Criticism is pouring in from an American influencer who has emotionally driven his son for a YouTube video.



According to foreign media such as NBC in the United States on the 15th local time, a shocking scene appeared in a video recently posted by influencer Jordan Cheyen, who has attracted more than 500,000 subscribers with childcare content.



The video, titled 'We are heartbroken', shows Cheyen and his 8-year-old son Christian sitting in the front seats of a car.

"I just heard that my dog ​​'Rosie' has a parvovirus," said Cheyen, and Christian began to sob loudly.



Mr. Cheyen told Christian, "Rosie will be fine. Rosie is strong," and had Christian repeat it.

As Christian cried even louder, Ms. Cheyen burst into tears, saying, "It doesn't matter how much you know the importance of a positive mindset. When you run into real situations, you inevitably become sad."




However, an unexpected 'reversal' was revealed in the video that was supposed to end in a sad mood.

Cheyen, who suddenly changed his expression, made Christian lean on his shoulder and said, "Pretend to cry."



Christian said, "I'm already crying", but Cheyen showed a 'crying smoke' that partially covered his face with his hands, and repeatedly forced him, "Try this expression. I'll use it in the video."




Christian continued sobbing and covered his face with his hands as his mother told him, and Ms. Cheyen did not stop giving instructions such as "Do not cover your mouth" and "Look at the camera."

Finally, Cheyen, who leaned on Christian and showed a cry of 'acting', turned off the camera with an expressionless expression.



People were shocked by the video, which was released online without being edited.

Netizens poured criticisms such as "I can't wait to see it. It's really disgusting", "SNS can make people really ugly", "There's no excuse. How can I ask my son for forgiveness?"




Cheyen later posted an apology video and explained, "It seems like an emotional exhaustion after crying all day," but the controversy did not subside. Eventually, Cheyen announced that she had decided to delete her YouTube channel and receive psychological counseling with her child.



Still, Cheyen said, "I can't say that my actions were particularly unusual. Behind almost all parenting content, there is a process where adults instruct children to do something, and then pay the price with snacks." "This case is a YouTube video I think it served as an opportunity to open a forum for public debate on the reality of the



This is a 'news pick'.



(Photo='Mr SKINNY TV' YouTube)