In the narrative novella Twilight, as my prime example and reviewed media. There’s a conclusive understanding of the media consumed often by young teens and the conditioned idealism promoted.The Twilight saga has since been promoted as a inspiring romantic perversion of teen fanfiction, and with much sourced criticism is by far one of the most problematic. Stephanie Meyer the author of the hit series has culled a majority of the reviews via creating a large casted excuse. The main critical part of the saga is the cast, but to provide a more solidified review, the most problematic scene is the consensual intercourse between Bella and Edward. This scene ultimately becomes repulsive in nature after Bella is completely bruised and frames the violent nature of it as her own fault. This scene is obscure already on it’s own, however, this romantic perception of the truth behind the scene is problematic. The large majority of young adults are within a similar age-range of 14-17, and consume the content in differing interpretations. However, the content in itself is directed as a romance, and therefore the author's perversion of said content is concerning. So fundamentally, is it well far-fetched to assume that the content is a form of conditioning of young girls to believe that's a sense of reality?