Seven Super Girls or SevenSuperGirls were a group of seven girls, aged 11 to 18, who produced skit videos for YouTube between and The outlet was part of the SevenAwesomeKids umbrella channel. Altogether, the Seven Super Girls channel received almost 10 million subscribers and over five and a half billion video views.
The nostalgia has spread to Twitter, too. Ian Rylett, who owned the channels, paid each of the content contributors a monthly salary in exchange for filming videos he directed. In August , Ian Rylett was arrested on suspicion of child sexual abuse. Positive Role Models. Brief hints at brands, celebrities, and trends in some videos.
What parents need to know Parents need to know that SevenSuperGirls is a skit YouTube channel hosted by surprise seven tween and teen girls. Continue reading Show less. Stay up to date on new reviews. Get full reviews, ratings, and advice delivered weekly to your inbox. User Reviews Parents say Kids say.
Adult Written by schopada November 1, Channel no longer exist Due to a sexual assault incident this channel no longer exist on YouTube. Report this review. Adult Written by jemgirl June 4, Continue reading. Friendly warning Parents. Please know that this channel was canceled due to the manager sexually assaulting one of the members. YouTube deleted the channel of the platform. Kid, 8 years old November 12, I think it's good and bad. They all have themes fo What's the story?
Is it any good? Talk to your kids about Our editors recommend. Strong female roles in enjoyable website-inspired series. STEM learning, positive role models in well-rounded series. Project Mc2. Whiz kids break stereotypes, make being smart cool. For kids who love positive role models. Best Tween TV Shows. Classic Streaming TV Shows. About these links Common Sense Media, a nonprofit organization, earns a small affiliate fee from Amazon or iTunes when you use our links to make a purchase.
Read more. Rylett was arrested on charges that he had molested the girl. The arrest was part of a series of troubling revelations involving YouTube and child-exploitative content, which had started to become public in By the end of the year, after a public outcry, YouTube began cracking down on potentially exploitative child videos it was hosting — though the problem persisted.
Most recently, YouTube has been under fire for the "Momo Challenge," in which a distorted woman's face asking kids to harm themselves supposedly proliferated in videos on the platform.
It turned out that there was no evidence the creepy meme was as widespread as reports suggested it was. Last week, according to local news website ClickOrlando. In exchange for pleading guilty to child abuse, Rylett was sentenced to 90 days in Orange County Jail in Florida, minus the 29 days he had already served while awaiting trial.
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