There are numerous reasons why a fight scene can look bad using a straight shot. This is one of the big challenges with fight scenes. But, letting kids have access to good content in moderation is a powerful learning tool and is a privilege that can be taken away as a discipline. If you let them get hooked on the negative content it makes it harder to stop. ABC kids and Kahn Academy kids are a couple my kids use. Know what they are doing, limit access, say no to harmful or negative content. Of course, there is some terrible stuff out there, and it's easy to find, but being involved and guiding what kids watch and saying no is critical. Talking to them about what they watch is really important. Teaching them about things out in the world, showing them different people and places. They like Blippi, he is super annoying, but honestly, his main channel content is not bad. There are so many subtle things these songs introduce kids to and they pick up on. Super Simple Song's is great, helped my kids learn their counting Numbers, Alphabet and general things that you don't even think about, like identifying emotions, types of weather, different greeting and introductions. I try to know exactly what my kids are watching all the time right now it's pretty easy with them being 2 and 5.įor example, SciShow Kids is really good, my 5 year old is starting to get more into it. Not all of it is bad, there are honestly some good youtube channels for kids. YT will literally not care unless it starts to actually cost them a certain breakpoint to their bottom line. The fact that there are channels doing this without that only shows how fuck-ass slow legislation is still with the internet. IMO anyone making kids shows should be under HEAVY restrictions using child psychology and young education guidelines and procedures as methods of teaching. This is the YT equivalent to Lord of the Flies, and it can get much worse. Kids are weird because they are still feeding off a lot of basic human instinct, and so is how those shows evolve to match that, but its because they haven't developed. Its a story that was pushed by the audience. As it evolved, it was what this demographic wanted to see more and more. Since they started with younger content, younger people were generally driven in the first place. This stuff evolved slowly as people started to see what got more views.
Its not like they sit and think this shit up suddenly.