Monday 21 July 2014

'Facts of Life' stars reunite






"Facts of Life" co-stars Kim Fields, left, and Lisa Whelchel reunited in the 2014 Hallmark Channel movie "For Better or For Worse." Here's what else these two actresses, and their former co-stars, have going on:"Facts of Life" co-stars Kim Fields, left, and Lisa Whelchel reunited in the 2014 Hallmark Channel movie "For Better or For Worse." Here's what else these two actresses, and their former co-stars, have going on:

After playing spoiled Blair Warner on "The Facts of Life," and taking a lengthy hiatus from acting, Whelchel reprised her role in 2001's "The Facts of Life Reunion." After divorcing her husband of 24 years in March 2012, Whelchel was a contestant on CBS' "Survivor: Philippines," and then snagged a role in Tyler Perry's 2013 movie, "Tyler Perry's A Madea Christmas."After playing spoiled Blair Warner on "The Facts of Life," and taking a lengthy hiatus from acting, Whelchel reprised her role in 2001's "The Facts of Life Reunion." After divorcing her husband of 24 years in March 2012, Whelchel was a contestant on CBS' "Survivor: Philippines," and then snagged a role in Tyler Perry's 2013 movie, "Tyler Perry's A Madea Christmas."

Kim Fields, who played Tootie on "The Facts of Life," roller-skated over to Fox in 1993 to play Regine Hunter on "Living Single." She appeared on several series and worked as a director-producer before playing a social worker in 2012's "What to Expect When You're Expecting." In 2013 Fields and her husband became a family of four as they welcomed second son Quincy.Kim Fields, who played Tootie on "The Facts of Life," roller-skated over to Fox in 1993 to play Regine Hunter on "Living Single." She appeared on several series and worked as a director-producer before playing a social worker in 2012's "What to Expect When You're Expecting." In 2013 Fields and her husband became a family of four as they welcomed second son Quincy.

Mindy Cohn has voiced "Scooby-Doo's" Velma and appeared on "The Secret Life of the American Teenager" as Dylan's mom since playing Natalie Green. According to IMDb, Cohn will voice Velma in the 2015 TV movie "Freak Out Scooby Doo!"Mindy Cohn has voiced "Scooby-Doo's" Velma and appeared on "The Secret Life of the American Teenager" as Dylan's mom since playing Natalie Green. According to IMDb, Cohn will voice Velma in the 2015 TV movie "Freak Out Scooby Doo!"

After playing housemother-turned-dietitian Edna Garrett, Charlotte Rae went on to voice the character of Nanny on "101 Dalmatians: The Series." She has also appeared in films like "You Don't Mess with the Zohan" and TV shows such as "ER." She played a "bead shop woman" on a 2011 episode of "Pretty Little Liars."After playing housemother-turned-dietitian Edna Garrett, Charlotte Rae went on to voice the character of Nanny on "101 Dalmatians: The Series." She has also appeared in films like "You Don't Mess with the Zohan" and TV shows such as "ER." She played a "bead shop woman" on a 2011 episode of "Pretty Little Liars."

Rebellious Jo Polniaczek joined the show in its second season. Nancy McKeon has since appeared on series like "Can't Hurry Love" and "Style & Substance." She starred in Lifetime's "The Division" and played Connie Munroe on the Disney Channel's "Sonny with a Chance." Rebellious Jo Polniaczek joined the show in its second season. Nancy McKeon has since appeared on series like "Can't Hurry Love" and "Style & Substance." She starred in Lifetime's "The Division" and played Connie Munroe on the Disney Channel's "Sonny with a Chance."

Cloris Leachman joined the cast as Beverly in 1986. With flicks like "The Beverly Hillbillies," "Double, Double, Toil and Trouble," "Now and Then" and "The Women" under her belt, the "Young Frankenstein" actress competed on Season 7 of "Dancing With the Stars." She also starred on Fox's "Raising Hope." Leachman won an Oscar for best supporting actress for 1971's "The Last Picture Show."Cloris Leachman joined the cast as Beverly in 1986. With flicks like "The Beverly Hillbillies," "Double, Double, Toil and Trouble," "Now and Then" and "The Women" under her belt, the "Young Frankenstein" actress competed on Season 7 of "Dancing With the Stars." She also starred on Fox's "Raising Hope." Leachman won an Oscar for best supporting actress for 1971's "The Last Picture Show."

