Are Parents To Blame For Naughty Children? | TDK Podcast

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  • čas přidán 26. 06. 2022
  • Are naughty children the result of shitty parents? Should we be allowed to scold other people's children if they misbehave in public? Why are children shows satanic?!
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    Cast:
    • Johnathan Chua / johnathanchua
    • Daniel Lim / danlim11
    • Jonathan Paul / jonathanpaul.sxw
    • Denise Oh / ohthedenise
    Behind the Cam:
    • Nashrul Merza
    • Julian Chin
    • Keith Kok
    • Daren Khek
    • Charlene Goh
    Edited by:
    Sherlene Lau
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Komentáře • 62

  • @TheDailyKetchupPodcast
    @TheDailyKetchupPodcast  Před 2 lety +5

    CASTING CALL!
    Secret Show #1
    Apply here if you're interested in sharing your perspective : forms.gle/mTJnsNQQQA6aCYvc6
    Secret Show #2
    Apply here if you're interested in living life to the fullest!
    forms.gle/euVMnZYYeXMKD3xf9
    P.S. you can apply for both!

  • @angelinateo1051
    @angelinateo1051 Před 2 lety +34

    I am a nursery teacher and having to be with 2.5 years old children daily has really changed my perspective of parenting. IT IS TOUGH and honestly there’s no such thing as the “right” way of parenting. Each child is unique in their own very special way and one method might work on one but fail terribly on the other. Personally, I really do stop “judging” parents when a child is crying his/her lungs out in public. The child like any adult might be going through a bad day. And being tiny regulation of emotions aren’t really their forte.
    Also, Denise being left in public alone as a child broke me a little. Personally, it is not a method I’ll ever use on any child.
    Just thought I’ll comment because this is something I’m really passionate in. And the bus I’m in hasn’t moved for the past 30 mins. * Bangkok traffic being beautifully tragic 💫*

  • @phoebsthepothead
    @phoebsthepothead Před 2 lety +50

    I really wanna see JP as a parent

  • @franzthegardener6978
    @franzthegardener6978 Před 2 lety +26

    As a responsible parent, we do not bring kids to certain places where there may be possibility of our kids ruining other's harmony. This is the necessary sacrifice for a few years of the kids life. Once the kids are older and can understand, we slowly normalise. My son is 20 and my daughter is 18, Both grown up to be understanding, respectful of others and responsible young adults in your country, studying.

  • @imairmeli
    @imairmeli Před 2 lety +42

    I used to be like JP too but after having kids, I am more tolerable to difficult kids. My boy cried murder in a restaurant because it is his nap time and we were trying to have dinner. My hub and me took turns carrying him outside the restaurant. We was crying non stop for a whole 30min. Just want to share, kids are all different. Some are easier and just nap when tired while others will cry the world down.

  • @Kytexer
    @Kytexer Před 2 lety +34

    If you're gonna be discussing parenting, invite at least one guest who has experience in parenting, or at least has been a teacher or a caregiver for a child.
    Honestly, many people assume parenting is easy or simple, until they actually do it.

  • @Met377
    @Met377 Před 2 lety +44

    For your info, the Teletubby statue was placed in an open space where there is heavy public traffic with no railings or casing on it. The kid did not kick the statue, he was seen pushed into the statue by the crowd which caused the statue to fall on CCTV.
    That designer toy retail shop is located on the top floor of Langham Place in Mongkok is known for being shady and upon the news going viral and getting a bad rep from the Hong Kong public, its mother company (a Japanese company if I'm not wrong) returned the money back to the boy's father.

  • @syin_yu
    @syin_yu Před 2 lety +7

    i LOVE tdk omg never fails to make my day!!!!! thanks for filming and posting :-)

  • @lim8469
    @lim8469 Před 2 lety +6

    im so happy that yall are posting so frequently 🥲🥲 i watch every single episode 👍🏽 hehee

  • @kazami5699
    @kazami5699 Před 2 lety +6

    I think parents should not use violence on children to punish them they should use good reasoning and understand the situation why the child did wrong or else they will grow up with violent mindset

  • @shermsin
    @shermsin Před rokem +1

    Honestly, only non-parents are the judging ones and have the most to say.

