Skip to main content

Boy, 8, learns to drive via YouTube tutorials before tootling off to McDonald’s

boy youtube driving lessons how to drive
Image used with permission by copyright holder
When you need to learn how to do something, there’s a good chance you sometimes hop onto YouTube and do a quick search.

That’s exactly what an eight-year-old Ohio boy did earlier this week when he fancied a trip to a nearby McDonald’s with his little sister.

With his parents dozing on the sofa, the unnamed kid from the village of East Palestine, Ohio, about 60 miles south-east of Cleveland, checked out a few videos on how to drive a car before grabbing the keys of the family van, calling his four-year-old sister, and jumping behind the wheel, local media reported.

As the boy tootled along the streets toward his nearest McDonald’s about a mile away, bemused residents who saw him called the police to say that, well, there was a boy driving a car through the village. A little boy.

By the time local officer Jake Koehler had located the novice driver, he’d already made it safely to the fast-food restaurant, joined the drive-thru line, and placed his order. Staff thought they were being pranked when they saw the wee lad drive up to pay.

After telling Koehler that he and his sister had really fancied a cheeseburger, the officer asked him how he’d learned to drive, to which he replied, “YouTube.”

Exemplary driving skills

Impressively, the kid safely navigated not only a bunch of intersections, but also railroad tracks.

Witnesses said the boy appeared to obey all the relevant traffic laws, including keeping within speed limits. “He didn’t hit a single thing on the way there,” Koehler told local media. “It was unreal.”

The good news is that the two children got their cheeseburgers, chicken nuggets, and fries before the cop returned them to their parents. And no charges were filed.

Clearly a lad with initiative, his folks might want to keep an eye on his YouTube searches for the time being to ensure he doesn’t try an even more ambitious adventure that puts him back in the headlines.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
YouTube hides dislike button count, drawing criticism from users and creators
Youtube video on mobile. Credits: YouTube official.

YouTube is currently the second-most-used platform in the world, and it has introduced a number of beneficial updates recently, such as offering translation options in the comments section of a YouTube video and introducing a "Media Literacy" campaign that empowers users to prevent misinformation. However, a recent update that hides the dislike button count has not gone down well with the creative community.

An announcement on the official YouTube blog has revealed the company would be making dislike counts private across its platform. While the creators will be able to see dislike counts, users will not. YouTube's justification for this is that it's seeking to reduce harassment of content creators, irrespective of their reach. YouTube revealed that it conducted an experiment earlier this year where the dislike button was available to viewers, but the dislike count was hidden. Because the count was hidden, it found that viewers or commenters were less likely to leave a dislike and engage in targeted harassment, which tends to occur at a higher proportion on smaller channels.

Read more
YouTube TV now works in Safari on Mac
YouTube TV on Safari web browser on Mac.

One of the biggest live TV streaming services in the United States finally works on one of the three major browsers in the world. YouTube TV -- before today had been unavailable in Safari on MacOS — now works on Apple's default browser. (As spotted by 9to5 Google.)

Previously, going to tv.youtube.com would kick you to a support page on all the other ways to watch YouTube TV if you were trying to do so from Safari. There's no word on what changed in Safari (or MacOS) to allow YouTube TV to finally be supported, but we're also not going to look gift horse in the mouth.

Read more
The Roku-YouTube-YouTube TV impasse isn’t over yet
YouTube TV on Roku.

It's been several months since Roku and YouTube TV reached a cease-fire in their dispute over ... well, over a few things. But it now looks like the war is heating back up.

To recap, Roku in April 2021 first announced that negotiations that would extend YouTube TV's availability on the Roku platform had broken down. In doing so, it said that "Roku cannot accept Google’s unfair terms as we believe they could harm our users." Exactly what those disputed terms are has been a little ambiguous. Roku has said it has to do with search results. Google calls any allegations baseless.

Read more