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Steven Fernandez aka "Lil Cloud" from Compton, California, is a youthful social media persona, skateboarder, folk musician, "challenge" vlogger and an actor who played in Quest: The Truth Always Rises (2017) as one among a teen ensemble, played in Search Party (2014) as a kid selling fake IDs, starred in short movie Los (2015), and earlier was recognized in Generation Like (2014), an episode of the PBS documentary television series "Frontline", as well as a documentary video DGK: Parental Advisory (2012) about a group young skaters. He came up in poverty but broke into fame as a skateboarding phenom at eleven years old, in 2012. He, as "Baby Scumbag", became renown also for viral videos of him canvassing the streets, trying to collect phone numbers of women and teenage girls. In at least one of these videos, he did so wearing only a diaper as his attire. The first of the pickup mission videos of his in general is titled "How to Get Girls!", the YouTube release of which has been flagged as unsuitable for viewing by general audiences. At fifteen years old, his career and rising stardom were put on hold for nearly two years when he, an older cousin of his (a grown man) and an older skateboarding colleague of theirs (also a grown man) were accused of crime against somebody younger than even Baby Scumbag himself. This was interpreted by many journalists as being the "behind the scenes" reality of his tail chase videos. On account of the insistence of his legal counsel, he had stopped publishing new content to his vlogging outlets, for the duration of his being in deep trouble. In the time since being apparently beating the rap, he has re-branded himself as "Lil Cloud" and is still recovering (psychologically, socially, professionally and educationally) from the scandalous ordeal including especially the judicial experience.