- Violent J: Everybody that likes our music feels a super connection. That's why all those juggalos here, they feel so connected to it, because it's exclusively theirs. See, when something's on the radio, it's for everybody, you know what I mean? It's everybody's song, "Oh, this is my song". That ain't your song. It's on the radio, it's everybody's song. But to listen to ICP, you feel like you're the only one who knows about it.
- Correspondent: A lot of people seem to sense anger coming off juggalos, 'cause there's a lot of middle finger stuff... I mean, who's the middle finger to?
- Interviewed Juggalo#1: The middle finger is to everybody who doesn't understand what we're doing. It's to the world.
- Interviewed Juggalo#2: To the mainstream.
- Interviewed Juggalo#1: People who don't understand, people like these people who drive by honking their horns, drive by laughing at us. We don't care. That's who the middle fingers and the "fuck yous" are for.
- Interviewed Juggalo#3: Fuck, I mean, to hell with society, you know. I mean, we worry about society and what they think. They control what goes on in our bedroom, you know, what we dress like, what our hair color is. Why let it control it here? This is where we have fun.
- Susanne Daniels: What do you think kids talk about? What do you think teenagers talk about? Teenagers talk about sex. Teenagers are consumed with sex. It is my personal opinion that teenagers should not be having sex, but- but they are- they're confronted with it in terms of advertising, and they see it on television in prime-time shows and, in fact, in daytime shows. We have really taken sex responsibly - I feel that the WB has - and tried to portray ramifications of it, why and how and when and where to say no.
- Himself - Correspondent: Jessica Biel's first big part was on a fledgling television network devoted to the teenager, the WB. She played a minister's daughter on the wholesome teen drama 7th Heaven. 7th Heaven was part of the WB's newly devised formula, radical by the standards of teen television: Keep it clean.
- Marianne Moore: [from Beverly Hills, 90210 Episode 0: Class of Beverly Hills] Let's take off all our clothes.
- Himself - Correspondent: By its third season, the WB made a course change. Their new trajectory: Dawson's Creek, a show about a group of sex-obsessed high school friends in an idyllic Cape Cod town. On Dawson's first episode, one of its lead characters, 14-year-old Pacey, begins a sexual affair with his teacher.
- Correspondent: [talking about the singer Britney Spears] She hit the scene at 16 with "Baby, One More Time," as a naughty Catholic schoolgirl bursting out of her uniform. When it came time for a spread in Rolling Stone, the 17-year-old self-professed virgin Britney struck the classic nymphet pose. And at the Video Music Awards last year, when Britney finally and famously came out of her clothes, she wasn't just pleasing eager young boys, she was delivering a powerful missive to girls: Your body is your best asset. Flaunt your sexuality even if you don't understand it. And that's the message that matters most because Britney's most loyal fans are teenage girls.
- Correspondent: In bringing teen sexual content to what had always been network TV's 8:00 o'clock family hour, Dawson's Creek and the WB made the headlines. However reluctantly, they had raised the sexual stakes even further. What would teens come to expect from TV now? Who would top Dawson's? MTV, that's who, by launching a new nighttime soap unambiguously entitled Undressed. Dispensing with plot almost completely, its quick-cut, channel-surf-resistant vignettes draw their characters so thinly they nearly disappear.
- Neal H. Moritz: I think what you can't do is play down to teenagers, play down to the young people. No teenager is going to be satisfied with a PG-13-rated horror film, OK? They want to see the blood and guts. That's what they want to do. They want to see the slasher element of those films. And you can't do that the way they want to see it and get a PG-13 rating.
- Himself - Correspondent: Having declared them worthy of a slot on TRL, MTV now also had a stake in making Limp Bizkit stars. The network put the band on their Spring Break special.
- Correspondent: And girls get dragged down there right along with boys. The media machine has spit out a second caricature. Perhaps we can call this stereotype "the midriff." The midriff is no more true to life than the mook. If he is arrested in adolescence, she is prematurely adult. If he doesn't care what people think of him, she is consumed by appearances. If his thing is crudeness, hers is sex. The midriff is really just a collection of the same old sexual cliches, but repackaged as a new kind of female empowerment. "I am midriff, hear me roar. I am a sexual object, but I'm proud of it."
- Barbara: I want to be a model. I want to be an actor. I want people to notice me and just be, like, "Oh, wow, she is pretty." I have to look good for people. I need to look good. Like, if I don't look good for people, I'll be really upset, and it'll, like, ruin my day. So whenever I go out with friends, like, even just over to their house, I need to look good.