Since playing Beverly's adopted son, Andy Moffet, actor Mackenzie Astin went on to appear in films like 1994's "Iron Will," 1996's "In Love and War," 2003's "How to Deal" and 2006's "Stranger Than Fiction." In 2014 he appeared in several TV shows, including "Hawaii Five-0" and "Scandal."Since playing Beverly's adopted son, Andy Moffet, actor Mackenzie Astin went on to appear in films like 1994's "Iron Will," 1996's "In Love and War," 2003's "How to Deal" and 2006's "Stranger Than Fiction." In 2014 he appeared in several TV shows, including "Hawaii Five-0" and "Scandal."

After playing handyman George Burnett, George Clooney starred in "ER" and picked up an Oscar for his role in 2005's "Syriana." He's known for starring in films like "Oceans Eleven" and its sequels, "O Brother, Where Art Thou," "Up in the Air" and "Good Night, and Good Luck," which he also directed and co-wrote.After playing handyman George Burnett, George Clooney starred in "ER" and picked up an Oscar for his role in 2005's "Syriana." He's known for starring in films like "Oceans Eleven" and its sequels, "O Brother, Where Art Thou," "Up in the Air" and "Good Night, and Good Luck," which he also directed and co-wrote.









  • Lisa Whelchel and Kim Fields reunited in a 2014 TV movie

  • They co-starred on the '80s sitcom "Facts of Life"

  • The two have said that it was just like "riding a bike"




(CNN) -- On Saturday, two stars from "Facts of Life" got together for a long overdue TV reunion.


Lisa Whelchel and Kim Fields, who co-starred on the '80s sitcom about a group of girls in boarding school as Blair and Tootie, were reunited in the Hallmark Channel TV movie, "For Better or For Worse," which aired on July 19.


After each going their separate ways -- Fields continued to act and direct while Whelchel became a Christian writer and speaker -- returning to a set together was "like riding a bike," Fields recently told "Good Morning America."


"Lisa's a wonderfully talented woman, plain and simple," the now 45-year-old actress said of her co-star.


Whelchel, 51, was just as comforted to take a small screen job alongside a familiar face.


"It was like old times, but really, really different," Whelchel said to People magazine. "We felt comfortable together, because we're such good friends. But I can see her talent as an adult. I would watch her during a scene now and think, 'Wow, she's really good. She's so funny.' I didn't appreciate that as a kid."


So what's the rest of the cast been up to? Click through the photos to find out.



How Monty Python says goodbye






In honor of fans worldwide who were able to enjoy a historic reunion of the surviving Monty Python members<a href='http://ift.tt/1iVibOi' target='_blank'>,</a> we take a look at what the troupe achieved outside of Python:In honor of fans worldwide who were able to enjoy a historic reunion of the surviving Monty Python members, we take a look at what the troupe achieved outside of Python:

John Cleese, now 74, created and starred in the immortal TV show "Fawlty Towers" in the 1970s and co-founded Video Arts, a company that makes training films. Younger viewers may know him best for his roles in the "Shrek" films (as King Harold), a pair of James Bond films (as Q) and the Harry Potter series (as Nearly Headless Nick). His most recent film role was in "Planes."John Cleese, now 74, created and starred in the immortal TV show "Fawlty Towers" in the 1970s and co-founded Video Arts, a company that makes training films. Younger viewers may know him best for his roles in the "Shrek" films (as King Harold), a pair of James Bond films (as Q) and the Harry Potter series (as Nearly Headless Nick). His most recent film role was in "Planes."

Terry Gilliam, 73, became a noted film director, best known for "Brazil" (1985), "The Fisher King" (1991) and "Twelve Monkeys" (1995). J.K. Rowling wanted him to direct the first Harry Potter film, but the studio didn't want the famously independent Gilliam. His latest film, "The Zero Theorem," is due for U.S. release this summer.Terry Gilliam, 73, became a noted film director, best known for "Brazil" (1985), "The Fisher King" (1991) and "Twelve Monkeys" (1995). J.K. Rowling wanted him to direct the first Harry Potter film, but the studio didn't want the famously independent Gilliam. His latest film, "The Zero Theorem," is due for U.S. release this summer.

