27
Feb
Posted on 2010 under teen alcohol abuse |
The Significant Dangers of Street Racing / Educational Video. Street Racing exposes the dangers of street racing by profiling teen racers. By: Jay Yu. TRT: 6 min 4 sec. Producer: Jay Yu. Creative Commons license: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike. Street racing is a form of unsanctioned and illegal auto racing which takes place on public roads. Street racing can either be spontaneous or well-planned and coordinated. Spontaneous races usually occur at intersections where two cars stop at a red light before they begin racing. Well coordinated races, in comparison, are planned in advance and often have people communicating via 2-way radio/citizens’ band radio and using police scanners and GPS units to mark locations of local police hot spots. Street racing is reported to have originated prior to the 1930s due to alcohol prohibition in some parts of the United States. At the time smugglers of unrefined and illegal alcohol would try to find ways to make more power and achieve better handling from their engine and suspension. Aside from being the basis of stock car racing, this became common after the war, and as a result, it is credited as being the origin of drag racing as well. Opponents to street racing cite a lack of safety relative to sanctioned racing events, as well as legal repercussions arising from incidents, among street racing’s drawbacks. Most duels are drag races. In 2001, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) reported that police listed street racing as a factor in 135 fatal crashes. The total was up from 72 street-racing-related fatalities reported in 2000. According to the California Office of Traffic Safety, more than 800 citations for illegal street racing were issued in 2001. The city’s attorney’s office prosecuted: -147 illegal street racing cases in 1999; -161 in 2000; -290 in 2001; In Florida in 2001, 7,216 citations were issued for racing on the highway. -In 1999, the Florida Department of Highway and Safety for Motor Vehicles reported 28 accidents related to Illegal Street racing with 2 fatalities and 27 injuries. -In 2000, the agency reported 39 racing accidents, with 1 fatality and 55 injuries. -In 2002, there were 48 racing accidents, 1 fatality, and 60 injuries. According to the NHTSA, motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death for people between the ages of 16 and 20. The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety says 5,749 teens died in the United States from motor vehicle crash injuries in 1999. Nationwide statistics show that 49 people are injured for every 1,000 who participate in illegal street racing. As a result, city and state ordinances have been issued regarding illegal street racing.
Duration : 0:6:41
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20
Feb
Posted on 2010 under Teenage Alcoholism |
Audience: 6-12; Synopsis: This video featuring the voices of Maine youth was produced as part of the media campaign: “If You Think Most Kids Drink–Think Again.” The “Think Again” campaign was a series of 4 television ads featuring Maine youth. The conceptual model represented by the theme “Think Most Kids Drink? Think Again!” is grounded in research that demonstrates the importance of perceived social norms in young people’s decisions about alcohol use. For a variety of reasons, including a barrage of media messages that glamorize alcohol use, young people often over perceive these norms. Their mistaken belief that “everybody else is drinking” leads to a subtle pressure to conform to a norm that doesn’t exist in reality. The fact is that most middle and high school students in Maine are not using alcohol. This expanded video incorporates additional footage with the ads to delve into some of the issues around underage drinking. The accompanying guide can be used to stimulate a discussion about underage drinking. Public domain video.
Duration : 0:6:22
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20
Feb
Posted on 2010 under under age drinking |
studentdotcom and shimmycocopuffsss come to the assistance of a worried mother. She is concerned about girls and underage drinking of alcohol and how it can lead to sexual activity. This is basically a public service announcement request for studentdotcom to help curb teen alcohol use.
Duration : 0:1:21
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29
Nov
Posted on 2009 under teenage drinking and driving |
Four North Carolina Teens Killed In Car Crash- Memorial Day weekend 2007
Four friends were killed in a high speed wreck that was so forceful it ripped out seat belts and sliced the car in half, police say.
Davidson County, NC — The wreck occurred early Saturday near Thomasville.
Robert King, 20, of Trinity; Jacob Mayo, 19, of northern Davidson County; John “Chad” Calvert, 18, of Thomasville, and Zachary Main, 18, of Kernersville, died in the wreck.
Police said alcohol was suspected in the wreck and a blood test was being conducted on the driver.
Mayo was driving a 1998 Nissan Altima which ran off both sides of Burton Road, ran a stop sign, hit a wire and then a tree, which cut the car in half, said Highway Patrol Trooper Mickey Mantel. He declined to release an estimate of the speed.
“It’s going to put a real damper on this summer and it’s going to make a lot of people reconsider what they do. It’s going to make a lot of people cautious,” says Christopher John, a friend of one of the victims.
The crash was discovered about 8:45 a.m. by a passing driver, who saw a body lying in a field
The crash happened about a hundred yards away from the Hasty Fire Department. Firefighters there say they heard a loud sound around 2 a.m. Saturday.
But it wasn’t until a driver passed by around 9 a.m. when they reported the crash. One firefighter says they thought a car went into a ditch and was able to get out.
