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And in the United States, our friends who are parents post photos and videos of their children’s slime successes and slime disasters on Facebook: tables spattered in candy-colored goo; couches ...
Kids across the internet LOOOOOOVE slime - and why not? It's fun. It's slippery. Parents don't want you to have it. Now, you can eat it, too.
They love watching videos of it, making videos of it, buying it, and playing with it, either for fun or self-care — slime has become an unexpectedly versatile, if not bizarre, viral trend.
With thousands of new videos uploaded to YouTube all the time, new trends and patterns can quickly emerge. As young children become less interested in sitting down in front of the TV, they are ...
Welcome to the World Slime Convention, where fans and purveyors of the internet's gloppiest trend gather to network and talk shop—many with their parents in tow.
With kids’ videos among the most watched content in YouTube history, scientists, videomakers and marketers are scrambling to figure out the algorithm for what makes young viewers so obsessed ...
Children are turning away from TV to watch "oddly satisfying" videos of slime, a report has found. Research suggests that young people are becoming increasingly disinterested in traditional TV ...
Hundreds of videos are popping up on YouTube with the newest craze – kids showing how to make slime or Gak with Borax.
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Amazon S3 on MSNChristmas Slime Contest: Kids vs. Adults
The happy members of the LaBrant family host a creative and messy Christmas slime contest.
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