  • @ytbe578
    @ytbe578 Před 2 lety +5

    answer to the title of the video: YES

  • @saiba687
    @saiba687 Před 2 lety +10

    This episode is so triggering as a parent 😫

    • @xxuenii
      @xxuenii Před 2 lety

      YESSSSSS they taking everything too lightly.

  • @jaceeeee33333
    @jaceeeee33333 Před 2 lety

    Love this episodes! I need more stories from yall childhoods!

  • @pandarealwhite
    @pandarealwhite Před 2 lety +6

    My two cents. Perhaps the hosts could watch the footage of the boy leaning against the Teletubby together prior to the start of the podcast, so that everyone is informed and can formulate their opinions more effectively.

  • @kii1359
    @kii1359 Před 2 lety +1

    I really love all your podcasts. Y'all always make me laugh HAHAHA :")

  • @angiemf9033
    @angiemf9033 Před 2 lety +2

    Yes. Children are born innocent. Parents are to be blamed for the behaviours of the children.

  • @TW-hk2uw
    @TW-hk2uw Před 2 lety +1

    I brought my kid to Japan (from Malaysia) when he was only 1.5 years old. He slept right through the trip. And we were even upgraded to business class. So its all about how we prepared him for the trip that's important.

  • @Ms951753able
    @Ms951753able Před 2 lety +1

    Most parents are first timers. They all learn as they are doing. It is good to encourage parents to go for child development courses. "Two-year-olds have twice as many synapses as adults. Because these connections between brain cells are where learning occurs, twice as many synapses enable the brain to learn faster than at any other time of life."

  • @rayroar1117
    @rayroar1117 Před 2 lety +2

    Actually if other people's children misbehave in public you do not need to scold them.
    You can just act a little weird (think Mr Bean) and the child will stop their misdeeds.
    The child may run away or may choose to stop what they are doing and watch you.
    If you scold them you are breaking a social norm already, if you act weird (without intending to harm) you are also breaking a social norm.
    So multiple methods.
    And the parents may appreciate you for that. Because they themselves cannot do it.
    Or rather, if they do it (act weird), it just would not have the same power as if a stranger does it.

  • @VICTORIAFORSS
    @VICTORIAFORSS Před 2 měsíci

    WHERE EVER THERE IS A FIRE HOSE OR PUBLIC FIRE EXTINGUISHER AROUND.....IT IS A BIG NO NO TO EVEN TOUCH THESE PUBLIC APPARATUS BY ANY ADULT OR ANY KID AT ALL ❗️❗️❗️❗️
    PARENTS NOT ALERT AT THEIR CHILDREN MIS-BEHAVIOR TOUCHING SUCH APPARATUS MUST BE HOLD ACCOUNTABLE FOR ANY HARM OR DAMAGE OCCURED ❗️❗️❗️
    IT IS NOT
    EXCUSABLE FOR PARENTS TO REMAIN SILENT AND PLAYING A DUMBGAME WHEN DAMAGES HAD BEEN DONE ALREADY TO A THIRD PARTY

  • @vinraj54
    @vinraj54 Před 2 lety

    Nice chat, good Job

  • @clarence961
    @clarence961 Před 2 lety

    WOWZ new episode alr awesome!!!

  • @xxuenii
    @xxuenii Před 2 lety +3

    Im very interested to hear JP views after he become a parent himself. Cause he will realise he is slapping himself in this epi 😅 kids now were not us in the past. And we were mainly raised to be a people pleaser which is 🤮

  • @nigeltan4685
    @nigeltan4685 Před 2 lety +1

    I feel that all those who threw the cane out the window turned out okay 😂

  • @angiemf9033
    @angiemf9033 Před 2 lety +1

    Well said JP. All your contributions are excellent. Good job

  • @yecly
    @yecly Před 2 lety +9

    YES, AND YES!!!
    Especially in the public area. Anything that the kid does that include public disturbance or crime will be served by the parents for negligent unless they can prove it otherwise.
    e.i. If your kid made disturbances in a cinema hall, then it's your responsibility to STOP WATCHING, take the kid outside to tend them.
    Same if your kid destroyed or caused property damage. The parents should be responsible or faced by legal charge depending on the situation.
    Wake up mothers and fathers, you can't throw a victim card everytime your child done something wrong. Take the responsibility and discipline your child to be a functional member of the society.
    A little mishap may be excused but you can stretch everything too far every single time.
    That or gave up your child custody to the state and serve your time in prison like you should.