Terry Jones, 72, has created TV shows about the Middle Ages, an era on which he's an expert. (He's written two books about Geoffrey Chaucer.) He's also written several children's books and was a regular contributor to UK newspapers during the Iraq war,<a href='http://ift.tt/1iVi9WC'> which he opposed</a>. With songwriter Jim Steinman, he's been working on a rock version of "The Nutcracker."Terry Jones, 72, has created TV shows about the Middle Ages, an era on which he's an expert. (He's written two books about Geoffrey Chaucer.) He's also written several children's books and was a regular contributor to UK newspapers during the Iraq war, which he opposed. With songwriter Jim Steinman, he's been working on a rock version of "The Nutcracker."

Michael Palin, 71, has probably spent as much time traveling in the past 25 years as he has acting. Among his projects: "Pole to Pole," "Full Circle" and "Michael Palin's New Europe." His most recent venture was "Brazil with Michael Palin," which came out in 2012.Michael Palin, 71, has probably spent as much time traveling in the past 25 years as he has acting. Among his projects: "Pole to Pole," "Full Circle" and "Michael Palin's New Europe." His most recent venture was "Brazil with Michael Palin," which came out in 2012.

Eric Idle, 71, has probably done the most to maintain the Python tradition. He engaged in "The Greedy Bastard Tour" in 2003, which included performances of Python material, and turned "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" into "Spamalot," which won the Tony for best musical in 2005. He also helped create the Rutles, perhaps the sharpest Beatles parody. And he sang his song "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" at the 2012 Olympics closing ceremony. Eric Idle, 71, has probably done the most to maintain the Python tradition. He engaged in "The Greedy Bastard Tour" in 2003, which included performances of Python material, and turned "Monty Python and the Holy Grail" into "Spamalot," which won the Tony for best musical in 2005. He also helped create the Rutles, perhaps the sharpest Beatles parody. And he sang his song "Always Look on the Bright Side of Life" at the 2012 Olympics closing ceremony.

Graham Chapman died in 1989. Before then, he performed material at several colleges and appeared in an Iron Maiden video. Since his death, at least one of his plays, "O Happy Day," has been performed. The Pythons haven't forgotten their colleague: They did a wonderfully uncomfortable routine with Chapman's "ashes" at the Aspen Comedy Festival in 1998, and in 2012, all the Pythons except Idle lent their voices to a film based on Chapman's memoirs.Graham Chapman died in 1989. Before then, he performed material at several colleges and appeared in an Iron Maiden video. Since his death, at least one of his plays, "O Happy Day," has been performed. The Pythons haven't forgotten their colleague: They did a wonderfully uncomfortable routine with Chapman's "ashes" at the Aspen Comedy Festival in 1998, and in 2012, all the Pythons except Idle lent their voices to a film based on Chapman's memoirs.









  • "Monty Python Live (Mostly)" concluded Sunday

  • Show was live in London, simulcast all over world

  • Group looked like it was having fun, didn't break new ground




(CNN) -- If there were any doubt that the members of the Monty Python troupe wouldn't be holding back in their farewell show, it came with a rousing version of "Every Sperm Is Sacred."


The performance of the "Meaning of Life" song included a whole range of props, including cannons in the shape of phalluses. And what's the point of bringing out phallus-shaped cannons if you're not going to, uh, set them off?


Python has always been equal parts deadpan and silly, highbrow and low, and the "Monty Python Live (Mostly)" show -- which concluded Sunday at London's O2 Arena and was simulcast all over the world -- highlighted those distinctions.


Among the sketches performed by the group were the Yorkshiremen, in which the four attempt to one-up each another in remembering horrible childhoods; "Crunchy Frog," in which John Cleese's inspector challenges Terry Jones' confectioner over some interesting chocolate creations; and, of course, the "Parrot Sketch," which was combined with the "Cheese Shop" sketch, allowing Cleese and Michael Palin to indulge in their fondness for synonyms and euphemisms.




Monty Python emerges for a last show at London\'s O2 Arena.

Monty Python emerges for a last show at London's O2 Arena.



In that one, Cleese and Palin seemed to be having a particularly good time, stepping on each other's lines in high-spirited confusion. Cleese also got in an impromptu knock against a British newspaper editor.


The "Monty Python Live (Mostly)" show has gotten decent reviews (mostly) during its three-week run, many praising the group for its contribution to comedy if lamenting the casualness of the live production. The final show was apparently little changed from the debut, with its many musical numbers and occasional hesitations. There were a couple special guests for the final show -- Eddie Izzard and Mike Myers -- and physicist Stephen Hawking, who joined a videotaped skit, was in the live audience.


