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SousVideEverything
A fun, goofy cooking channel that's mostly fine for kids, but a few gross-out moments and the occasional mild curse make it better for tweens than little ones.
Best for ages 10+
This channel is built around one hook: what happens when you push cooking to its absolute extreme? The host is enthusiastic, genuinely curious, and runs his videos like food science experiments for people who love meat. He's got a big personality, lots of energy, and a knack for making cooking feel like an event rather than a chore.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
This channel is built around one hook: what happens when you push cooking to its absolute extreme? The host is enthusiastic, genuinely curious, and runs his videos like food science experiments for people who love meat. He's got a big personality, lots of energy, and a knack for making cooking feel like an event rather than a chore.
The tone is playful and a little over the top, which kids tend to love. He brings in guests sometimes, does taste tests with family members including his dog, and keeps things moving fast. There's no politics, no scary content, and nothing remotely edgy in the traditional sense. The biggest concern is some mild language when things go wrong, and a few experiments involve food that's gone genuinely bad and described in pretty vivid terms.
He's clearly a real enthusiast, not just chasing clicks. He explains techniques, talks about meat cuts, and actually teaches something along the way. Parents who cook will probably enjoy watching with their kids.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
The host describes the smell of severely spoiled meat in graphic, extended detail, comparing it to a dead baby left in a hot car. The language and imagery are vivid enough to disturb younger or sensitive kids.
A cut of meat is intentionally cooked until it's rotten and then handled and partially prepared anyway for the sake of the experiment, which models a casual attitude toward food safety that could confuse younger viewers.
The host casually cuts off an expletive mid-sentence, catching himself but not before the first syllable is audible. It happens briefly and without emphasis but it's there.
Uncle Roger's character uses his signature near-profanity style humor, which stops short of full swearing but includes bleeped or cut-off language that's clearly meant to imply it.
There are several product mentions and a sponsored-feeling aside about a kitchen gadget purchased from Amazon, without clear disclosure that it may be a partnership or affiliate arrangement.
What Parents Should Know
Watch the extreme duration cooking videos with younger kids first before letting them watch alone, since some experiments involve rotten food described in ways that can be unsettling.
Use the channel as a springboard to talk to your kids about food safety, since some experiments deliberately do things you should never actually do at home.
Expect your kids to want to try cooking after watching this, which is genuinely a good thing. The host makes cooking feel exciting and approachable.
Be aware that Uncle Roger guest appearances come with his well-known comedy style, which edges close to profanity even when it technically avoids it.
Skip the most extreme experiment videos with kids under 8 or so. The core cooking content is perfectly appropriate, but the gross-out factor in a few videos is real.
Check video descriptions since the host regularly links to products and ingredients, and some of those links are likely affiliate-based even when not labeled clearly.
Recommended for ages 10+.
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