‘Kids say they take a quick look at TikTok’: a new kind of distracted driving is on the rise
Summary
Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images ‘Kids say they take a quick look at TikTok’: a new kind of distracted driving is on the rise As watching videos, using touchscreens, and even livestreaming behind the wheel become more common, experts warn of increased risk of crashes J ackie was on her way to a doctor’s appointment last fall when she realized her Uber driver’s eyes were not fully on the road. “He had a video playing on his phone and was intermittently looking at it,” she said. Jackie, who is 32 and lives in New Jersey, could not tell exactly what the driver was watching, but she remembers seeing shots of people talking – she guessed it was a video podcast. “I was definitely feeling a lot of dread and distress.” As they continued on their 40-minute drive down the New Jersey Turnpike – a hectic highway that is not easy driving – Jackie considered saying something. The driver said he was watching videos on YouTube and failed to notice the scene ahead of him. “We see people reading, watching videos, watching a football game,” a spokesperson for the California highway patrol told the San Francisco Chronicle , warning drivers to “stay focused behind the wheel”. And a 2020 UK study found that using Apple CarPlay and Android Auto infotainment screens weakened drivers’ reaction more than alcohol or cannabis use. “We’re definitely seeing increased risk with the touchscreen itself,” Klauer said. “Whether that touchscreen increases the prevalence of watching videos and movies, one might think so, but I don’t have any data to actually say that’s true.” On her way back from the doctor’s appointment, Jackie once again found herself in a rideshare with a driver who was watching something on his phone.
Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images ‘Kids say they take a quick look at TikTok’: a new kind of distracted driving is on the rise As watching videos, using touchscreens, and even livestreaming behind the wheel become more common, experts warn of increased risk of crashes J ackie was on her way to a doctor’s appointment last fall when she realized her Uber driver’s eyes were not fully on the road. “He had a video playing on his phone and was intermittently looking at it,” she said. Jackie, who is 32 and lives in New Jersey, could not tell exactly what the driver was watching, but she remembers seeing shots of people talking – she guessed it was a video podcast. “I was definitely feeling a lot of dread and distress.” As they continued on their 40-minute drive down the New Jersey Turnpike – a hectic highway that is not easy driving – Jackie considered saying something. The driver said he was watching videos on YouTube and failed to notice the scene ahead of him. “We see people reading, watching videos, watching a football game,” a spokesperson for the California highway patrol told the San Francisco Chronicle , warning drivers to “stay focused behind the wheel”. And a 2020 UK study found that using Apple CarPlay and Android Auto infotainment screens weakened drivers’ reaction more than alcohol or cannabis use. “We’re definitely seeing increased risk with the touchscreen itself,” Klauer said. “Whether that touchscreen increases the prevalence of watching videos and movies, one might think so, but I don’t have any data to actually say that’s true.” On her way back from the doctor’s appointment, Jackie once again found herself in a rideshare with a driver who was watching something on his phone.
## Article Content
‘The public believes that hands-free is safe, but anything that causes you to take your eyes off the roadway increases risk significantly,’ said Charlie Klauer, a research scientist.
Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images
View image in fullscreen
‘The public believes that hands-free is safe, but anything that causes you to take your eyes off the roadway increases risk significantly,’ said Charlie Klauer, a research scientist.
Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images
‘Kids say they take a quick look at TikTok’: a new kind of distracted driving is on the rise
As watching videos, using touchscreens, and even livestreaming behind the wheel become more common, experts warn of increased risk of crashes
J
ackie was on her way to a doctor’s appointment last fall when she realized her Uber driver’s eyes were not fully on the road. “He had a video playing on his phone and was intermittently looking at it,” she said. Jackie, who is 32 and lives in New Jersey, could not tell exactly what the driver was watching, but she remembers seeing shots of people talking – she guessed it was a video podcast. “I was definitely feeling a lot of dread and distress.”
As they continued on their 40-minute drive down the New Jersey Turnpike – a hectic highway that is not easy driving – Jackie considered saying something. But she felt vulnerable as a rider. “I was alone in a car with someone who was already doing something I found shocking and reckless,” she said. “I didn’t know how they were going to react.”
Jackie, a publicist who asked that her last name be withheld for privacy reasons, made it to her appointment safely, but the experience rattled her. And it happened again just hours later.
A moment that changed me: I was hit by an SUV – and it made me reconsider my drinking and screen time
Read more
Since cellphones became ubiquitous, drivers have been texting behind the wheel, leading to awareness about “distracted driving”. Slogans such as “It can wait” or “Arrive alive, don’t text and drive” are blazed on highway billboards across the country, and 49 states and Washington DC have instated laws against it. (Montana is the one
holdout
.) But experts – and plenty of drivers, passengers and pedestrians – have clocked a new culprit: people watching videos, such as YouTube or TikTok, while driving.
