As a scientist I am wary of both panic and blind celebration when confronted with something new. Here we have a ten year old whose daily life now includes large audiences, ritual expectations and an always on feedback loop of likes and comments. Psychologists and paediatricians are still mapping how such constant visibility alters a developing brain; we should be humble enough to admit that the data are incomplete. At the same time, we already know from earlier child artists in film and television that irregular hours, missed schooling and blurred boundaries between work and play can cause long term harm. India did not write the 1986 child labour law and later NCPCR guidelines for entertainment just to forget them when the set becomes a home studio. Faith may be timeless, but platforms are not, and our regulatory thinking needs to catch up with the physics of the digital glare.