Create a family-friendly Rick Roll video following GittyBoiYT's tutorial: design a clickbait thumbnail, film the surprise reveal, and share responsibly.



Step-by-step guide to Create a Rick Roll w/ GittyBoiYT!
Step 1
Ask an adult for permission and help to make and post a family-friendly Rick Roll video.
Step 2
Watch GittyBoiYT's family-friendly Rick Roll tutorial together with your adult so you know the thumbnail and reveal idea.
Step 3
Pick a willing family member or friend who will enjoy a silly surprise.
Step 4
Sketch a big bold clickbait thumbnail idea on paper.
Step 5
Add a short funny title and a big smiley face to the thumbnail sketch.
Step 6
Color and decorate the thumbnail with your colouring materials to make it bright.
Step 7
Cut out your finished thumbnail carefully with scissors.
Step 8
Mount the thumbnail on cardstock and attach any extra pieces with tape or glue.
Step 9
Choose a safe place to film where everyone can move around without tripping.
Step 10
Set up your small prop or costume item for the surprise reveal.
Step 11
Ask your adult to help pick a family-friendly sound or a royalty-free cover to use in the video.
Step 12
Practice the surprise reveal once so everyone knows what will happen and stays safe.
Step 13
Record the video: show the clickbait thumbnail then do the friendly surprise reveal.
Step 14
Watch the video with your adult and get their approval and the permission of anyone who appears before posting.
Step 15
Share your finished creation on DIY.org.
Final steps
You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!


Help!?
What can we use if we don't have cardstock or colouring materials listed in the instructions?
Use flattened cereal box cardboard or thin chipboard to mount the cut-out thumbnail and swap missing markers or crayons for colored pencils, watercolor washes, or stickers to color and decorate the thumbnail.
My thumbnail keeps bending or falling off during the reveal—how can we fix that?
Reinforce the cut-out thumbnail by gluing it to folded cardboard, tape a popsicle stick or wooden skewer to the back as a handle, and rehearse the reveal once in the chosen safe filming spot so it stays flat while recording.
How can we adapt the steps for younger kids or older kids following GittyBoiYT's tutorial?
For younger children have an adult pre-cut the thumbnail, supervise scissors and filming, and let the child color with large crayons for a simple reveal, while older kids can design flashier thumbnails, choose a royalty-free cover, practice the reveal, and edit the clip themselves.
What are some ways to enhance or personalize our Rick Roll video before sharing on DIY.org?
Personalize the project by adding a handwritten caption on the mounted thumbnail, wearing a themed costume for the surprise reveal, using the family-friendly royalty-free cover you and your adult selected, and doing a quick trim/edit to polish the final video before posting on DIY.org.
Watch videos on how to Create a Rick Roll w/ GittyBoiYT!
Facts about video production and online safety for kids
🎵 'Never Gonna Give You Up' was released by Rick Astley in 1987 and later became the heart of the Rickroll prank.
😂 Rickrolling started around 2007 on internet forums as a playful bait-and-switch prank.
🔒 Share responsibly: use private or unlisted settings and ask a parent before posting — pranks should be kind and safe.
🖼️ Thumbnails work like mini-posters: big faces, bold text, and bright colors help viewers notice your video.
📺 YouTube has over two billion logged-in monthly users — a fun surprise can reach lots of people!


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