Media for White Children

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Oct 3, 2025
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I apologize in advance if this is the wrong board or if it's not allowed.

This thread is for both good recommendations and media to avoid for White children. (books, shows, movies, games, etc.). I am a widower and thus single father of a (almost) 3 year old daughter and it is no small task in 2025 to keep your White children free of jewish influence, miscegenation propaganda, homosexual/gender ideology propaganda, etc. For now this thread is just to throw out ideas and recommendations.

As a general rule, I completely avoid all modern children's books. I had to throw away half of the books we got at our baby shower because in my experience, quite literally every single kids book made in the past decade at least is full of forced diversity. Even stuff like "100 first words" books that just show pictures of a bunch of items or food or whatever, you'll see black and brown fingers and hands everywhere.

I'm just going to list a few things for now and will add more later.

RECOMMENDED:
Tangled (Disney, 2010) - IMO this movie was a major turning point for Disney, most of what they made since is questionable in one way or another.
Migration (Illumination, 2023) - Just a fun movie about ducks. The bad guy is White but he's the only human in the entire movie.

AVOID:
Elemental (Disney, 2023) - The entire movie is racemixing propaganda, made by a Korean director who made the movie about his struggles of being a foreigner. It's about a city made up of elementals, Fire, Water, Wind, and Earth. They all have their own sectors of the city, and the main plot is a Fire elemental and Water elemental falling in love despite the Fire girls fathers protesting. They paint him as a bad guy for wanting his Fire daughter to get with a Fire elemental, and they make him comically racist.

RESEARCH FURTHER:
All 90'-00's Nickelodean. Surely some of it is okay but these shows were made by anti-White jews like Dan Schneider, anything with his involvement or others like him surely is not a good influence for children.
 
Good topic and certainly not out of bounds by any means. I also have young children and have the same concerns navigating all the harmful propaganda and goy slop that is out there.

Recommended:

Frozen (Disney, 2013) - this does come after Tangled, which was very good, but I’d say it just made it in before they went full woke tard. Can be viewed as a bit girl bossy but it’s all White characters in a fictional Scandinavian kingdom that really focuses on the love between two very different sisters. Younger sister ends up falling for a working class White man.

Brave (Pixar, 2012) - other than some girl bossy-ness, an underrated movie depicting Scottish culture. Fun movie. It is not full of songs, but the ones it does have are beautiful, Scottish folk songs.

Bluey - TV show from Australia that depicts a dog family (mum, dad and two daughters). Funny, witty and often sentimental, can be a fun watch with the kid(s). Haven’t really found any bad propaganda in it yet either.

Toy Story, Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3. All are good fun without anything culturally poisoning. Toy Story 4 is the worst and has Bo Pep doing the “I don’t need no man” bit. I’d pass on that one but it’s not going to turn your kid gay or anything.

Masha and the Bear - show we stumbled upon on YouTube. From Russia and is mostly lighthearted fun with a little girl who lives with a protective bear who cares for her and keeps her safe. I just learned that it’s the most watched pre-school show in the world. Good to know “evil” Russia, with their traditional and Christian values, are trumping the globohomo filth pushed by jews in the USA and Western Europe.

Avoid:

Frozen 2 (Disney, 2019) - what a difference 6 years made as now there are non-Whites all over the Scandinavian kingdom. The main royal guard is a negro. That aside the plot is stupid and convoluted, with the main theme that the Whites screw over the “native” people (Sámis I guess). The sisters own grandfather being the main evildoer, whose actions generations ago messed up nature or something. A few decent songs but mostly a hard pass.

Sesame Street - always been pushing diversity from day 1. Now pushes other insidious stuff as well.

Cocomelon - this is for those with toddlers. Started out fine when my oldest was of age. In the last couple years it’s gotten extremely diverse and now is trying to normalize gay couples (shoutout to Mark Dice for red pilling me on that).

PS - condolences on the loss of your wife. I can only imagine how difficult that was and still is.
 
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Good topic and certainly not out of bounds by any means. I also have young children and have the same concerns navigating all the harmful propaganda and goy slop that is out there.

