This definitely beats whatever we were doing when we were 9 years old, no matter how cool it might have seemed at a time. One boy from Florida, who also happens to be a famous influencer and a budding rapper, is totally living the life – including the dream life of a (very young) car enthusiast.
This boy is Super Siah, real name Messiah Bentley. He rose to fame when he was just three years old, after he was featured on his parents’ channel, BEAM Squad. That video proved so popular that Super Siah was made a fixture on the channel and, sometime later, he got his own spinoff, which, incidentally, is much more popular than the original channel.
Super Siah boasts millions of followers on all the cool platforms the kids use these days, including YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. His sponsors include HBO Max and Cartoon Network, and his videos average at over 1 million views, whether they’re silly pranks, mundane videos, or official releases for new music. His net worth is estimated at $4 million.
Of course, since he’s 9, Super Siah doesn’t get to spend this money as he sees fit, but he could if he wanted to. At least, that’s what he implies in one of his recent IG posts, in which he leans against a car in the family garage and writes, “I'm a BOSS, I can buy the same things my parents buy!”
He’s too young to drive actual cars, but that’s not stopping him from using them as props. His media content and his music videos show glimpses of a Bentley, a McLaren, or the occasional Mercedes. The only cars he does drive – and collect – are kiddie electric cars, like a Lamborghini Aventador, a Porsche 911 or a Bentley. Super Siah also owns several quad bikes, and he often shows those off, too.
When he’s not leaning on expensive rides for photos, or driving kiddie models, Super Siah is vacationing on superyachts and performing at rapper Offset’s family shindigs. Yes, we know social media is (mostly) smoke and mirrors, but Super Siah is learning to play that game very well, from a young age.
Hilariously, given his claim that he can buy anything his parents can, both Super Siah’s father and mother have been convicted of fraud and sentenced to prison in 2021 – though their sentences were lighter on account of having three young kids. They used stolen Social Security numbers to take benefits that belonged to the elderly and claim tax returns that weren’t theirs. Super Siah’s online popularity was not affected by the controversy.
Super Siah boasts millions of followers on all the cool platforms the kids use these days, including YouTube, Instagram and TikTok. His sponsors include HBO Max and Cartoon Network, and his videos average at over 1 million views, whether they’re silly pranks, mundane videos, or official releases for new music. His net worth is estimated at $4 million.
Of course, since he’s 9, Super Siah doesn’t get to spend this money as he sees fit, but he could if he wanted to. At least, that’s what he implies in one of his recent IG posts, in which he leans against a car in the family garage and writes, “I'm a BOSS, I can buy the same things my parents buy!”
He’s too young to drive actual cars, but that’s not stopping him from using them as props. His media content and his music videos show glimpses of a Bentley, a McLaren, or the occasional Mercedes. The only cars he does drive – and collect – are kiddie electric cars, like a Lamborghini Aventador, a Porsche 911 or a Bentley. Super Siah also owns several quad bikes, and he often shows those off, too.
When he’s not leaning on expensive rides for photos, or driving kiddie models, Super Siah is vacationing on superyachts and performing at rapper Offset’s family shindigs. Yes, we know social media is (mostly) smoke and mirrors, but Super Siah is learning to play that game very well, from a young age.
Hilariously, given his claim that he can buy anything his parents can, both Super Siah’s father and mother have been convicted of fraud and sentenced to prison in 2021 – though their sentences were lighter on account of having three young kids. They used stolen Social Security numbers to take benefits that belonged to the elderly and claim tax returns that weren’t theirs. Super Siah’s online popularity was not affected by the controversy.