  • @k3ntw4i
    @k3ntw4i Před 2 lety

    The end so wholesome xD

  • @austen98
    @austen98 Před rokem

    Because it was brought up, I would like to discuss the beating of children in whatever way you see it. To do this, I would like to bring up something my dad said to me after I grew up. He said, " You know, I hated caning/punishing you but...your mother told me to do so or I didn't know what else to do" So I asked him, what made you stop because I distinctly remember that he did stop hitting us after we got to a certain age, I think it was like 9 or 10. He explained that he realised that he was only doing what he experienced while he grew up (what he learned from his own parents) and just thought that repeating it was the way, the only way. He had an epiphany later on when he was discussing something with us while we were on a road trip together to Pangkor Island, without my mother, that we had a great time. We were singing songs in the car along with the stereo and he asked, why are we not like that most of the time? Almost in unison, according to him, we (my brother and I) said because mommy isn't here because mommy will tell us to "shut up" and not make noise (she was the authoritarian type). He realised eventually that caning us was just having the opposite effect. From then on, he took us, at about 9 and 10 respectively, for weekly trips scuba diving around the environs of Pangkor Island and taught us how to use power boats and dinghies. By our teenage years, we were already well-versed in the operation of such water vehicles (which included all the things you need to do to use and care for the boat). By 15, we were very self-sufficient on our own. All he need to do is tell us what he wanted and it was done. My sister, however, turned out to be the exact opposite of us due to the fact that my mother felt she had the onus of bringing up the only daughter in the family. Needless to say, my sister became a mirror of my mother, although at the same time, bringing up her daughters in a good way, left her to treat us, her older brothers like crap.
    Coming back to the topic though, my answer would be, YES, the parents are to blame if the children are naughty. In places like planes and all, it can't be helped but in the environs of a restaurant, for example, if the child is acting up, one of the parents has the onus of taking that child away and calming them while leaving the rest of the table and customers in peace to eat their meal. For parents to leave a child bawling their eyes out in front of everyone is just bad form on the part of the parents because it means they have no compass, socially and to a lesser extent, morally. Sure there are times when no matter what a parent does the child still misbehaves. However, and I must point this out, a child doesn't just do something out of a vacuum. If children act in a particular way, they do so learning that it's okay from someone else, from their own family, or even their own parents and that the parents just don't notice it and don't do anything about it. The onus is on parents to know their child inside and out so they can react to things they don't want their child to do and come up with solutions to try to make their child understand that certain things are not to be done. It's not easy. I am a parent myself and it's been a voyage of discovery for me, and I keep learning more every day. The old ways like how our parents brought us up, like smacking, in the long run, don't work, no matter how much others think it might.

  • @stefgoh6160
    @stefgoh6160 Před 2 lety

    Humans r all made unique & parenting must b customised accordingly which makes it one of the toughest job in e world bcos it’s a job u take on tt last until the day you die. Also, nobody has a complete repertoire of skills or tools to help them parent each individual kid. One only knows what benefited them & was detriment to them after it was all said & done. Parents learn fr their kids as much as their kids learn fr them thru out the parenting process. I found parenting a very humbling process bcos I felt like half the time I wasn’t doing a good job & tt I simply was ill-equipped to parent. It’s very disconcerting to not know all the time & to have to learn so much at 1 go. The worst part is letting go when one has to balek kampung to Jesus & leave their kid behind. I don’t think I wl ever b ready to do tt but I wld hv to eventually.