Recommended:

Frozen (Disney, 2013) - this does come after Tangled, which was very good, but I’d say it just made it in before they went full woke tard. Can be viewed as a bit girl bossy but it’s all White characters in a fictional Scandinavian kingdom that really focuses on the love between two very different sisters. Younger sister ends up falling for a working class White man.

Brave (Pixar, 2012) - other than some girl bossy-ness, an underrated movie depicting Scottish culture. Fun movie. It is not full of songs, but the ones it does have are beautiful, Scottish folk songs.

Bluey - TV show from Australia that depicts a dog family (mum, dad and two daughters). Funny, witty and often sentimental, can be a fun watch with the kid(s). Haven’t really found any bad propaganda in it yet either.

Toy Story, Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3. All are good fun without anything culturally poisoning. Toy Story 4 is the worst and has Bo Pep doing the “I don’t need no man” bit. I’d pass on that one but it’s not going to turn your kid gay or anything.

Masha and the Bear - show we stumbled upon on YouTube. From Russia and is mostly lighthearted fun with a little girl who lives with a protective bear who cares for her and keeps her safe. I just learned that it’s the most watched pre-school show in the world. Good to know “evil” Russia, with their traditional and Christian values, are trumping the globohomo filth pushed by jews in the USA and Western Europe.

Avoid:

Frozen 2 (Disney, 2019) - what a difference 6 years made as now there are non-Whites all over the Scandinavian kingdom. The main royal guard is a negro. That aside the plot is stupid and convoluted, with the main theme that the Whites screw over the “native” people (Sámis I guess). The sisters own grandfather being the main evildoer, whose actions generations ago messed up nature or something. A few decent songs but mostly a hard pass.

Sesame Street - always been pushing diversity from day 1. Now pushes other insidious stuff as well.

Cocomelon - this is for those with toddlers. Started out fine when my oldest was of age. In the last couple years it’s gotten extremely diverse and now is trying to normalize gay couples (shoutout to Mark Dice for red pilling me on that).

PS - condolences on the loss of your wife. I can only imagine how difficult that was and still is.
Nice list, I wholeheartedly agree with everything you've listed (that I'm familiar with, haven't heard of Masha and the Bear but I'm going to check it out). Also Frozen 2 just flat out SUCKS even if it wasn't for the diversity, just a completely soulless sequel. I don't mind a little girlboss stuff like Brave if it's not too absurd, so I treat that on a case-to-case basis.

My daughter has seen all of the Toy Story's and she seems to not like 4, so I guess her taste is pretty good. She always asks for 1 or 2.

As for Cocomelon, the stuff I've heard about it was all about how damaging it is for attention spans with the constant camera cuts and stuff, the show was scientifically designed to be as addicting for kids as possible. Knowing it has propaganda is just the cherry on top for avoiding it.

Also thanks for the kind words, it's tough but fortunately I'm blessed with the easiest kid ever, she's so well behaved at 2 I legitimately could leave her unattended all day if I left food and drink in her reach (not that I ever would, of course). My wife passed when our daughter was only a few months old so the silver lining is that she was too young to know what was going on, at least. I think it would be a hell of a lot harder to deal with without a kid, honestly.

Another one to avoid is Ms. Rachel. She's got one of the most popular kids channels out there and people swear by her, but she features some "non-binary" weirdo on her channel singing songs to kids.... Yeah, not in my house.
 
My kids still like ALF. 80s cartoons like garfield, Duck Tales, the smurfs (avoid the modern movies of smurfs, imo), care bears?

