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KidWatch Channel Safety lappbros

L

lappbros

Top videos analyzed · June 2026
74 / 100
B

Goofy sports humor that's mostly fine for tweens, but there's some trash talk and mild potty humor that younger kids probably don't need.

Best for ages 10+

This is a sports comedy channel made by college-aged guys who clearly love baseball and basketball. The format leans heavily on stereotype skits and challenge videos, the kind of stuff that's meant to make athletes laugh in recognition. The humor is pretty self-aware and the guys seem genuinely likable. Nothing feels mean-spirited at its core.

Score Breakdown

Language & Tone 78 / 100
Violence & Danger 90 / 100
Adult Content 82 / 100
Commercialism 65 / 100
Role Modeling 75 / 100

KidWatch Assessment

This is a sports comedy channel made by college-aged guys who clearly love baseball and basketball. The format leans heavily on stereotype skits and challenge videos, the kind of stuff that's meant to make athletes laugh in recognition. The humor is pretty self-aware and the guys seem genuinely likable. Nothing feels mean-spirited at its core.

The content isn't squeaky clean, though. There's mild trash talk, some bathroom humor, and the occasional jab at another player's mom or appearance. It stays pretty tame by YouTube standards, but it's not the kind of thing you'd put on for a seven-year-old without being nearby. Sponsorships pop up regularly and they're pretty smoothly folded into the videos.

Honestly, for a sports-obsessed kid in middle school or high school, this channel is a pretty good time. The creators come across as having fun rather than trying to be edgy.

Flagged Moments from Top Videos

Mild Different Types of Catchers

The trash-talking catcher character uses repeated 'your mom' style insults directed at opposing players, including one referencing Thanos having to snap twice because a player's mom is so fat. It's played for laughs but the fat-shaming angle is worth knowing about.

Moderate Different Types of Catchers

A recurring bit involves a player belittling a female athlete who shows up, questioning whether girls can play baseball and suggesting she go play softball with the soccer players. The stereotype is framed as a character flaw, but younger kids may not catch that nuance.

Mild I Bought the Cheapest Baseball Bat on Wish.com ($5)

The creator casually jokes about being poor as a college kid in the middle of a sponsored segment, which is a minor mixed message but the sponsorship itself is woven into the content in a way that kids might not recognize as advertising.

Mild High School Basketball Stereotypes

A brief exchange involves a player making comments about how pretty another player's sister is during a game. It's quick and not graphic, but it's a mild flirtatious undertone that parents of younger kids might want to be aware of.

Mild Baseball Stereotypes (Inspired by Dude Perfect)

A recurring bit involves a player stuffing gum wrappers in his ears and up his nose as a pregame ritual, played for gross-out humor. Very mild but worth noting for parents of impressionable younger kids who might try to copy it.

What Parents Should Know

Watch an episode or two alongside your kid the first time so you get a feel for the humor style before handing over the remote.

Give a heads up to younger kids that some of the characters are meant to be examples of bad sportsmanship, not role models to copy.

Point out when the sponsored segments start, since the transitions into ad content are pretty seamless and kids may not realize they're watching a commercial pitch.

If your kid plays sports, use the stereotype skits as a fun conversation starter about what good teamwork and sportsmanship actually look like.

Skip the trash-talk-heavy videos with kids under ten, or at least talk through why the characters are being obnoxious on purpose.

Check the comments section occasionally since the channel has an engaged audience and comment sections on sports content can get competitive and crude.

Recommended for ages 10+.

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