YouTube star Ms. Rachel built her multimillion dollar empire by entertaining toddlers online. Now, she’s scored a deal with Netflix.
Netflix's new deal with Ms. Rachel, the kid content phenom, marks the latest major influencer agreement to come to streaming.
Like many other streaming services, the YouTube app on Apple TV now prompts you to pick an account every time you launch it.
The entertainment giant hopes the sing-songy content creator’s 13 million young fans will follow her to the streaming service.
Popular YouTube toddler learning show Ms. Rachel is coming to Netflix. It will start with a four-episode season of “curated compilation” videos on January 27th, the company announced today. Netflix says this first batch of “research-backed” educational videos aimed at early child development will cover topics like learning to talk or read.
Ms. Rachel, a popular YouTube channel starring early childhood educator Rachel Accurso, is bringing episodes to Netflix in January 2025. Here’s everything to know about the new 'Ms. Rachel' episodes on Netflix.
Parents and children everywhere know Ms. Rachel’s music well, and now the viral YouTube sensation will be coming to Netflix with a brand new show featuring her most popular music.
Inspired by her own journey as a mother, Rachel Accurso, known as Ms. Rachel, has created a series of research-based videos that not only help toddlers learn but also bring families closer together through the power of play and education.
Rachel Accurso, better known as toddler-educator-of-the-internet Ms. Rachel, is bringing her popular YouTube series to Netflix.
Netflix is preparing to release 'Ms. Rachel' content on January 27. Here's everything you need to know about the kid-friendly show's Netflix debut.
Enormously popular kids educational content creator Ms. Rachel is finally coming to a streaming service near you.
Ms. Rachel has that shining optimism on display that's netted her over 16 million subscribers on YouTube alone. I'm lowkey jealous because it seems like she's making beaucoup bucks with such a great idea, and maybe even more so now that Netflix is involved. Why should readers be so thrilled about this development though?