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Jason Alafgani
AI Sounds Scary, But Parents Are Using It to Teach

AI Sounds Scary, But Parents Are Using It to Teach

AI can feel like a threat. For many parents, it seems like the next version of social media—something that promises connection but often delivers distraction. But AI isn’t inherently harmful. Like any tool, it depends on how it’s used—and who’s guiding it.

What Kids Actually Need

-More storytelling, less scrolling.
-More play, less passivity.
-More connection with people who love them.

That’s what Jellypod is built for.

Jellypod: AI That Helps Parents Create More, Not Consume More

Jellypod isn’t another content feed. It’s an AI-powered podcast studio that helps you create personalized, educational audio for your kids.

You choose the topic, the characters, the tone. Jellypod turns that input into a complete, fully voiced episode—often in minutes.

The Magic of Audio, Personalization, and Learning

Kids love hearing their name in a story. They remember more when they’re part of it. Jellypod lets you build story-based learning episodes that cover anything from science to social skills to gratitude.

What Makes Jellypod Different from Other AI Tools

  • No random internet scraping
  • No unsafe chats
  • No screen dependency

Jellypod episodes are crafted from your intent—guided by your values. It’s AI as a co-creator, not a replacement.

Real-World Example: Curious Sparks

Brandon Tidd wanted to connect with his kids and reinforce what they were learning. He used Jellypod to create Curious Sparks, a weekly podcast where his children became the main characters in educational adventures. They now look forward to learning.

AI Isn’t Replacing Parenting—It’s Enhancing It

Jellypod gives you a way to be present, even when life gets busy. It brings learning to life. It makes your child feel seen. And it lets you do all of that without adding more screen time, scheduling, or stress.

Create your first personalized podcast with Jellypod →

Watch a Parent Do This in Real Life

Brandon Tidd walks through how he created his kids’ podcast, Curious Sparks, using Jellypod: