What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this sports competition series
pits professional athletes against amateurs. It includes a lot
of back-and-forth insults and stereotypically macho behavior,
such as crotch-grabbing and aggressive butt slapping. Jokes and
insults often employ "sissy"-oriented language (like calling a
man a "she" or joking that a pro football athlete played for
the Cowgirls instead of the Cowboys). Women in bikinis
occasionally appear as window dressing, and the camera
sometimes zooms in on one of their body parts for emphasis.
Athletes exhibit some poor sportsmanship, though teasing is
generally lighthearted in tone.
Families can talk about athletes' behavior. Have you seen or
experienced the kind of trash-talking seen on the show in your
own life? What motivates it? How much of this type of behavior
is just harmless fun, and what's completely uncool? Are certain
sports more competitive than others? Do some come with a
harsher attitude than others? Why?
In PROS VS. JOES, amateur athletes get a chance to compete against their sports idols. In each episode, three male "Joes" take on retired or aging professionals like baseball star Jose Canseco and football master Michael Irvin in their own areas of expertise, competing for bragging rights and a place in the show's championship match. The competition is full of nail-biting tension and impressive athletic performances. In one episode, for example, the Joes take on professional fighter Randy Couture, who subjects his opponents to relentless physical punishment, yanking one's shoulder out of its socket twice. One of the players, who's a hand-to-hand combat instructor in the military, holds his own quite well against his powerful match, but he still goes down without making a dent in the pro.
Full of stereotypically macho showboating and sissy jokes, Pros vs. Joes is definitely targeting male viewers. Though female pros occasionally appear, the roster is almost exclusively male. Players casually grab their crotches and, in at least one episode, a pro football player teases his amateur opponent by aggressively grabbing his butt.
Watching the amateurs take on their idols makes for good entertainment, especially when a contestant displays a level of skill that comes anywhere close to the professionals'. But with all the trash-talking (which includes plenty of foul language), parents will want younger viewers to stay away and may want to check in with teens about the athletes' all-too-frequent unsportsmanlike behavior.
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Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.




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