Reasonable Doubt

Inside Baby Autism YouTube

There’s a fine line between educational vlogging and fearmongering. I went down the rabbit hole.

Kelsey Osgood
GEN
Published in
12 min readFeb 27, 2019

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Photo by Janko Ferlič on Unsplash

A video opens with a young boy, maybe five years old, waving to the camera and chatting animatedly. His words are obscured by a soundtrack and his mother Andrea’s voice:

“This was the first sign of autism that I noticed in my son at six and a half months,” says Andrea, who runs the vlog FoolyLiving, which boasts nearly 138,000 subscribers. “He has since been diagnosed with high-functioning autism and OCD.”

The video flashes back to the baby pulling himself to standing, rolling over on the carpet, and cooing happily at his mother, who speaks sweetly to him off camera. Without Andrea instructing followers to note the child’s repetitive hand movements, viewers might assume they’re watching a home movie of a healthy child. In fact, many viewers did just that and commented in kind. “This baby looks and acts very normal. I don’t get it,” wrote one person. Another asked, “Maybe he does that because he’s a baby and can’t properly control his body? You know, because he’s a baby lol.” A few countered that their kids had done similar things as babies but did not have autism.

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Published in GEN

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Kelsey Osgood
Kelsey Osgood

Written by Kelsey Osgood

Author of How to Disappear Completely: On Modern Anorexia. Writes often about religion, literature, and health. kelseyosgood.com