The Province

Adults need to protect YouTube’s ‘child stars’

Parents, please stop harming your kids by turning them into viral sensations or, worse, fodder for cyberbulli­es

- SONNY BUNCH

I realize that turning your kids into viral content can be a lucrative line of work. A family that films their child unboxing toys on YouTube pulled in $11 million last year; a far more insidious family that filmed their kids suffering emotional abuse in the form of “pranks” had more than 750,000 subscriber­s before their empire collapsed.

Given the exploding popularity of YouTube celebritie­s and the cash, there’s lots of incentive to find (or create) the next child star. And who better to mold into the Shirley Temple of the digital age than the cutie pie living in the next room over?

So, like I said, I get it on some level. Parents have long turned their kids into entertainm­ent for others and reaped the rewards; the Hollywood dream factory has mutated into the YouTube content farm. More disturbing than the businessme­n, however, are the folks who film their children having some sort of emotional breakdown and then put it on the internet.

I’m thinking of the parents who tape their children dealing with the effects of anesthesia or the ones instructed by Jimmy Kimmel to film their children breaking down into tears because they think their folks have eaten all their Halloween candy.

I’m thinking of a poor little boy in Tennessee crying about being bullied, whose tears went viral, a poor little boy to whom celebritie­s reached out and offered support and love and trips, a poor little boy whose family the howling mobs on Twitter quickly tried to tear down.

A poor little boy who will forever be known to bullies as the kid who cries when you’re mean to him.

I don’t want to name the boy because I don’t want to add to what will be a lifetime of Google woes, but if you’ve been online in the past few days, you’ve seen him. And you’ll forget about him in time as the next viral kid pops up for his 15 seconds and then disappears.

But after we forget the boy and after we bury whatever “awareness” his mother was trying to raise (for her son and for bullying, of course; certainly not for her YouTube page). And after we forget about the GoFundMe page that either hit its goal or got shut down or just kind of limped along. And after we forget about the good deeds done and the angry tweets, you know who’s going to remember him? The bullies. Taping a kid crying about other kids being mean to him is like slapping a meat belt on a diver and dropping him into the ocean from a helicopter; every shark within smelling distance is going to take a bite.

It’s hard to say exactly what sort of impact these videos will have. In a troubling essay for the New Statesman, Amelia Tait asked whether enough was being done to protect YouTube’s child stars; the answer given by British professor John Oates, founder of the British Psychologi­cal Society’s Media Ethics Advisory Group, is not enough.

“There’s the question of what the child will think of these materials, which are there for all-time basically, when they’re older and when they have a better capacity to judge ... what they were induced to engage in,” Oates said. He thinks there is “potential” for long-term psychologi­cal harm, as well as a possibilit­y that these children will be bullied as teenagers.

What we need are parents who act like, well, parents. Adults. Grownups who understand the concept of long-term consequenc­es.

For God’s sake, stop putting your kids’ tears online for the rest of us to either laugh at or empathize with. Everything on the internet will be there forever. Your children shouldn’t be forced to live with your need for attention.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? YouTube celebs garner tons of attention and oodles of cash, which proves too big a temptation for some parents to resist as they post potentiall­y embarrassi­ng videos of their kids online.
— GETTY IMAGES YouTube celebs garner tons of attention and oodles of cash, which proves too big a temptation for some parents to resist as they post potentiall­y embarrassi­ng videos of their kids online.

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