Nevertheless, if the group didn't break any new ground, then again, it didn't have to.


"It gives the crowd exactly what they want but relies pretty heavily on the fan love and makes a hefty withdrawal from the reputation bank," wrote The Guardian's Peter Bradshaw when the show debuted.


In a not-quite-full Atlanta theater where the show was simulcast, fans cheered their favorites, anticipating the Spanish Inquisition and singing along with "The Lumberjack Song." There were a couple audio glitches at the beginning, but for the most part it was an enjoyable afternoon, with the show functioning more as a celebration of Python history than a demand for new material.


Indeed, fans looked on the bright side of Python all over. In Calgary, Alberta, a storm knocked out the audio, but the audience simply started a singalong.


As the show came to a close, two frames came up on the O2's big screen: "Graham Chapman 1941-1989," in memory of the late Python member, and "Monty Python 1969-2014." If this is indeed the end, Python can go out knowing its legacy is secure.


And that's not so completely different.



Adam Levine marries in Mexico






Model Behati Prinsloo is now married to the "Sexiest Man Alive," Adam Levine. Here's a look at the "sexy" singer through the years:Model Behati Prinsloo is now married to the "Sexiest Man Alive," Adam Levine. Here's a look at the "sexy" singer through the years:

Levine performs with Maroon 5 on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in Burbank, California, in 2004.Levine performs with Maroon 5 on "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in Burbank, California, in 2004.

Maroon 5 poses with their award for "Best New Act" after the 2004 MTV Europe Music Awards in Rome.Maroon 5 poses with their award for "Best New Act" after the 2004 MTV Europe Music Awards in Rome.

Levine and Maroon 5 pose with their awards for "Best New Artist" during the 2005 Grammy Awards in Los Angeles.Levine and Maroon 5 pose with their awards for "Best New Artist" during the 2005 Grammy Awards in Los Angeles.

Levine sings with Kanye West in Los Angeles in 2005.Levine sings with Kanye West in Los Angeles in 2005.

Levine performs in Uniondale, New York, in 2007.Levine performs in Uniondale, New York, in 2007.

Levine performs with Maroon 5 at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 2007.Levine performs with Maroon 5 at Madison Square Garden in New York City in 2007.

Levine, second from right, sits with Denzel Washington, center, at a 2009 NBA playoff game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Denver Nuggets at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.Levine, second from right, sits with Denzel Washington, center, at a 2009 NBA playoff game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Denver Nuggets at the Staples Center in Los Angeles.

Levine and singer Cee Lo Green arrive at a press conference for "The Voice" in Los Angeles in 2011.Levine and singer Cee Lo Green arrive at a press conference for "The Voice" in Los Angeles in 2011.

Levine signs autographs in Valencia, California, in 2011.Levine signs autographs in Valencia, California, in 2011.

Levine sings during the Maroon 5 video shoot for their song "Moves Like Jagger" in Los Angeles in 2011.Levine sings during the Maroon 5 video shoot for their song "Moves Like Jagger" in Los Angeles in 2011.

Levine performs with model Anne Vyalitsina during the 2011 Victoria's Secret fashion show in New York City.Levine performs with model Anne Vyalitsina during the 2011 Victoria's Secret fashion show in New York City.

Levine performs in Indianapolis in 2012.Levine performs in Indianapolis in 2012.

Levine and bandmate James Valentine accept their People's Choice Award for Favorite Band in 2012 in Los Angeles.Levine and bandmate James Valentine accept their People's Choice Award for Favorite Band in 2012 in Los Angeles.

Levine and Vyalitsina arrive at the 54th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles in 2012.Levine and Vyalitsina arrive at the 54th annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles in 2012.

Levine and Maroon 5 perform at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on March 15.Levine and Maroon 5 perform at the Staples Center in Los Angeles on March 15.








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  • Adam Levine and Behati Prinsloo reportedly wed Saturday

  • The couple is said to have tied the knot in Mexico

  • They began dating in 2012 and officially announced their engagement in July




(CNN) -- Singer Adam Levine has married an Angel -- of the Victoria's Secret variety, that is.


According to reports, the Maroon 5 frontman and "The Voice" coach wed model Behati Prinsloo in Mexico on Saturday. The nuptials took place in front of more than 200 guests following a pre-wedding beach party the night before, People magazine reports.


CNN has reached out for comment to Levine's rep.


The couple, who began dating in 2012, officially announced their engagement in July.