Recommend: Cars, Cars 2, Over the Hedge, Monsters, E.T., The Star, Angry Birds (movie is about libtard birds who welcome the pig invaders who turn out to be trying to take over their land so they have to fight back against the pigs, and it's pretty funny to boot), Frozen, Lego movie, Puss in Boots, Frozen for sure. But they added blacks to Frozen 2 (avoid Frozen 2)

Probably decent (i don't remember alot about these but i don't remember them being woke, so probably ok): Ice Age, Bee movie
 
EXCELLENT topic!

i also have young children, and we avoid screens almost completely (aside from sports and animal shows), however on occasion we will watch a movie together or they will watch videos on YouTube. mostly, though, i’ve seen them fall in love with reading. joy!!!

i have an extensive list of books that i recommend, but age appropriate reading is important so the child doesn’t struggle too much and can enjoy the story.

my daughter (11) enjoys reading the Boxcar Children series, as well as some of the many Nancy Drew novels. my older son (9) is currently reading the Chronicles of Narnia series and is LOVING it.

another great book for boys is Hatchet, a story about a young boy who survives a plane crash in the wilderness but then has to survive the wilderness on his own. additionally, boys tend to love reading non-fiction books about subjects they care about. my older son will read nearly anything about animals, for instance.
 
My kids still like ALF. 80s cartoons like garfield, Duck Tales, the smurfs (avoid the modern movies of smurfs, imo), care bears?

Recommend: Cars, Cars 2, Over the Hedge, Monsters, E.T., The Star, Angry Birds (movie is about libtard birds who welcome the pig invaders who turn out to be trying to take over their land so they have to fight back against the pigs, and it's pretty funny to boot), Frozen, Lego movie, Puss in Boots, Frozen for sure. But they added blacks to Frozen 2 (avoid Frozen 2)

Probably decent (i don't remember alot about these but i don't remember them being woke, so probably ok): Ice Age, Bee movie
Original 80's Duck Tales is a great suggestion. There was a reboot in 2017 that has a few seasons, I've only seen bits and pieces of a handful of episodes, they seemed fine but I haven't seen it thoroughly enough to recommend it, especially when the 80s Duck Tales exists. I haven't seen Angry Birds but that quick rundown has me planning on checking it out. The Star is also a great suggestion for a Christian childrens movie, I forgot about that one.

EXCELLENT topic!

i also have young children, and we avoid screens almost completely (aside from sports and animal shows), however on occasion we will watch a movie together or they will watch videos on YouTube. mostly, though, i’ve seen them fall in love with reading. joy!!!

i have an extensive list of books that i recommend, but age appropriate reading is important so the child doesn’t struggle too much and can enjoy the story.

my daughter (11) enjoys reading the Boxcar Children series, as well as some of the many Nancy Drew novels. my older son (9) is currently reading the Chronicles of Narnia series and is LOVING it.

another great book for boys is Hatchet, a story about a young boy who survives a plane crash in the wilderness but then has to survive the wilderness on his own. additionally, boys tend to love reading non-fiction books about subjects they care about. my older son will read nearly anything about animals, for instance.

Hopefully my daughter's the same way, obviously she's too young to read on her own now but she'd much rather have me read to her than to watch a movie so that seems like a good sign for the future!
 
EXCELLENT topic!

i also have young children, and we avoid screens almost completely (aside from sports and animal shows), however on occasion we will watch a movie together or they will watch videos on YouTube. mostly, though, i’ve seen them fall in love with reading. joy!!!

i have an extensive list of books that i recommend, but age appropriate reading is important so the child doesn’t struggle too much and can enjoy the story.

my daughter (11) enjoys reading the Boxcar Children series, as well as some of the many Nancy Drew novels. my older son (9) is currently reading the Chronicles of Narnia series and is LOVING it.

another great book for boys is Hatchet, a story about a young boy who survives a plane crash in the wilderness but then has to survive the wilderness on his own. additionally, boys tend to love reading non-fiction books about subjects they care about. my older son will read nearly anything about animals, for instance.
I enjoyed animal shows when I was a kid and tried with mine, but it seems like all of these programs are obsessed with the mating habits of all these animals now. You can’t watch five minutes of a show without seeing hippopotami mounting each other, or the courtship rituals of the Congolese giant salamanders that eventually ends up in a mounting situation.
 
Great topic! I have a 2&3 year old, and their mom is crazy so it’s really just me and my mom at this point so I’ve been thinking along the same lines, and we are good about no tv except for 30-60 minutes after dinner (with exceptions for football heh). Have you checked out Angel Studios? I know they have some animated programs for young children. I’ll also throw on youtube and watch a 2010-18 patriots game so my boys can see white men dominating the field!
 
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