People Can’t Stop Talking
Friday, September 11th, 2009About Teen Driving, Texting Video
A short, but violent, video about the dangers of teen driving and texting has become a top viral video, and has kept both the media and social network sites chattering, since it was first posted on YouTube in early September.
The film, which includes a graphic, but realistic auto crash reenactment, was contracted by a British police department and was originally 30 minutes long. It was produced last year. The movie was shown to high school students as a public service announcement. And, according to its producer, it was meant to shock and elicit a reaction.
As it stands now on the Internet, the teen driving video is edited to four minutes long. But some would say it’s long enough to make a teen driver or a worried parent ill.
A girl, driving two friends, is texting and sways off the road, eventually involving three autos in the chain reaction accident. There is bloodshed, the sounds of crushing bones, and suffice it to say an unhappy ending for the teen. Within minutes, the mood of the teen driving goes from giggles to stunned silence as she is airlifted from the scene.
Peter Watkins-Hughes, the writer and director of the video, is not backing down from the controversy. Young people, he said, because of television and video games, are desensitized in many cases to the sight of blood and death. It will take a hard hit, in a place where they are vulnerable, to make teen driving and texting an important topic of daily discussion.
Watkins-Hughes seems to be getting his intended reaction. A sampling of on-line comments:
· Some viewers are commenting that the clip is so graphic it’s laughable. Then again, a lot of teen driving videos are violent, and teens don’t want to let on that an adult has hurt or deceived them.
- Some bloggers are convinced that the whole thing is real and the individuals really died. It looks real enough, except for the multiple camera angles, expert sound quality and slow motion segments.
- Many are complaining that the teen driving and texting habit is foolish. Some teen drivers are promising never to text while teen driving again and appealing to others to make the same pledge.
Car crashes are the number one cause of death in youth. Any accident that you see, there’s close to a two-thirds chance there was a teen driving. Controlled road tests of teen driving and texting showed that, the average text, takes 4.7 seconds. When the teen driving is taking his eyes off the road for 4.7 seconds at 55 mph, that’s the length of a football field.
Of course, not all texting accidents are the result of teen driving. Adults do it too.
There is a massive campaign growing on the federal level, to outlaw driving and texting. It’s a matter that the individual states must decide. Several states have already passed laws to the effect. It probably won’t be long before driving-and-texting laws will be in effect across the nation.
Perhaps then the teen driving statistics will begin to change.



