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tv   Teen Kids News  PBS  April 19, 2014 4:00pm-4:31pm PDT

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>> welcome to "teen kids news." i'm siena. we'll start with our top story. >> there's a deadly danger lurking inside many of our homes. not the cleaning products -- we know to avoid those. it's no surprise that tools, especially those that are sharp or electric, need to be handled with care. no, this danger is usually found in the bathroom, right in the medicine cabinet. experts say...
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...meaning the medicine was prescribed for someone else. >> it has become the drug problem of the 21st century. >> robert stutman spent years as a special agent with the government's drug enforcement administration. he says many teens don't realize that medicines can be as dangerous as illegal drugs. >> kids believe that because it originally came from a doctor, it is safe, and nothing could be further from the truth. >> these medicines are balled "prescription drugs." that's because they are ordered, or prescribed, by a doctor or other medical expert. >> if you have a drug and you're taking it, then a lot of thought has gone into the dosage and frequency with which you take it. >> dr. aott works for quest diagnostics, a company that specializes in healthcare. quest wants teens to know that taking someone else's medicine puts you at risk for heart problems, addiction, overdose, even death. >> the majority of those who
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died from drug overdose in this country -- about 60% died from prescription-drug overdose. >> take, for example, kids who have trouble paying attention, especially in class. they have a chemical imbalance in the brain. there's medicine that can correct that and help them be able to concentrate better. but some teens who don't have that chemical imbalance mistakenly believe taking that medicine will help them do better on tests. >> and there is tremendous pressure on kids who have the prescription to share it with their friends. >> and as i said in the beginning of this report, another place kids find other people's medicine is right at home. >> quite often, family members that are prescribed medication, even after having used the majority of the medication, they leave the remainder in the medicine closet, and, unfortunately, that becomes an access point for teenagers to acquire prescribed medication.
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>> they don't really realize what they're taking, but they're just taking it because they can. >> these are scenes from a documentary made by a teenager. it's called "out of reach" because that's how prescription drugs should be kept -- out of reach. >> how do you start that? >> i just took pills from the medicine cabinet. >> besides the health dangers, here's another reason to avoid taking medicine not prescribed for you. it's illegal. the bottom line -- taking someone else's medicine can be a prescription for trouble. for "teen kids news," i'm emily. >> even if you're careful to avoid eating a lot of sugary foods, you may still be consuming more sugar than you should. i'll explain. >> protests across the country as thousands of parents opt their kids out of taking tests for the controversial common core standards
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initiative, an educational program designed to ensure students from the 3rd grade to the 8th are reaching a certain level of learning in math and language arts. critics say common core gives the federal government more power to dictate curriculum, taking decisions out of the hands of local schools. they claim is causes undue stress, forcing students to focus on passing a test rather than becoming critical thinkers. >> we have, as parents, collectively all been noticing a trend that our children are just getting stressed-out. they're enjoying learning a lot less. >> parents are legally allowed to keep their kids from taking the test, but advocates argue students who opt out miss out on crucial information helpful to their future. >> common core is designed to be more rigorous and to help students be ready for college and a career. and by opting out, the students aren't going to see the data that comes from completing that
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assessment to really see where they're at. >> he's still in diapers, but the royal baby, prince george, is taking his first official trip abroad, the pint-sized monarch visiting new zealand with his parents, the duke and duchess of cambridge, also known as will and kate. the royal family will also visit australia. for "teen kids news," jonathan hunt, "fox news channel in the classroom." >> most of us know too much sugar is bad for us. the effects can range from acne to obesity, health problems now and in the future. but it's not just the sugar in food that's adding up. nicole talked to nutrition expert dr. deb kennedy about liquid sugar, starting with the number-one culprit -- soda. >> so, how much soda does the typical teen drink? >> well, the typical teen boy drinks two cans of soda a day
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and a girl about 1.4 cans a day. >> wow. >> and that's a lot of extra calories and sugar, because the typical soda has 10 teaspoons of sugar a day. >> wow. >> right? >> is that over the limit? >> that is totally over the limit. so, a boy can have 8 1/4 teaspoons a day, and a girl, 5 teaspoons a day. so, a teen girl -- her allotment of added sugar would be half a can of soda. so, it's really not that much. >> right, especially 'cause she's not gonna drink half a can and then throw it out. >> no. no. absolutely not. no. and when you look at where teens are getting most of their sugar, you're looking at it. it's all of these liquid -- we call them "liquid candy" in the business, right? it is your soda and your iced tea and your flavored milk and also your juice, as well. >> isn't juice better for you than soda? >> juice -- um, yes. juice is better for you than soda, and when you buy juice, you should look for the 100% juice. but the thing with juice is that
