Mauvaise influence: Les dérives du kidfluencing
Titre original : Bad Influence: The Dark Side of Kidfluencing
Un aperçu révélateur de l'univers de Piper Rockelle, star de YouTube, de sa relation avec sa mère, Tiffany Smith, et des histoires inédites d'anciens collaborateurs qui ont fait partie de so... Tout lireUn aperçu révélateur de l'univers de Piper Rockelle, star de YouTube, de sa relation avec sa mère, Tiffany Smith, et des histoires inédites d'anciens collaborateurs qui ont fait partie de son équipe de création de contenu.Un aperçu révélateur de l'univers de Piper Rockelle, star de YouTube, de sa relation avec sa mère, Tiffany Smith, et des histoires inédites d'anciens collaborateurs qui ont fait partie de son équipe de création de contenu.
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"Bad Influence" is a grim 3-part Netflix docuseries about kidfluencers and the awful parents who monetize their childhoods for clicks. It's well-produced, but the whole thing feels exploitative, invasive, and downright icky. I'm grateful we don't have children; I can't imagine raising a kid in an age where everyone has the attention span of a gnat. AND where kids take life advice from someone like Piper Rockelle, who I only know because she did a cursed collab with the witless Katy Perry, who recently rode Bezos' penis rocket into space cosplay with Gayle King (who is now shocked, shocked!, by backlash). This series rightly lays blame on the momagers, the platforms, and the adult enablers, especially the legions of creepy men who follow these minors and collect photos like they're Pokémon cards. I may not be a digital native (I still remember our first VCR), but I do know this: nothing about this influencer economy feels safe, decent, or sane.
It is the story of a girl who became a sensation through social media platforms. It is the journey of Piper, who became a breadwinner for her single mother.
The title of the latest documentary series on Netflix aims to draw society's attention to the grim side of the lives of kid influencers. The doc dated back to 2017, when YouTube was slowly becoming a thing. The birth of a Momager, Tiffany, who created havoc across the internet through her kids and another adolescent, making them a SQAUD.
The three-part deliberately maintained the attention over the creepy life parts where a bunch of growing kids start losing life as they slowly become a money-making machine.
In 2025, when internet celebrities are roaring louder than ever, the series chronicles the early stage of the phenomenon. It talked about that time when the internet was still not cheap and peasants were slowly becoming more accessible.
The case of Piper shot at its peak when other members of the famous SQUAD brought serious allegations against Tiffany.
Three episodes include snippets from the past when children used to live under one roof, while being filmed under different circumstances. The act of kissing, a fake love trope, has been used to reflect the toxic environment these kids grow up. With the intervention that happened back in 2022, things started changing.
When we expose our real life to the world, things start changing. Life starts acting differently, and the comments and reactions received from strangers play a decisive role in life. Making your child a source of income is not a decision that parents should take. By making them as your source of income, you are not jeopardising their childhood or adolescence, but stopping them from finding what they are seeking from life.
The title of the latest documentary series on Netflix aims to draw society's attention to the grim side of the lives of kid influencers. The doc dated back to 2017, when YouTube was slowly becoming a thing. The birth of a Momager, Tiffany, who created havoc across the internet through her kids and another adolescent, making them a SQAUD.
The three-part deliberately maintained the attention over the creepy life parts where a bunch of growing kids start losing life as they slowly become a money-making machine.
In 2025, when internet celebrities are roaring louder than ever, the series chronicles the early stage of the phenomenon. It talked about that time when the internet was still not cheap and peasants were slowly becoming more accessible.
The case of Piper shot at its peak when other members of the famous SQUAD brought serious allegations against Tiffany.
Three episodes include snippets from the past when children used to live under one roof, while being filmed under different circumstances. The act of kissing, a fake love trope, has been used to reflect the toxic environment these kids grow up. With the intervention that happened back in 2022, things started changing.
When we expose our real life to the world, things start changing. Life starts acting differently, and the comments and reactions received from strangers play a decisive role in life. Making your child a source of income is not a decision that parents should take. By making them as your source of income, you are not jeopardising their childhood or adolescence, but stopping them from finding what they are seeking from life.
So the topic of this docu-series was very interesting, very eye opening, but the way it was executed felt wrong and honestly kind of strange. The parents seem to not really take much accountability for putting their children in these awful situations, the people they chose to interview seemed to be biased about the topic and seemed to still think it was okay to have your children plastered all over social media. This whole docu-series just seems like even more exploitation. I think they should have taken this topic a bit more seriously. I felt gross throughout the entire duration of this new Netflix "expose" which at this point just seems to be more click bait without any real consideration for the topic at hand.
This is a show about something that needs to be talked about a lot more than it actually is! Super heartbreaking to see these kids manipulated like that! The second episode absolutely broke me, its so sad how this mom is allowed to get away with horrible things. I hope that when piper turns 18 she has the courage to come out about all this abuse. I would recommend watching this show, not in a public place because you might shed a tear or two. I think this is eye opening to many people, before this documentary I would see piper getting a lot of hate for her actions but after an inside look it makes sense.
I've seen a lot of Netflix documentaries and this one definitely is a stand out. With these types of docs, I'm used to my time being wasted and treated like i'm barely even watching. Surprisingly almost every bit of this documentary is disturbing and telling. It is a problem I was vaguely aware of but not nearly to this extent or what was really at play. There are many jaw dropping moments and it has a lot of substance to really think about. While at times the interviews are a bit frustrating because of the lack of accountability and blame shifting, I think it leaves a lot of food for thought and effectively reveals the truth.
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- Bad Influence: The Dark Side of Kidfluencing
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By what name was Mauvaise influence: Les dérives du kidfluencing (2025) officially released in Canada in French?
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