As of late Saturday, the Highway Patrol said seven people had died in wrecks across the state during the Memorial Day weekend.
Associated Press, WFMY News 2 located in Greensboro, North Carolina- video and text from the WFMY website- wfmynews2.com.
While it is yet to be determined how and if alcohol played a role in the accident and deaths of the four teens from Davidson Couty, Casey Bokhoven was definitely a victim of a drunk driver.
Casey died March 11, 2007. While standing on a sidewalk in Winston-Salem, NC, he was hit and killed by news anchor Tolly Carr.
http://www.myspace.com/ncproud
http://www.youtube.com/ncproud
Duration : 0:1:34
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8
Nov
Posted on 2009 under Uncategorized |
A 30 second public service announcement regarding the hazards and consequences of teen drinking and driving. For more information, contact the Clay County Public Health Center at 816-595-4200.
Duration : 0:0:31
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8
Nov
Posted on 2009 under Teenage Alcoholism |
ATTN: I do make these videos out of facts I find on the internet and out of my own reading, and experience. Do not message me “claiming” you made these videos. Please, it’s a waste of time. I think I would know if I made a video or not, and if I took a CLIP of a video, I give props to them.
Well, anyway…Another one of my fact filled videos to spead the word about certain issues. My friend died in a car accident when his car was hit by a teenage drunk driver, and this video is dedicated to him and all the other victims. If you comment it must be respectful, no fighting, NO CHAIN LETTER COMMENTS, or spam. If you do break that rule you will have your comment deleted and you will be BLOCKED.
Duration : 0:5:41
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23
Oct
Posted on 2009 under Uncategorized |
An anti drinking commercial made at North Sydney TAFE.
Duration : 0:1:0
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23
Oct
Posted on 2009 under Uncategorized |
Three witnesses say they saw a 17-year-old girl surrounded by ballplayers.
Duration : 0:1:58
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22
Aug
Posted on 2009 under Teenage Alcoholism |
Discussion of the problem of teenage drinking and driving, made in cooperation with the Yale Center of Alcohol Studies. 3 college men, one doing no drinking, one drinking beer and one drinking heavily are studied. Results are compared to effects of equivalent amounts in rats. Depicts an accidents resulting from only casual drinking before driving. Shows rat experiments, teenagers drinking in bar and dancing, and alludes to death of one couple because of driving while intoxicated. Producer: Centron Corporation. Young drivers are a high-risk group, partially because they are young and just learning the rules, but that is not the only reason. Young drivers often think they are invincible; that the crashes caused by teenage drinking and driving reported on the news will never happen to them. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, the youngest drivers are less likely to drive after drinking, but are more likely to crash when they do, because of inexperience with both alcohol and driving and the combination of the two. In 2003, 27 percent of 16-20-year-old passenger vehicle drivers fatally injured in crashes had high BACs (0.08 percent or more). The percentage of high BACs was much lower among females (13 percent) than among males (33 percent), and also was lower among 16-17-year-old drivers (16 percent) than among 18-19-year-old (30 percent) or 20-year-old (35 percent) drivers. In many high schools, students come face to face with the effects of teenage drinking and driving, with presentations from groups like Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), or Students Against Destructive Decisions (SADD). These education programs help to raise awareness. The federal government has taken steps in the past decade to bring attention to the issue, and there are consequences for young drivers charged with drinking and driving. In many states, a teenager will lose their license for a period of a year or longer if they are convicted of driving while intoxicated. On November 28, 1995, President Clinton signed legislation that included a provision forcing states to adopt and enforce a “zero tolerance” policy against teenage drinking and driving. Since that legislation’s inception, “zero tolerance” policies have been criticized, saying that such policies are unfair because they may unfairly punish an innocent teenager who may be driving an intoxicated friend home or because they are in the same area as a teen who has been drinking. It seems that zero tolerance policies may not be all bad however. According to the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety, studies of zero tolerance laws indicate they reduce crashes in [the 13-19] age group. A study of 12 states passing zero tolerance laws reported a 20 percent reduction in the proportion of fatal crashes that were single-vehicle nighttime events (crashes likely to involve alcohol impairment) among drivers ages 15-20. Alcohol and a teenage driver is a very dangerous combination, one that may be avoided through parental involvement and education. Keywords: Substance abuse: Alcohol; Car culture: Youth; Safety: Automotive; Alcoholism drinking colleges students men boys rats experiments laboratories safety accidents mourning grief. Alcohol Safety films Safety education Drunk driving Teenagers Bars Roadhouses Automobiles (accidents) Accidents (automobiles) Lawrence, Kansas (history and culture) Restaurants Rats Scientists Research Experiments Chemistry Danger Death Danger Lurks Safety. Creative Commons license: Public Domain.
Duration : 0:14:41
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15
Aug
Posted on 2009 under Uncategorized |
teens drunk/drinking and are showing some bad affects.
Duration : 0:1:59
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