
The Plugged In Show, Episode 79: Cruella & Disney’s Darker Turn
Our team tackles Cruella and then expands the discussion to Disney villains in general, truly exploring the good, the bad and the ugly.

Our team tackles Cruella and then expands the discussion to Disney villains in general, truly exploring the good, the bad and the ugly.

The Plugged In team took on this timely topic for this week’s podcast, discussing the influence social media has on especially its youngest users.

We talk about Billie Eilish’s changing image, why it matters for teens and how her personal philosophy of self-fulfillment is actually not so different.

Ever since the first motion-picture camera started rolling, the entertainment industry has been fascinated by the family.

When people learn what I do, they think it must be great watching movies for a living. But the perk isn’t seeing movies. It’s being able to talk about them.

Screen time. It’s one of those phrases that we toss around pretty frequently these days. Often because, as parents, we’re concerned that our kids are getting too much of it.

Gothic horror master Edgar Allan Poe wouldn’t have any trouble understanding our contemporary culture’s fascination with unsolved mysteries.

You wouldn’t think that a fairly innocuous kids’ movie on Netflix would trigger a lot of controversy. But clearly you’re not familiar with Bigfoot Family.

God made us all so different. Is it so unusual to think that He’d find different ways to reach us? Even different expressions in art and entertainment?

Even the most devout films about Jesus, and the ones that adhere to the Bible most tightly, can still have issues for families to navigate.
Good media discernment is about guarding our eyes and hearts before we watch or listen. And it’s also about grappling with the entertainment we do see or hear. That’s why the Plugged In Blog is devoted to guarding, discussing and grappling. About Plugged In >>