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sugar is sugar is sugar, right? you can drink too much sugar by drinking way too much juice, so you should limit the amount of juice you drink a day to one cup a day. and then the rest of your servings of fruit should be the real thing -- the apples and bananas and strawberries. so, don't drink more than one cup of juice a day, right? and try and avoid most of the other liquid candies, except once a week, perhaps, as an occasional treat. >> i don't really understand that. i would have thought that when the juice says, "all natural," i would think that the natural sugars would be better for you than the processed sugars. >> right. so, in juice, you have a lot of fructose, right? so, this is a strawberry banana juice, and in this, it has about 43 grams of sugar. so, that has 10 teaspoons of sugar in it. yes, it comes from fruit, but if you look at a strawberry, one cup of strawberries has 7 grams of sugar. so, this is like eating 6 cups of strawberries in terms of if you ate 6 cups of strawberries,
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you wouldn't be able to do it -- right? -- because you would get too full. >> you can't sit there and eat 6 cups of strawberries. >> right. so, your body is naturally developed to stop eating when full. but when you mush all the fruit down into a juice, you can pound away the sugar really, really easily, and your body doesn't say, "stop" as readily. your body takes in the calories you drink differently than the calories you eat. so, that is brand-spanking-new research that we've found. so, definitely -- you see "all natural," that doesn't mean "drink as much as you want." >> how 'bout coffee drinks? what's in those? >> tons and tons of sugar. so, they might be called "coffee drinks," but they have as much sugar as hot chocolate. they usually come with the whipped cream. but if you look at how much sugar are in those coffee drinks, you would be surprised. it's way over your daily limit. so, what i say is stick to herbal iced teas -- those have lower sugar -- or grab some seltzer water and add a little bit of juice to it and drink those for a sweet drink every
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day. and watch the caffeine in those coffee drinks, too, 'cause that can add up. >> so, what should we be drinking? >> okay. you should be drinking lots of water every day -- about 6 to 7 glasses of water -- one cup of juice a day, three cups of milk, and that's what you should be drinking every day. the rest you need to think of as "that's something i'm gonna have occasionally." it is not a daily drink. you drink these drinks every day, that's why you look to the right, you look to the left -- 1 in 3 teens will develop diabetes in their lifetime. 1 in 2 african-american or hispanic teens will develop diabetes in their lifetime. and this is why. you got to stop doing this. >> what about flavored milks? >> so, flavored milk -- the great thing about milk is it's the number-one source of calcium in a teen's diet. the bad news is that about 75% of teens aren't getting enough calcium, so some teens will only drink milk if it's flavored with
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chocolate or vanilla or strawberry, and all those flavors have a lot of sugar in them. so, if you drank just one of these a day, you would think, "that's not that much." but, actually, it adds up to 23 cups of sugar a year. so, that's a heavy price to pay for the amount of calcium that you're getting. so, what i try and say is dilute it. you can take this home and probably add 3 more cups of milk to it and it would still be chocolaty enough for you. they put way too much sugar in the ones that you have that you get at the store. so, make your own chocolate milk. and get that calcium while you're growing, because your bones are gonna shut like a bank at the age of 18. >> if you like to drink a big glass of juice, here's a suggestion -- reduce the juice and make up the difference with sparkling water. for "teen kids news," i'm nicole. >> i'll tell you how what i'm
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wearing has to do with driving. >> recently we visited the ford motor company in dearborn, michigan. as carina reports, they're able to design a car and even an entire factory using some pretty amazing technology. >> henry ford revolutionized manufacturing when he came up with the assembly line. instead of one person doing many jobs to build a car, each person specializes in one part of the process. now that process is going through a new revolution. the workers on this assembly line are benefiting from new technology -- virtual reality. >> it's the same technology they use to make video games and movies like "avatar" and "rise of the planet of the apes," and what it essentially does is it
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tracks objects in space, and then we can make those objects move virtual objects in a virtual environment. [ record scratches ] >> yeah, i found that a little hard to follow, too. but, as they say, seeing is believing, and i was about to see just what he meant. >> hi. >> carina, how are you? >> good. >> hey, come this way. i want to show you something. >> okay. >> welcome to the ergonomics lab. >> wow. cool. what does "ergonomics" mean? >> oh. ergonomics is really cool. it's the study of the relationship between humans and anything they touch and feel. >> and that's where the virtual reality comes in. allison helped me suit up for what's called "motion capture." it really is how they do special effects in movies. the gloves are tracked by a computer so my hands show up in the virtual reality. and once i put on the headgear, i'm able to actually step into a make-believe, 3-d world.
