02/06/2026

LYFE TUESDAY | JUNE 2, 2026

FOLLOW

ON INSTAGRAM

24

Malaysian Paper

@thesundaily @t

Screen-shunning parents turn to audio toys for kids

A LONE in her bedroom, six year-old Emilia laughs at jokes told by kids on the other side of the world and listens to stories told by a lively adult voice. The tales and gags – many baffling to adult ears – are emitted by a Yoto player, one of a growing class of sound-only gadgets for young children. Devices offering entertaining and educational audio content are increasingly sought out by parents keen to keep their offspring from overdosing on screens. This comes at a time of increasing concern about the impact of electronic devices on children’s mental and physical well-being. “We try to avoid screen time. Of course, occasionally half an hour a day is fine but not more than that,” said Emilia’s mother Vanessa Gunnella, a 41-year-old economist living in Frankfurt, Germany. Compared to when the young girl is dropped in front of a phone, iPad or television, “she gets more focused” when listening to programmes like Yoto’s daily podcast, Gunnella said. “It’s good for her to focus and listen.” Guided streaming Belief in the value of kids’ audio is proving to be big business. Germany-based market leader Tonies – Yoto’s much larger commercial competitor – booked €630 million (RM2.9 billion) in revenue in 2025. Last week, the company reported over 29% year-on-year revenue growth in the first quarter, to almost €126 million. Privately-held Yoto is smaller, reporting 2024 revenue of just under £95 million (RM506 million) to the UK’s Companies House. Device makers are benefitting as “people are becoming very convinced unlimited screen time is harmful,” Tonies chief executive Tobias Wann told AFP. In 10 years, Tonies has sold close to 12 million audio players and 150 million toy figures that kids can place on the box to unlock new content, he said. Data shows children use their devices for almost 40 minutes a day, he added – while insisting the company’s data collection is “never individualised” and only used to AMAZON Studios announced recently it has greenlit the first three children’s shows that were created under a new initiative to use artificial intelligence (AI) in content development. The GenAI Creators Fund pays filmmakers, digital creators and startups to use AI to develop their projects in a short time frame. Punky Duck series director Jorge Gutierrez said he is used to spending two years making a pilot, but his new show was greenlit to run on Amazon after just two months. “The best way I can describe it is, it’s like you have sex and then someone hands you the baby. It’s pretty crazy,” Gutierrez said at the annual AI on the Lot Conference, where the first images of the approved animated series were shown. MGM

International Centre for EdTech (educational technology) Impact and professor at Britain’s Open University. “By removing the screen, you are minimising that aspect or risk of this multi-sensory explosion” young children can experience when using a device like a tablet or smartphone or even watching fast-paced modern cartoons, she said. But “multi-sensory overload can also come without a screen”, such as with toys sporting multiple flashing lights and sounds, Kucirkova added. “It really depends on how (devices) are designed,” she said. What is more, children aged two to eight – the core audience for products like the Toniebox or Yoto player – are in the midst of learning to produce and understand language and to interpret social cues and situations, Kucirkova noted. “It’s always preferable for this young age group to be using real-life humans” to practise social skills, she added. Wann argued as parents, “we can’t and don’t want to spend the entire day with our children. It’s not supposed to be that way either.” Many people caring for young children who have got in touch with him say the devices have benefitted them as well as their kids. “I very often hear from parents that their kids will listen to the Toniebox for an hour when they wake up on Sunday morning and this one hour of extra sleep is priceless,” Wann joked. Kucirkova said where kids do use gadgets, it used to be “primary guidance from researchers to say that if you want to use media, then use it with your child”. But not all parents had the possibility of doing this, she said, so researchers were now also looking at modifying the design of devices to help children use them in a healthier way.

o Devices with fun, educational audio content growing popular

Parents are increasingly leaning towards providing audio devices to their children. – 123RFPIC

Gunnella said that on a smart device, her daughter Emilia will often “change and skip and get some content which is not really good quality... I don’t like that.” No silver bullet Simply removing the screen from the equation is not a panacea, said child development expert Natalia Kucirkova, director of the

days just about every child in Germany listens to Tonies figurines,” he said. With the popularisation of music streaming, the question at Tonies’s founding was how to “give kids agency” safely, Wann said. “You don’t just want to give your child a smartphone or iPad and say, ‘Here’s Spotify. Good luck. Pick whatever you want.’”

Two more projects – Diana Music Hunters from Albie Hecht and Cupcake & Friends from Buzzfeed Studios – were also greenlit in a couple of months, reflecting a new approach from major studios. Hollywood’s unions and artistes have raised concerns about the use of AI, with creatives, writers and actors fearing they could be replaced by digital facsimiles. AI Studios chief at Amazon MGM Albert Cheng told the conference the technology will not eliminate jobs – it will actually reduce costs and timelines to make it possible to increase the number of productions. But Cheng acknowledged “AI is addictive”, adding it is important for humans to make sure they do not “succumb and let our brains go to waste.” judge the popularity of different items. Wann tied Tonies’s success to a long-standing German culture of children’s radio plays, known as Hoerspiele , that proved accessible when introduced to other global markets. “Back in the day, I used to listen to those on long-playing records. Then came cassettes and CDs. And these

Amazon greenlights AI-generated shows for children under new initiative

Amazon is pushing out AI generated shows for children. – 123RFPIC

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online