2 published verifications about children children ×
“Beauty pageants and television reality shows for children are banned worldwide.”
No worldwide ban on child beauty pageants or children's reality TV shows exists. Only a handful of countries have enacted narrow, jurisdiction-specific restrictions — France banned beauty contests for girls under 16, and China prohibited certain child-celebrity reality formats. Meanwhile, child beauty pageants and reality shows remain legal and actively operating in the United States, Australia, and numerous other countries. TLC was broadcasting child pageant content as recently as January 2026. No international treaty or global legal framework prohibits these practices.
“Social media platforms are deliberately designed to be addictive for children.”
The claim is partially true but overstated. Peer-reviewed research confirms social media platforms use engagement-maximizing features — infinite scroll, algorithmic personalization, dopamine-driven feedback loops — that produce addiction-like behaviors in adolescents. However, the claim that these features were "deliberately designed to be addictive for children" specifically implies proven, child-targeted intent that goes beyond what current evidence establishes. Legal cases alleging this remain unresolved, companies deny the characterization, and the documented designs target all users' engagement, not children specifically.