About ToyLearn TV
ToyLearn TV started the way most small projects do: at a kitchen table, with a tired toddler, a very loud cartoon, and a feeling that there had to be a calmer way to spend twenty minutes together. We are a tiny studio of parents, early-childhood teachers, and toy collectors who got curious about whether we could build a corner of the internet that felt more like a quiet playroom and less like a commercial break.
Every video on the site is screened by a real person before it makes it onto a shelf. We watch with the sound up, and we ask three questions: Is the pace slow enough for a two-year-old to track? Is the language clear enough that a non-reader can follow it just from the pictures? And does the video respect children — their time, their attention, their growing sense of the world — instead of trying to sell them something? If we can't answer yes to all three, the clip doesn't make the cut.
We organize the site around three lenses: concept (colors, shapes, numbers, letters, counting, animals), brand (LeapFrog, Fisher-Price, Melissa & Doug, Play-Doh, Orbeez), and age range (18 months through 4 years). Young children build understanding by meeting the same idea again and again in slightly different ways. The goal isn't to teach a curriculum; it's to give your child a small, predictable, encouraging window into one idea at a time. Pick a corner, watch a clip, then take the matching toys off the shelf and act it out together. The transition from watching to doing is where the deepest learning happens.
We are independent and small on purpose. We aren't owned by a toy company, we don't take sponsorships from brands aimed at children, and we don't run auto-play. We do show non-personalized contextual ads on some pages so that the site can keep paying for itself, and we mark every ad slot clearly in the page so you can see where they are. If you have feedback, suggestions, or a video you think belongs on ToyLearn TV, please write to us — we read everything.
Thank you for being here. Curating a calm corner of the internet for tiny humans is a quietly hopeful thing to do, and we're glad to share it with you.