  • @theophi-smiles
    @theophi-smiles Před 2 lety

    TDKP - My fav entertainment

  • @firsfdm2782
    @firsfdm2782 Před 2 lety

    Wew didn't expect to be this early. Am a fan guys. Subscribed and notified

  • @Ganesha6661
    @Ganesha6661 Před 2 lety

    For the fire extinguisher issue, if the pin is there, no one will be able press down and release the form. So, the BK failed their safety

  • @sleepy_dobe
    @sleepy_dobe Před 2 lety +1

    Eh....not possible that the fire extinguisher came without a safety pin. The fire safety rules are in place to ensure such things are regularly checked by qualified and certified fire safety personnel and if this safety pin issue was observed during monthly inspections, the extinguisher in question would have been replaced immediately, and a note of the finding and corrective action taken would be made in the inspection report. As a former facilities personnel familiar with such rules and practices, this raises a lot of questions in my mind for the restaurant's owner and manager in question.
    Safety pin aside, I believe this is a difference in culture. Not trying to be racist, but if you notice, most Indian kids tend to be noisier, run around more, touch things more etc etc, because I think in their culture, kids are given a lot more freedom to explore and run around than kids in a typical Chinese culture. I have noticed this in most Indian families that I come across, that I know personally, and those that I see in public. So I believe it is just part of their culture, and I don't think it is racist to say so. If it's racist for people to comment on something that is part of your culture, then nobody can say anything about anyone anymore. Cultural differences aside, all parents still have a responsibility to teach their children appropriate and acceptable behaviour in public. This is simple consideration to the people around you.

  • @joyful8124
    @joyful8124 Před 2 lety

    Would love to hear out your pov about Roe v Wade!

  • @ben2415
    @ben2415 Před 2 lety

    FIRST! MY DDDAILY KETCHUPPP

  • @jytan740
    @jytan740 Před 2 lety

    suddenly know so many facts abt telletubbies

  • @tituslzh
    @tituslzh Před 2 lety +3

    Of course. Just look at how parents spoilt their kids nowadays by giving them whatever they want.

  • @kyson6968
    @kyson6968 Před 2 lety

    I love Daniel hooksss

  • @Fangs569
    @Fangs569 Před 2 lety +4

    Under the Singapore Standard, Code of Practice SS 578, Use and Maintenance of Portable Fire Extinguishers, the owner or occupant of a premises is responsible for the inspection and maintenance of the fire extinguishers installed in the premises. This is to ensure that the fire extinguishers are in good working order. Without that safety pin, the extinguisher could be partially discharged or triggered. Without further investigation, the kid who pressed the fire extinguisher could be suspected of pulling out the pin and pressing the fire extinguisher trigger; which suggest that the act is intentional...

  • @andytanSG
    @andytanSG Před 2 lety

    Nice

  • @jimw8615
    @jimw8615 Před 2 lety

    Be a parent, then u will understand a lot of things. Life is not black & white. As much as parents educate their children. Shit do happen. Parents just have to take responsibility after that. Life is grey.

  • @benwong2061
    @benwong2061 Před 2 lety

    Algo!

  • @Ben-kh2rh
    @Ben-kh2rh Před 2 lety +1

    next episode aimrun pleaseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee

  • @cherriemay528
    @cherriemay528 Před 2 lety

    Don't hit me😳

  • @hiboon9271
    @hiboon9271 Před 2 lety +9

    About the kids crying and don't give attention, I feel like most of the parents just let them cry in public area or restaurant which may disturb others. At least bring them out of that place la. Want ignore also think of other people around pls.

    • @yapolloable
      @yapolloable Před 2 lety

      ya sia, these pundeh parents. No brain, don't give birth la sial. 😂

  • @tampenismall2195
    @tampenismall2195 Před 2 lety

    Crying like a MF
    Love this line

  • @anlynhi
    @anlynhi Před 2 lety +1

    Commenting on parenting when none of the hosts are parents themselves ...🤔

  • @elilo5867
    @elilo5867 Před 2 lety +2

    Just dont cut the umbilical cord when your kid is born and that will be its leash

  • @TheEverscar
    @TheEverscar Před 2 lety

    Where is the casting link???

    • @tareginda
      @tareginda Před 2 lety

      In the description box under video

  • @strongstrengthtv
    @strongstrengthtv Před 2 lety

    alot of parents do not scold their kids.. they see it normal to cry loudly in public. my mom was different embarrasing and i feel it is unfair. they really have a different approach. nowadays most leave the disciplining and the taking care of to the maids, only weekends then they try to accompany the kids.