KidWatch › Channel Safety › Lofe
This is a grown man doing cringeworthy pranks with regular profanity, drug references, and genuinely bad behavior modeled as comedy — not for kids at all.
Best for ages 17+
Lofe is a prank and social experiment channel built around a pretty simple formula: show up somewhere you probably shouldn't, do something obnoxious, and film whoever reacts. The humor leans heavily on awkwardness and confrontation. It's not mean-spirited in a malicious way, but it's consistently immature and peppered with profanity throughout.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Lofe is a prank and social experiment channel built around a pretty simple formula: show up somewhere you probably shouldn't, do something obnoxious, and film whoever reacts. The humor leans heavily on awkwardness and confrontation. It's not mean-spirited in a malicious way, but it's consistently immature and peppered with profanity throughout.
The content normalizes bothering strangers, pushing past people's stated boundaries, and treating authority figures like props in a bit. There's regular drug references, sexual jokes, and a general 'buffoonery' brand that the creator leans into deliberately. He's clearly going for relatable and goofy, but a lot of it just models disrespect as entertainment.
His audience skews college-age at the youngest, and honestly that's about right. The channel isn't violent or explicitly sexual, but it's layered with stuff that parents of younger teens won't love. Think less 'harmless YouTube goofing' and more 'content a 19-year-old thinks is hilarious but a 13-year-old probably shouldn't be absorbing.'
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The creator purchases vapes and uses them in a public university classroom as a prank, framing nicotine product use as funny content. The entire premise normalizes vaping to a young audience.
The script includes multiple casual sexual innuendos, a joke about a friend stealing vaccines to get high, and commentary about enjoying performing a sex act. This runs throughout the setup segment.
The creator confronts police officers at a county jail while dressed in a prison jumpsuit and references a 'Ted Bundy fetish,' then argues with officers about their legal right to film when asked to stop.
The creator repeatedly pushes back on law enforcement in a confrontational tone, pressuring officers and calling out perceived inconsistencies rather than complying. This models deliberate disrespect for authority.
While mostly harmless in concept, the segment repeatedly uses profanity and frames wasting police officers' time as comedy, modeling disregard for public resources.
A Walmart employee physically grabs a member of the creator's group during a dispute, escalating a prank into a near-physical confrontation that the crew continues filming and joking through rather than de-escalating.
The creator makes a joke implying that a Black person showing up at someone's house is inherently alarming and 'racist,' playing race for laughs in a way that's uncomfortable and reductive.
The creator walks into a business and starts yelling at an employee as a 'prank,' then brushes off the disruption as buffoonery when confronted by management. Profanity is used freely throughout the interaction.
A staff member is referenced as deaf and the creator makes repeated jokes at his expense about him not being able to hear or respond, framing a disability as part of the comedy.
What Parents Should Know
Skip this channel entirely for anyone under 17 - the humor, language, and behavioral modeling are consistently aimed at a college-age audience at minimum.
Watch a few videos yourself before forming an opinion, because the thumbnails look goofy and low-stakes but the actual content goes harder than the packaging suggests.
Talk to your teen about the difference between 'funny because harmless' and 'funny because someone else is uncomfortable' - this channel is mostly the second type, and it's worth naming that.
Be aware that the channel actively sells merch and integrates it into the content casually, so younger viewers may not clock it as advertising.
If your kid is already watching this, ask them what they think the pranks say about how you should treat strangers or people doing their jobs - it opens a good conversation without coming across as a lecture.
Recommended for ages 17+.
Is your child watching Lofe?
See exactly what your child watches, every week.
KidWatch monitors your child's actual YouTube watch history and sends you a private weekly safety report. No blocking. No spying. Just awareness.
Start monitoring free →No credit card required · Privacy-first · Cancel anytime