is from 2011’s Cyberbully and contains an all-to-real account of the dangers of bullying (online and off):

2 responses to “Beware the Ides of March: A Look at ABC Family’s “Cyberbully” (2011)”

  1. Being a member of “the older generation”,I do not underestimate the affects of bullying and I certainly don’t/ nor have ever,thought of it as a “Right of Passage”. It was and IS hurtful and sometimes destructive! Please don’t lump people into generational pigeon holes! We live in an era of instant media and I think that is why this conversation is so prevalent!

  2. I edited it to explain that I am referring to something that my grandfather had said. That was the “older generation” I was speaking of. Plus, I know plenty of people who do it see as “no big deal.” They just see bullying as a part of growing up. We do need to change things as a society and make people aware that bullying in any form is wrong.

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