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Controversy after mum turns one-year-old into Instagram influencer

A mother has sparked controversy after transforming her one-year-old son into a social media influencer.

UK mum Stacey Woodhams runs an Instagram account on behalf of her son Ralphie which has garnered over 15,000 followers.

Influencer
Do you think it’s acceptable for parents to run an Instagram account on behalf of their children? [Photo: Instagram]

Every day she makes sure to update the page with a new post of Ralphie, while often spending hours styling him before the upcoming photoshoots.

A large majority of the posts are sponsored images of her son in a bid to promote everything from children’s clothing to shampoo.

And as a result, Stacey and her husband have received over £10,000 (AU$17,000) worth of freebies from bedroom furniture to paid-for trips out to Lapland.

In order to maintain the picture-perfect online persona she has created for Ralphie, his mum has even gone so far as to ban other family members from sharing photographs of him via social media.

“If a photo of him in a tracksuit with snot running down his face and his hair is messy gets put on social media, that is not representative of the brands we are representing,” Stacey told The Telegraph.

“It sounds awful referring to him as a brand because he is a human and a child but essentially, the name that we have created is a business,” she added.

Unsurprisingly, her child’s social media presence has sparked criticism from fellow parents with many accusing her of being an “unloving mother”.

In response, Stacey has defended her career choice.

“What I do doesn’t define me as a mum and people should think carefully before commenting as suicide happens because of online trolls,” she explained.

“They’re factoring into that pool of online abuse and it’s just nasty and could be detrimental if the receiving person wasn’t in the right frame of mind.”

Stacey then went on to explain that celebrity mums such as Kim Kardashian are protected by their wealth and status when trolled for sharing images of their children.

View this post on Instagram

Snake Skin Drip on my little Northie

A post shared by Kim Kardashian West (@kimkardashian) on Nov 21, 2018 at 2:48pm PST

“I think it’s wrong that Kim Kardashian gets pardoned and can share intimate family videos and people support her and buy into her brand yet I share a gorgeous picture of Ralphie and I get called a terrible mother just because I have no status.”

“I’m sure she gets abuse too but it’s different – she’s protected by the super scale of her success so she couldn’t possibly see everything written online, whereas small time accounts are trolled directly and it’s hard,” she added.

In recent news, a report by the Office of the Children’s Commissioner revealed that children have on average 1,300 pictures and videos of themselves posted online by the time they’re 13.

Although it’s no longer unusual to see parents create an online profile for their kids, do you think it’s a good idea?

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