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>> what you're gonna see here is it's stereoscopic. so, you're actually gonna go inside the computer... >> cool! >> ...just like being inside a video game. >> of course, ford engineers don't use this stuff to play games. for example, they can use it to design a car without having to build a real car. >> so, we can make evaluations about style or about assembly technique in a digital environment, where we don't actually have to make real product, which costs a lot more money and takes more time. >> i'm gonna give you the power tool. there you go. >> allison handed me a tool so i could see how motion capture works. wow. this is awesome. it looks so real. remember allison's explanation of ergonomics? [ tape rewinding ] >> it's the study of the relationship between humans and anything they touch and feel. >> with virtual reality, the engineers can look at how workers on the assembly line touch and feel the items they
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use to assemble a car. >> so, through the use of our motion capture, we actually study all the jobs on the assembly line and make sure that we design them, then, so that a small person on the assembly line can build it and then a very large person. >> thanks to the improvements ergonomic engineers make in the assembly process, workers building cars like the new focus can more easily focus on doing a good job -- another example of how science is not only very useful but also lots of fun. wow! this is really, really cool. for "tkn," i'm carina. >> we've reported on the dangers of texting while driving. we've even warned you about the dangers of texting while walking. now we're telling you about the dangers of texting while flying. seems a helicopter pilot was texting and crashed because of it. listen, the message is pretty simple -- you always need to look where you're going, whether
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you're on, beside, or even high above the road. >> want to volunteer a guess at the nickname for tennessee? here's a hint. i've already given you the answer. >> we all know what the american flag looks like, but every state has a flag, too, and every one of them tells a story. here's our "flag facts" report. >> in 1796, tennessee became our 16th state. america now stretched west to the shores of the mississippi river. then, in 1812, the united states went to war with britain again. many tennesseans volunteered to fight for their new country. they were commanded by general and soon-to-be president andrew jackson. that patriotic spirit earned
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tennessee its nickname -- "the volunteer state." but another 80 years would pass before it got its own state flag. >> this is one of my favorite flags because it's simple. it uses red, white, and blue, and it's a design, actually, that was submitted by a soldier named leroy reeves, and the three stars represent the three parts of the state of tennessee. there's western tennessee, between the tennessee and mississippi rivers, there's middle tennessee, which is known for the tennessee river and also bluegrass country, and then the great smoky mountains are in the eastern part of tennessee, and that's what the third star is meant to represent. >> the design celebrates unity by enclosing all three stars within a circle, and the red, white, and blue colors celebrate tennessee's unity with america. a distinctive blue edging ensures that the flag can be easily recognized, even on days when there's no breeze to unfurl it. with "flag facts," i'm scott.
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>> studies show that kids know little about money. this website is out to change that. themint.org gives tips and tools. you can learn how to earn, save, invest, and even spend money wisely to help prepare for your financial future. the mint also has interactive activities -- for example, a calculator that figures out when you'll be a millionaire. with this website, you'll learn it makes sense to save your cents. with "click this", i'm nydja. >> here's a reason you won't find me camping in sri lanka. a new species of tarantula has been discovered there. it's called a tiger spider, and it's as big as your face. >> here on "teen kids news," we've often run stories giving tips on using makeup, but we've never done a makeup story quite like the one you're about to see. we'll be right back.
