So Sam and Nia are family vloggers who had a viral hit about the husband dipping a pregnancy test in a toilet with his wife's urine in it and finding out she was pregnant. ()
This has got to be fake. The vlog after that they're pretty much back to normal and have been involved with more controversy like getting kicked out of a convention because the husband was threatening to punch their haters.
How can you use a fake pregnancy and abortion as a ploy to get more views?
Here are some videos exposing them.
Quote:
5. A Christian vlogger’s extremely viral miscarriage announcement was “staged” — in a manner of speaking, anyway. I hesitate to even include this particular item, as there will likely never be any conclusive answer as to whether it was fake. But it’s impossible to ignore the online brouhaha that’s been brewing since a pair of married Christian vloggers posted, in quick succession, (1) a pregnancy announcement, (2) a miscarriage announcement and (3) an announcement that husband Sam Rader had quit his job to make confessional videos like (1) and (2) full-time, as a profession.
Aside from the very odd timing of the videos and the Raders’ apparent thirst for online fame (“WE’RE GOING VIRAL!!” they posted, after announcing the pregnancy, and “our tiny baby brought 10M views” after announcing the miscarriage), viewers have noted several other hiccups in the Raders’ story. Buzzfeed spoke to several doctors, for instance, who said the unreliable pregnancy test method the Raders’ used was likely to produce false-positives; the hospital where Sam Rader worked also told the site that, counter to video No. 3, he never actually quit. On top of all that, the Raders stand to make a lot of money from each of these videos — they are, for instance, running pre-roll ads on their miscarriage announcement and its 4.6 million views.
EXCLUSIVE: Father who 'surprised' his wife with news she was pregnant then announced she had suffered a miscarriage 'was a paying user of Ashley Madison'
A user who appears to be Sam Rader, of Christian vlogging couple Sam and Nia, is listed as a paying user of Ashley Madison in the hacked files
Sam, 29, and Nia, 26, became internet sensations filming their family life
This month they shared news of their pregnancy and alleged miscarriage
A user who appears to be Sam Rader allegedly made two $189 payments
The database shared online by hackers lists the name, home address, IP address, credit card details, and email address of each paying user
Rader's manager declined to comment to Daily Mail Online when asked about the data. Direct emails and calls to Rader have gone unanswered
Yes, there is something shady about these folks. The claim to have Christian values but they never put them into action. The husband is the worst though, such a hypocrite. I kinda feel sorry for the wife.