"She's the coolest person in the world," Levine, 35, recently said of Prinsloo in GQ magazine.


As the newest "Sexiest Man Alive," Levine was aware of his reputation as a ladies' man with a preference for models.


But he told GQ, "I don't date what the person does ... I date the f*****g person," he said. "I could have been a zitty teenager and walked into a Tower Records, and we would have talked about Pearl Jam, and we would have fallen in love when we were 15. And that's when you know. It's like, oh, my God, game over."


According to People, Levine and Prinsloo exchanged vows in front of celebrity guests that included Robert Downey Jr., model Coco Rocha and Levine's Maroon 5 bandmates James Valentine and Jesse Carmichael.



Arrest mom for leaving girl, 9, at park?





  • Mother arrested for allegedly leaving her 9-year-old at the park while she was at work

  • The arrest led to an online debate about how young is too young to leave kids alone

  • State laws don't set a minimum age at which a child can be left on his or her own

  • Helicopter parenting can get in the way of a child's growth, many parents say




Editor's note: Kelly Wallace is CNN's digital correspondent and editor-at-large covering family, career and life. She is a mom of two girls. Read her other columns and follow her reports at CNN Parents and on Twitter.


(CNN) -- The case of a South Carolina mother arrested for allegedly leaving her 9-year-old daughter at a park for hours while she worked at a nearby McDonald's has sparked a robust debate online, first about whether this mother should ever have been arrested, and second about how young is too young to leave a child on his or her own.


Let's start with the arrest, shall we.


Place me solidly in the outraged camp about the arrest of the North Augusta mother, Debra Harrell, who was charged with unlawful conduct toward a child, a felony punishable by up to 10 years in jail.


Harrell's attorney, Robert Verner Phillips, said he took the case pro bono because it "struck a nerve" with him.


He said when Harrell worked, she would sometimes leave her daughter at a friend's house, let her go with a group of friends to the park or take her to McDonald's and let her play on a laptop inside the restaurant.


But, after the laptop was stolen from their home and Harrell's daughter was "bored to death" being at McDonald's with nothing to do, Harrell ended up taking her to the park on a few occasions -- a park that was about a six-minute walk from their home and about a seven-minute drive from where Harrell worked, said Phillips.


"She could have gone home at any time. She has a key," he said, adding that she also had a cell phone.


"It just was absurd to make this insinuation that she's abandoned at the park." Phillips noted the park was the site of a government-sponsored program where an adult would be on hand giving out free breakfasts and lunches from 9-10 a.m. ET and 12-1 p.m. ET every weekday.


"This is a very independent little child," said the attorney, who believes there is a "very big public policy at stake" in this case.


"Because if this woman gets convicted, guess what? ... From now on, do officers now have an obligation every time they see a 9½-year-old not in the presence of their parents, do the parents get arrested?"


"It truly is the classic slippery slope," he added.


Many people across the country raised the question (which I wonder about, too) whether the same thing would have happened if a 9-year-old was left in a park for hours by a more privileged mom in an affluent neighborhood. Harrell is an African-American working mom living on minimum wage.


"The clear bias against a .... mother of color is so glaringly apparent," said the children's television host Miss Lori.


"The child in question had a responsible working mother, a cell phone, a plan and an obvious history of trustworthy and responsible behavior that made her mother comfortable enough to allow her to play on her own," said the mom of three, who's also a Babble.com blogger.





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Taigi Smith, a full-time working mom of a toddler, said the time has come "to stop criminalizing poor women -- black and white -- for doing whatever it takes to provide for their children."


"Wouldn't it have been better to help this mom find reliable child care or a day camp instead of placing her daughter with social services?" Smith asked. (Harrell's daughter, who was in the custody of South Carolina's Department of Social Services, is back with her mom, who has been fired from McDonald's, according to Phillips. Meanwhile, an online petition to raise money to help Harrell afford child care has been started on youcaring.com.)


Debate over how young is too young


Similar anger was directed by many women and men I chatted with via e-mail toward the bystander who felt the child should not be alone in the park and decided to call the police.


"We, as parents, need to be more supportive and less accusatory," said Buzz Bishop, a father of two boys in Calgary, Alberta, who founded the blog Dad Camp. "A mom trying to do her best in tough circumstances was knocked a few pegs lower by a busybody."


On the other side are people like Terry Greenwald, a divorced father of three, who believes "no 9-year-old should be left alone in a park while (their) mom works."


