Business Day

Video producers accuse YouTube of sidelining black people in Kids app

- Mark Bergen and Lucas Shaw

About a year ago, Zerius Zontay discovered that his family’s work was no longer appearing on YouTube Kids. He and wife Symphony often post short clips on the video-sharing site, featuring their three sons who play with toys, sing songs and joke around.

Zontay wanted to get their clips back on YouTube’s app for children, a destinatio­n where the video site tries to direct viewers who are younger than 13.

For months, Zontay lobbied YouTube, repeatedly sending e-mails to community managers, to no avail. Then, in June, as protests against police misconduct spurred a national conversati­on on race, his frustratio­n simmered over.

“I’m seeing YouTube promoting Black Lives Matter, but with the Kids app, they’re showing that certain kids don’t matter,” said Zontay, a former music teacher. “You scroll for a long, long, long, long time before you get to a black face.”

In recent years, YouTube has come under intense pressure for its handling of kids content in letting too many underage people use YouTube’s main site and allowing harmful programmin­g in the Kids app.

In 2017, YouTube published a “Field Guide for Creating Family

Content,” and began restrictin­g more types of programmin­g from appearing in the app. Last year, the Zontays’ channel disappeare­d from YouTube Kids just as the video site was removing thousands of channels to purge inappropri­ate content.

When reached for comment, a YouTube spokespers­on responded with a statement saying: “We are committed to supporting and amplifying black creators on YouTube Kids and have launched programmin­g initiative­s designed to highlight equality, racial justice, and activism for kids of different ages, but we recognise there’s more to be done.”

DIVERSITY

YouTube, part of Alphabet’s Google, pitches itself as an equaliser in the media world, allowing anyone to upload videos and amass an audience. But some of YouTube’s video producers say the company has done too little to support diversity. In June, four Black YouTube creators sued the company for racial discrimina­tion, saying the service automatica­lly removed their videos. YouTube has said it does not discrimina­te and the suit is without merit.

On June 11, YouTube announced a new $100m fund for black creators.

The opacity surroundin­g YouTube’s recommenda­tions, rules and content-moderation process is a frequent source of frustratio­n among its users. YouTube staff members do not select the videos or the content creators that get promoted, instead letting its software surface programmin­g based on viewing habits.

The Zontays were never notified directly that their programmin­g had been removed from the Kids app. Instead, they learnt about it when a fan reached out and asked why their videos were missing. While they waited for an answer from YouTube, the Zontays saw a post on Facebook from a YouTube creator with the inverse problem. Their video was inadverten­tly appearing on the Kids app even though they had uploaded footage not intended for minors. “It makes no sense,” said Symphony Zontay.

Melanie, owner of CrayCrayFa­milyTV, a Black family friendly vlogging channel, said she experience­d similarly puzzling problems. (She asked that Bloomberg News not use her last name for privacy reasons.) Videos of her two daughters, Naiah and Eli, were removed from YouTube Kids without explanatio­n while the family’s clips of doll videos remained on the app.

She suspects YouTube ’ s algorithm may be at work, surfacing similar videos from families with a different racial profile. “It’s more digestible to see very lilywhite families doing things,” she said. “It’s just unfortunat­e.”

A company spokespers­on said that some channels were removed because a number of their videos — showing the binge consumptio­n of junk food or “pranks where kids were in distress ”— were “not enriching or appropriat­e” for children. The company said that many of those channels had since “adjusted” their content, and as a result would be reinstated on the Kids app. YouTube did not say which channels run afoul of the rules.

Zontay said his family has not produced any inappropri­ate videos and pointed to examples of clips now on the Kids app that feature pranks and skits involving junk food. “We do not have this type of content, but others do and they are on the app!” he wrote in an e-mail.

YouTube Kids draws a fraction of YouTube’s main audience, but the app is where parents, educators and YouTube steer children. In 2019, after settling with US regulators for violating children’s privacy laws, YouTube began promoting the app with videos that creators or the company deemed “Made for Kids.” For millions of children, YouTube has replaced television as the central medium for passing the time and learning how the world works. There are black creators on YouTube Kids, and the site’s top-earning channel, Ryan’s World, features an Asian-American family.

Even after being kicked off of the Kids app, the Zontay family’s programmin­g continued to thrive on YouTube’s main site.

Their primary channels, ZZ Kids TV and Goo Goo Colors, have more than 6.5-million subscriber­s — just shy of Nickelodeo­n’s numbers on YouTube.

In 2019, the two channels brought in more than 97-million views on the Kids app before being removed, according to Zontay.

“In parts of the country where they aren’t seeing black faces, how else are they going to learn about diversity if not through YouTube?” said Melissa Hunter, head of Family Video Network, a multichann­el network that represents the Zontays.

On June 28, the Zontays posted a 52-minute video about the issue. In it, Zerius, Symphony and their three sons are wearing shirts bearing the words “Black Entertainm­ent Matters”. A few days later, they found that their channels had been reinstated on YouTube Kids with no explanatio­n.

YOUTUBE PROMOTES BLACK LIVES MATTER, BUT WITH THE KIDS APP, THEY’RE SHOWING CERTAIN KIDS DON’T MATTER

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