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>> some of the most amazing movie magic is created in the makeup chair. we got to speak with an expert. >> if you've seen "pirates of the caribbean," "g.i. joe," or "smurfs 2," then you've seen the work of todd tucker. >> hi. how are you? >> i'm good. how are you? he's one of hollywood's makeup masters. what does a special-effects makeup artist do? >> what a special-effects makeup artist does is they bring in the actor, they create a head cast of the actor, and then we sculpt and design out a makeup that fits the actor perfectly, whether it's an old age or a character or a monster, and then we create the appliances, go on set, glue them on to the actor, and then maintain them throughout the shoot and basically transform them into somebody completely different. >> so, what is an appliance? >> appliances are the pieces that we create. we start with a sculpture on the actor's face, and then we mold that and create an exact copy of that sculpture in either a silicone material or a foam
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latex material, and then that's custom-fit to the actor, so when we glue it on to their face, when they make expressions and smile, it moves with their face and it looks completely real and transforms them. >> so, what are some of your favorite creations teens might have seen? >> well, one of my favorite creations is hank azaria as gargamel in the "smurfs" movie... >> [ laughs, burps ] >> ...mainly because we were able to take hank, who's a relatively good-looking guy, and then turn him into this kind of hideous old wizard character, and hank is such a great comedic actor that when we put him into makeup, he just brings the character to life. >> aaaaaaaaah! >> right in the smurfberries. >> what we'll do is we'll bring the actor in and we will do a head cast first so we have an exact copy of his head, and then for "smurfs," what we did was we created a sculpture design of what we were gonna make hank azaria look like as gargamel to show to the director so that he can decide whether or not he likes it and if he wants to make changes. so, for this makeup, we did a -- we had hank shave his head. we did a full wig. we did fake prosthetic ears,
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nose, teeth, and eyebrows. and to give you an idea, this is the nose appliance that he wore, and it's made out of silicone. you can feel it. it feels very real. >> yeah. >> so, it looks very real on-camera. these are -- this is the silicone ear that he wore, 'cause we wanted to make his ears very big, and then one of the major things that changed his look were these dentures, which are very silly, giant dentures. >> wow. >> deeply disappointing experiment. >> pretty substantial. >> definitely. >> yeah. >> welcome to the party! [ laughs evilly ] >> how did you get started in this business? >> i was always a huge fan of horror movies and science-fiction films as a kid, and i was also an artist, so i drew a lot. so, i started learning how to sculpt and kind of transfer my drawing to sculpting and ultimately moved to los angeles in 1990, and my first film that i worked on was "hook." >> what kind of talent does it
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take? >> well, you have to -- you have to be an artist to start. you have to be able to have that eye where you can visually draw or sculpt. you have to be able to make molds, teeth, eyes. i mean, there's a lot involved in doing makeup effects. >> can you show me a demonstration? >> sure. i'll do a 60-second transformation into a vampire. come on over, and i'll show you how we do it. all right. so, first of all, what i'm gonna do is put a little bit of this dark purple makeup around my eyes to give me a bit of a sunken-in look, little bit of a sickly feel, right there and right there. so, all of a sudden, i don't look as healthy. and i put these lenses in. >> oh. so, they kind of change the color of your eyes. >> they do. >> ohh. [ suspenseful music plays ] do the contacts -- do they hurt
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your eyes at all? >> they actually don't. >> wow. >> and instantly... i am a bit scarier. >> definitely. >> yes. >> oh, that's definitely scarier. >> yeah. [ music continues ] >> oh, impressive. you must be a hit at halloween parties. >> we have a lot of fun at halloween. yes, we do. >> so, what advice do you have for kids who want to do what you do? >> start getting videos and books that teach you how to do makeup effects and start learning in your garage and start building stuff and just have fun. >> so, if you're trying to make up your mind about a career and you have a talent for creativity, becoming a special-effects makeup artist might be just the ticket, as in "movie ticket." for "teen kids news," i'm katie. [ thunder crashes ] >> aaaaaah! >> [ laughs evilly ] >> [ laughs ] well, that's our show for this week. thanks for watching "teen kids news." we'll see you next time.