"Today's world is a dangerous place for children, especially those who are unattended."


Lesa Lamback, who uses the park Debra Harrell's daughter was playing in, agrees, telling CNN affiliate WJBF, "You cannot just leave your child alone at a public place, especially. This day and time, you never know who's around. Good, bad, it's just not safe."





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How old does a child need to be before he or she can be left alone? That's a question many of us were asking ourselves after news of this story first broke.


If we look at the laws on the books, we won't come up with anything clear-cut. According to the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, there is no legal minimum age at which a child can be left alone. However, if leaving a child alone puts him or her at risk, it is considered a crime.


Phillips, Debra Harrell's attorney, confirmed there is no age at which a child can be left on his or her own specified in South Carolina law. The challenge for the prosecutor will be to prove that this child's needs and care were not adequately arranged before she was left at the park, he said.


We left a message seeking comment from the prosecuting attorney in the case, but have not yet heard back.


"The longest seven minutes ever"


So what's a parent to do?


I remember growing up in a small tight-knit neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, and walking to the store myself in the first grade. I'm sure by the age of 9 I was going to the park with my friends. (Thankfully, my mom was never arrested!)


I'll admit I'm not sure I'll let my girls, ages 6 and 8, start doing things on their own as early as 9, but I'm hoping I'll have the courage to let go soon after, especially when they desire to do more and more by themselves.




CNN\'s Kelly Wallace, a mom of two, remembers going to the store by herself as young as the first grade.

CNN's Kelly Wallace, a mom of two, remembers going to the store by herself as young as the first grade.



Bishop let his 7-year-old son ride his bicycle around the block for the first time a couple of weeks ago and wrote a blog post about it, calling it "the longest seven minutes ever."


"He rode a half-mile out of my sight. I was terrified, but guess what? He did it. And he loved it," said Bishop. "We, as parents, need to get over ourselves."


Gina Rau, a mom of two in Portland, Oregon, said her son, who is now 10, will always remember the first time he walked the dog or rode his bicycle around the neighborhood "because he was filled with so much pride."


That said, she believes every child is unique and thinks parents need to determine what each child can do and at what age.


"My daughter may do things before or later than her older brother, simply because she's unique and may not be following the same readiness track as her brother," said Rau, who runs her own marketing and brand consulting business.


Dangers of helicopter parenting


Whenever I think about this topic -- how young is too young to let our kids fly free -- I think back to Lenore Skenazy, a New York City mom, speaker, author and television host who never expected the firestorm of outrage she encountered after she wrote a story in 2008 on why she let her 9-year-old son take the subway by himself.



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After being called the worst mother on the planet and countless other things that couldn't be printed here, she wrote a book, "Free Range Kids," which has since become a top parenting blog, about how helicopter parenting is holding our children back.


"If you think back to your own childhood and some event that made you feel like king of the world -- maybe you made a tree house, or started a neighborhood game of kickball, or even got lost and then found your way home again after some very scary moments -- chances are, you were not holding your mother's hand at that moment," said Skenazy, who is also host of the international show "World's Worst Mom" on Discovery/TLC.


"Time on our own as kids allows us to screw up but also to triumph. This lays the foundation for our own definition of ourselves. (I'm the kid who took the train downtown by myself at 11!)" she said. "To get those memories, parents have to trust their kids enough to let go."


Author and blogger Avital Norman Nathman, who wrote about her outrage over Harrell's arrest, also believes that parents who tend to "helicopter" are doing "a disservice" to their kids.


"Of course we need to protect our children, but part of that protection is making sure they have the knowledge and skills to handle things on their own," said Norman Nathman, editor of the motherhood anthology "The Good Mother Myth: Redefining Motherhood to Fit Reality."


"We should be there to guide them and help them figure out how to navigate situations properly with the end goal being one of independence."


So watch this space in the next year or two. I'm sure I'll be freaking out when my daughter makes her first trip to the store by herself or her first ride sans parents on the subway or bus.


Knowing that flying solo will make her feel proud and better able to handle the challenges she'll ultimately have to face -- alone -- will hopefully get me through it. That and some advice Skenazy offered when I asked her what she tells parents who are afraid to let go.


"This saying helps a lot of people: 'All the worry in the world doesn't prevent death. It prevents life.' "


How young do you think is too young to leave a child on his or her own? Share your thoughts in the comments or tell Kelly Wallace on Twitter or CNN Living on Facebook .