Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 15 days 2 hours 10 minutes
Science and engineering YouTube madman William Osman explains how his Grandma... wasn't his biggest fan, that his dad still sends him job applications, and how Caretaker saved the day.
psychicpebbles is BACK! Zach's here to talk Smiling Friends, the thing he's laughed hardest at in his life, what it's like to work with Michael Cusack and more.
We've done 44 episodes of creative advice -- now we expose our flaws, our vulnerabilities, and the things that hinder us most. It's a long, long list, but we narrowed it down to 6 of the worst offenders. We S U C K.
Chad (Anything4Views) from Cold Ones joins us to talk about the side of him virtually no one knows: business mogul, chef, and administrator of Chad's Orphanage for Wayward YouTube Boys. Also, smoking frankincense out of a crack pipe.
Johnny Millenium is a pioneer of giving honest and passionate video game reviews on his HappyConsoleGamer channel, sharing his unbridled and unflinching love for anime and gaming going back decades. In a world of Angry Video Game Nerds, Johnny saw opportunity to live by the tagline “Other people review games and bash them, I just want to review cool games that I think KICK ASS!” Oh -- and he literally invented the concept of filming in front of a wall of video games...
It's Groundhog Day. Every day is Groundhog Day. Some of us are using the internet, some kind of... aren't. And we want to know what *you* are up to.
If someone gets help with their video, does that mean they're just a host? Are total DIY creatives the only *true* artists? Is it possible to scale up a creative project and still have it be YOURS?
A stolen Spice Girls tweet sparks a conversation about ethics in online creative media -- and whether it's even possible to be original in 2020.
In our longest episode ever, we recap the Cereal Tier Ranking livestream and give an emergency quarantine announcement to the Dumpster Crew, INFANTry, and Baby Gang -- and then it's time for some real talk.
YouTube isn't just a virtual thing, and nothing offline is more important than VidCon. Are we about to lose VidCon 2020, and if so, what do we do?!