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>> here's a shout-out to pr newswire for including "teen kids news" on their big screen in times square, new york city.
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steves: confined within its walls, as it has been for centuries, dubrovnik juts out from the rocky croatian coastline
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looking inviting from both the land and the sea. its central promenade is the heartbeat of the city -- a thriving people zone. it's a multi-generational celebration of life, where everybody's out enjoying that mediterranean knack for capping the day with an easygoing stroll. dubrovnik is very touristy, and understandably so. even with all its crowds, as anywhere, back-street charm is just a few steps away. stepped lanes help you imagine actually living here in an age before tourism dominated the economy. the town's imposing architecture is a reminder of its former glory. in the 15th century, the salt trade and shipbuilding made dubrovnik a maritime power and rival to venice.
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the sponza palace is a fine surviving example of dubrovnik's golden age in the 15th and 16th centuries, combining both renaissance and venetian gothic styles. stepping into its stately courtyard takes you back to that illustrious age. through clever diplomacy, dubrovnik managed to maintain its independence untithe 1800s. through all those centuries, the republic of dubrovnik invested mightily to withstand any siege. they stockpiled grain in huge underground silos and piped in water from nearby mountains. dubrovnik's single best attraction is its mighty wall, offering an unforgettably scenic mile-long stroll. while constructed over many centuries, today's impressive fortifications date from the 1400s, when they were beefed up to defend against the ottoman turks. while the walls worked fine against the turks five centuries ago, they couldn't protect the city from modern artillery.
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in 1991, after croatia declared independence from yugoslavia, the yugoslav army shelled the city, damaging about 2/3 of its buildings. brighter, newer tiles mark the houses that were hit and roofs that had to be replaced. these roofs were rebuilt using the same materials as the original ones. when the war engulfed this beloved city, the world paid attention. today, as the new tiles are fading, so are the scars of that war. we're staying at a small guesthouse at the top of town. throughout croatia, sobe -- that's rooms for rent in private homes -- are a much better value than big hotels. ours is run by pero. pero, tell me about the war here in dubrovnik. pero: well, it was a very difficult time. dubrovnik was under siege for eight months. so, no water, no electricity, no food, medicine.
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and all the refugees from all those smaller places around, they came to dubrovnik, hoping they would not dare to do such things to dubrovnik, right? steves: what happened to this house? pero: well, this house was hit by two grenades from mortars, right? so, this is what i found on top of my house. two of those explode. the house was hit. no tiles -- i could see the sky. there was no roof on the house. steves: and this house... pero: this house is more than six centuries old. and it's in my family for more than 200 years. so i took some loans in the bank, and i decided to rent it, like a guesthouse. steves: so, now the tourists are coming back, and you have a good business. -pero: yes. -steves: and a beautiful house. congrat-- the quality and the craftsmanship is just beautiful. pero: thank you very much. steves: with the war in the past, the tourists are back.
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to escape the crowds, hit the beaches during the heat and crush of midday. go for a dip near or far from the old town. wherever you choose, you'll swim in the shadow of one of europe's finest fortified medieval cities. and evenings in town are peaceful. a hole in the mighty wall leads to a great little bar called buza -- just the place for a romantic sunset. clinging like a barnacle to the outside of the city walls, this tranquil getaway is the perfect place to appreciate this city's extraordinary setting.
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[playful instrumental music] ♪ - known around the world for its charming seaside village atmosphere, cape town and the western cape offer a unique combination of history... - this is where nelson mandela was being kept when he was here. - nature... - this is the cape of good hope. - lots and lots of penguins. - and adventure activities like nothing we've seen before. - whoo! - oh, my god! - [laughing] - it jumped! - so we're about to get down in the cage with the great white sharks. from sharks to sand dunes. - nathan! - join us as we travel to the very end of this great continent in: - travel with kids: africa!

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