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6 year oldBuzzFeed News spoke with seven parents who shared similarly deep concerns about their children's exposure and relationship to the Paul brothers' massively popular YouTube channels.
Their children's ages range from 3 to 11 and all share a unique allegiance to Logan and Jake Paul's videos. According to their parents and recent conversations they've had with their children, they've discovered that some of them are die-hard fans and others casually view their videos from time-to-time.
Here's what the parents of these young fans and viewers are urgently asking of YouTube, and what they are doing in their own homes in an attempt to regulate and impose some kind of parental control.
Yadegar bought Sam around $100 worth of Logan’s merchandise, which she plans to take away from her. As for her Sam, she wants to know when she’ll have access to YouTube again.
“She just kept asking, ‘When am I going to get it back?’ I don't even know what to tell her about the suicide and the suicide forest. I feel like her mind is too pure to hear about that stuff.”
Yadegar wants the platform to screen videos before they are posted.
“It's not rocket science to know thousands of kids would watch him,” the mom said of Paul’s viewership. She also wants the company to punish Logan by taking down his channel.
“You can still find it,” she said of the video. “I didn't watch it through [Logan] I watched it through someone else. What else is there? If there's something like that, there's so much more."
"I don't know what she's watching, when she's sitting on her bed all quiet," Yadegar added. "It's sad, but it did open my eyes to, ‘No, she's too young for this.’”
A mother of eight, Roberts has four children (aged 10, 8, 5, and 2), who "all love [Logan Paul] and his brother."
Roberts told BuzzFeed News she was aware of the YouTubers, having heard her children talk about them and sing their songs, but she "never paid any attention" to the substance of their videos.
When her oldest child made her aware of the Logan video in question, she said she was "absolutely shocked," not only by the nature of the video, but how far it reached and was enabled to reach on YouTube.
"YouTube put it on their 'trending' list and it was almost worse than Logan uploading it in the first place," she said.
Now, Roberts said she's "hot on my kids' tails," demanding that they unsubscribe to both brothers' channels and monitoring their children's YouTube habits by looking over their shoulders.
"I told them, 'Do not try looking for it; if you do I will remove your tablet.' They've accepted it."
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