Earlier this month, a driver
slammed
into a parked police cruiser on a highway in Redwood City, California, narrowly missing an officer, who footage caught jumping out of the way just in time. The driver said he was watching videos on YouTube and failed to notice the scene ahead of him. “We see people reading, watching videos, watching a football game,” a spokesperson for the California highway patrol told the
San Francisco Chronicle
, warning drivers to “stay focused behind the wheel”.
Fatalities from car crashes
decreased
after the introduction of seatbelt laws and airbags in the 1970s, but ticked back up after the Covid pandemic. Experts cited a bevy of reasons: larger cars, higher speed limits, the
opioid crisis
and smartphones. The most recent data from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA)
showed
that 3,275 people were killed due to distracted driving in 2023, and more than 300,000 were injured. That statistic does not break down how drivers were distracted.
“People are engaging more and more with their phones [while driving],” said Charlie Klauer, a research scientist and associate professor at Virginia Tech who studies the effects of driving while distracted or fatigued. “The progression has gone from texting to browsing and looking and watching, which we now see a lot of. It’s Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok and a wide range of things.”
New drivers, which the NHTSA categorizes as between the ages of 15 and 20, made up the largest proportion of drivers who were distracted at the time of a fatal car crash. Klauer says she sees distracted driving “across the board” in her research, but “it’s through the early to mid-20s that we see very high prevalence of this type of behavior.”
Joel Feldman became a speaker and advocate against distracted driving after his daughter Casey’s death from an accident in 2009. He hosts school assemblies to remind middle and high school students about the dangers of not paying attention on the road. “I talk to kids, and they’ll say that they take a quick look at a TikTok video” while behind the wheel, he said. “I didn’t hear that five years ago. It comes up whether I’m giving talks in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Colorado or Maryland, and those are just the ones I’ve been to in the last few weeks.”
And then there are the people
making
, not watching, videos behind the wheel. In November, a 43-year-old woman hit and killed a man while allegedly
livestreaming
from her car. Viewers
reported
hearing a loud thud, the cry of a child in the backseat, and the woman saying, “Fuck, fuck, fuck … I just hit somebody.” A month later, the popular Twitch
streamer
Jalen Melton (username: MeltIsLIVE) collided with anothe
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
N/A
### Areas for Consideration
- ‘The public believes that hands-free is safe, but anything that causes you to take your eyes off the roadway increases risk significantly,’ said Charlie Klauer, a research scientist.
- Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images View image in fullscreen ‘The public believes that hands-free is safe, but anything that causes you to take your eyes off the roadway increases risk significantly,’ said Charlie Klauer, a research scientist.
- Photograph: skaman306/Getty Images ‘Kids say they take a quick look at TikTok’: a new kind of distracted driving is on the rise As watching videos, using touchscreens, and even livestreaming behind the wheel become more common, experts warn of increased risk of crashes J ackie was on her way to a doctor’s appointment last fall when she realized her Uber driver’s eyes were not fully on the road. “He had a video playing on his phone and was intermittently looking at it,” she said.
### Implications
- Jackie, who is 32 and lives in New Jersey, could not tell exactly what the driver was watching, but she remembers seeing shots of people talking – she guessed it was a video podcast. “I was definitely feeling a lot of dread and distress.” As they continued on their 40-minute drive down the New Jersey Turnpike – a hectic highway that is not easy driving – Jackie considered saying something.
- Some manufacturers have gone back to the old way: Hyundai, Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz and Subaru announced they will bring back buttons to 2026 models.
- And a 2020 UK study found that using Apple CarPlay and Android Auto infotainment screens weakened drivers’ reaction more than alcohol or cannabis use. “We’re definitely seeing increased risk with the touchscreen itself,” Klauer said. “Whether that touchscreen increases the prevalence of watching videos and movies, one might think so, but I don’t have any data to actually say that’s true.” On her way back from the doctor’s appointment, Jackie once again found herself in a rideshare with a driver who was watching something on his phone.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers drivers, driving, watching topics. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 1377.
Related Articles
Rhythm Heaven Groove comes to Switch on July 2
1 day, 15 hours ago
Roku will stream Savannah Bananas games, along with the entire Banana Ball...
1 day, 15 hours ago
The best Android tablets of 2026: Lab tested, expert recommended
1 day, 15 hours ago
The best dedicated web hosting of 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
1 day, 15 hours ago