Here’s why grown-ups playing teenagers may be an inaccurate portrayal

Projecting a grown-up in the job of a high schooler is the story ancient in Hollywood circles, an obsolete custom actually being polished with almost no repercussions for the actual studios. The projecting chiefs regularly discover defenses for these decisions easily, contending that the content or topic requires a matured up entertainer. However, in the ages of kids who have grown up venerating the TV there turns into a significant issue of body issues, sexualization, and ridiculous principles of how they should act.

If Hollywood doesn’t start to stop this practice from the beginning, the young people of today will keep on settling on exceptionally extreme choices to keep in sync with the appealing existences of the not-so-fifteen-year-olds ruling our screens.

Blake Lively was twenty years of age when she previously graced our screens as Serena van der Woodsen-the gossip Girlsophomore in secondary school with a faultless fashion awareness, impeccable skin, and an enchanting character. Zendaya Coleman is 24, right now playing seventeen-year-old Rue Bennett on HBO’s Euphoria, where she manages intense chronic drug use. Jughead Jones, Riverdale’s wickedly attractive sixteen-year-old rebel, was played by 24-year-old Cole Sprouse.

There is an enormous issue when studio heads choose to project entertainers who are definitely more seasoned than their given jobs since it makes a distinction between the topic and target group. Subliminally, youngsters will start to contrast themselves with their top pick on-screen characters, starting to ask why they don’t look anything the same and how they can deal with fix themselves.

Varnika Srivastava

Varnika Srivastava is pursuing in Journalism - Mass Media. Varnika is currently working as a student news journalist, social media campaigner, and blogger.