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- Mighty McClures YouTuber Mom Reveals 1 Man's Haunting Facebook Comment on Photos of Her Underage Twin Daughters</p>
<p>Zoey LyttleJuly 10, 2025 at 11:27 PM</p>
<p>just_aminat/Instagram</p>
<p>Ami McClure with her twin daughters, Ava and Alexis.</p>
<p>The Might McClures are one of several YouTube families depicted in ABC News Studios' new docuseries Born to Be Viral: The Real Lives of Kidfluencers</p>
<p>In the show, parents Ami and Justin McClure discuss everything from the steep salaries they bring in from vlogging to how they think it might impact their kids, twin daughters Ava and Alexis and son Jersey</p>
<p>In multiple episodes, they discuss the often unwanted adult, male demographic viewing their videos</p>
<p>ABC News Studios' new docuseries Born to Be Viral: The Real Lives of Kidfluencers dives deeper into the highs and lows of creating family vlog content. At its highest, the income is steady and the videos are fun; at its lowest, parents risk putting their underage kids in front of an unwanted audience.</p>
<p>The series features several viral vlogging family units, including the Mighty McClures. Their family page, run by parents Ami and Justin McClure, revolves around their three kids: 7-year-old son Jersey and twin daughters Ava and Alexis, who will both turn 12 on July 13.</p>
<p>All of the kids grow up on screen in Born to Be Viral, which is now streaming on Hulu. The series followed vloggers over the course of six years, but even the earlier episodes accurately depict some of the less favorable outcomes of viral fame.</p>
<p>The Mighty McClures/Instagram</p>
<p>Justin and Ami McClure with their son, Jersey, and twin daughters, Ava and Alexis.</p>
<p>In episode 2, Ami recalled one Facebook comment that immediately caused her to block the unknown fan who wrote it. The mom of three said the eerie note came in response to photos she's shared of her set of social media stars.</p>
<p>Ami recited the comment for the docuseries camera: "Please keep her safe, she's my future wife," she said.</p>
<p>Over the course of the six-episode special, viewers see the Mighty McClures' audience grow even further, bringing in even higher incomes and opportunities but, inevitably, more of the less favorable results of child stardom.</p>
<p>Ava and Alexis have since started their own account as an offshoot on the family page. The Mighty McClures have 4.16 million YouTube fans, but the girls' channel — titled the McClure Twins — has already surpassed the broader unit with a total of 4.49 million subscribers.</p>
<p>In episode 5 of Born to be Viral — when Ava and Alexis are a bit older, but still not even teens — Ami and Justin revisited the audience issue when he read a statistic about their fans. With some bewilderment, he stated that their viewers are "30 percent male, mostly [ages] 35 to 44."</p>
<p>The Mighty McClures/Instagram</p>
<p>Ava and Alexis McClure.</p>
<p>The girls can be seen squirming and laughing uncomfortably. In a confessional, however, Ami said she wasn't exactly panicked about the statistics given that they only have so much control over who watches their public videos.</p>
<p>"Looking at the girls' demographic as they grow up, I have to be honest in saying I don't concern myself too much with that," said Ami. "I mean, it's the world. People say things like, 'Well you're exposing them to this, or people who shouldn't be looking at little girls.' Maybe. Those people walk around the world every day."</p>
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