Indian Kid YouTuber
04/18/2019
In February 2017, Disney and YouTube dropped the 27-year-old Swedish content creator, whose real name is Felix Kjellberg, after he posted a video of him laughing while two men held up a sign that said "death to all Jews." Later that year, he came under fire again and apologized for using the n-word during a live-stream.
YouTube is home to millions of hours of children's entertainment †part of the 400 hours of video uploaded to the service every minute †ranging from CBeebies and Disney to the incomprehensibly successful Little Baby Bum , a UK-based YouTube-native children's channel devoted to 3D animated songs and nursery rhymes for pre-schoolers in numerous languages.That dollar amount is low compared with the money earned from similar content by other YouTubers on our list—the result not only of how few deals Ryan (or his family) chooses to accept, but also the fact that his pint-size demographic isn't exactly all that flush.The younger brother of controversial YouTuber Logan Paul, this 21-year-old is also on the list of top social media influencers Jake Paul became popular Toy reviews for his role as Dirk on the Disney Channel series "Bizaardvark." He is also well-known for his YouTube channel , which has over 17 million subscribers.The tech savy Ronit Singh first gave reviews on each and every gadget that he had on his website and later started a You Tube channel to do so. Today with over 2000 subscribers on his channel , this 15 year old even gets calls from electronic companies to advertise their products on his channel.However, there's a marked absence of actual controls to limit the kind of content your child sees, even by language, so if you'd rather avoid American versions of nursery rhymes, block children's channels that focus on unwrapping sweets, or just never want to hear the Finger Family song again, you're out of luck.These include demonetising †removing ads †from "any content depicting family entertainment characters engaged in violent, offensive, or otherwise inappropriate behavior, even if done for comedic or satirical purposes" and blocking the most inappropriate videos.Of course this stuff can't hold a candle to original kids' comics and cartoon series — say, a classic like Hanna-Barbera's Wacky Races — which generations of children past consumed in place of freebie content on YouTube because, well, ad-funded, self-sorting, free-to-access digital technology platforms didn't exist then.