KidWatch › Channel Safety › zeeksteryt
Cool kid with cool bikes, but he's regularly riding illegally on public streets and that's hard to ignore.
Best for ages 14+
Zeekster is a teenager who films himself riding high-powered electric bikes around his city, hitting jumps, doing tricks, and hanging with friends. His personality is likable and pretty low-key. He's not trying to be shocking or edgy, he just genuinely loves his bikes and wants to share that with people. The vibe is casual and authentic, which is part of why younger kids are drawn to it.
Score Breakdown
KidWatch Assessment
Zeekster is a teenager who films himself riding high-powered electric bikes around his city, hitting jumps, doing tricks, and hanging with friends. His personality is likable and pretty low-key. He's not trying to be shocking or edgy, he just genuinely loves his bikes and wants to share that with people. The vibe is casual and authentic, which is part of why younger kids are drawn to it.
The problem is the content itself. These aren't bicycles. They're electric bikes putting out way more power than street-legal limits allow, and he rides them on public roads, near schools, and through traffic pretty regularly. He jokes about cops being around and mentions surprise when there aren't any. He does include a disclaimer saying it's done by professionals on a closed course, but the footage very obviously isn't.
He also talks about buying gear and bikes pretty freely, cycles through expensive upgrades constantly, and runs giveaways tied to follower counts. It's not malicious, but there's a real consumerism current running through everything.
Flagged Moments from Top Videos
He rides his high-powered electric bike on public roads to school, mentioning he's surprised there are no cops around and implying he expects police attention as a normal part of his rides. This pattern normalizes illegal street riding as fun and routine.
He casually mentions wanting to see how far back he can drop the bike and nearly hits 12 o'clock wheelies while riding on public streets with a laptop in his backpack. The risk to himself and others around him is real and treated as entertainment.
The video includes a disclaimer that everything was done by professionals on a closed course, but the footage clearly shows public trails, streets, and school routes. That kind of disclaimer on obviously non-closed-course footage is misleading to younger viewers.
He hits jumps on a dirt track while admitting he doesn't know if he should risk it, and then does it anyway framing it as something you do 'for the video.' That mindset, doing risky things because the camera is rolling, is a pattern worth talking to kids about.
He openly states his bike has 36 times the legal power limit for an e-bike and uses it to deliver food through downtown city streets at high speeds, running lights and racing a friend. The whole premise is built around circumventing regulations.
He and a friend do a rolling street race pushing the bike up to 27 kW output, mentioning the bike tops out around 72 mph. This happens in a regular urban environment, not a track.
The video follows a large group ride through what appears to be public downtown streets at night, which is the kind of event that frequently involves riders running red lights and ignoring traffic laws as a group.
A giveaway requiring Instagram follows and YouTube subscriptions is embedded directly into an unboxing video, using excitement around an expensive product to drive social media growth. It's a common tactic but worth flagging for younger audiences who don't recognize it as marketing.
What Parents Should Know
Talk to your kid about the difference between what the disclaimer says and what the footage actually shows, because that gap is a good lesson in media literacy.
Use the street riding content as a conversation starter about why certain vehicles have power limits on public roads and what the real risks are to riders and pedestrians.
Watch a few videos together before letting younger kids watch alone, mostly so you can gauge whether your kid is treating this as entertainment or as a how-to guide.
Keep in mind that the bikes he rides cost thousands of dollars and he upgrades them constantly. If your kid starts asking for one, it's worth having a realistic conversation about what these machines actually are.
The channel is probably fine for teenagers who already ride or are into motorsports and understand the context. For younger kids who might take the street riding at face value, hold off or watch together.
Recommended for ages 14+.
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