Liza Anokhina - a Russian child who was 11 when people started recognising her in the street. Now, she is one of Russia's most popular child bloggers with 2.3 million followers on popular social media Instagram.
In a Moscow park her producer person jogs backwards, using his phone to film as Liza runs and blows raspberries. Tall and slim and wearing thick makeup for the shoot, she squeals with laughter when she views the result.
In a Moscow park her producer person jogs backwards, using his phone to film as Liza runs and blows raspberries. Tall and slim and wearing thick makeup for the shoot, she squeals with laughter when she views the result.
"We've done (Instagram) 'stories', now we'll do TikTok" the 25-year-old producer Ivan Bushmelev tells her, referring to her main social media platform
In Russia, about 40 million Instagram users, behind only Indonesia, India, Brazil and the United States, according to Statista. And the photo-sharing platform is, as elsewhere in Europe, particularly popular among children, analysts say.
Instagram and other platforms have spawned a generation of young "influencers", leading to concerns that parents might exploit children for financial gain
Another risk is that the desire to accumulate "likes" may be psychologically damaging for children mind.
Such concerns have forced social media companies themselves to react, with YouTube and Instagram moving to make such blogs less attractive to advertisers and to make "likes" invisible to users other than the creators.
Yet many Russian parents encourage their children to blog and even send them to classes to improve their skills.