Categories: Tilzy.TV

DECA Signs Smosh

Along with the Back Dorm Boys, Lisa Nova, and Lonelygirl, Smosh defined the early days of YouTube.

In late 2005, the low-fi, frenetic stylings of unabashed Carmichael, California college students, Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox, helped to characterize user-generated content for years to come.  Low-quality production, unparralleled wackiness, quick edits, and the use of popular musical numbers were staples of Smosh’s catalog and attributes that,  before any high-profile, original series hit the web, became synonymous with online video.

Though the comedy duo now produces a regular output of short-form sketches (I like Left Handed and Anthoy’s Daniel Day-Lewis in There Will be Pokemon), they’re most famous for their classic theme song covers.

Subscribe for daily Tubefilter Top Stories

Subscribe

Pokemon (embedded above) racked up over 24 million views on YouTube before it was removed thanks to a DMCA takedown notice from Shogakukan Production Co.  Add to that hits like Mortal Kombat and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and originals like Transofmers and Boxman, and it’s no surprise Smosh is the 3rd Most Subscribed YouTube account of all-time (563,901 subscribers as of this post) and ranks in the top 15 for Most Viewed.

With those kinds of numbers, and reportedly over 340,000 members on its own Smosh.com, it was only a matter of time before a media company bought into these kids in an attempt to take them to the next level.  Today, DECA

announced just that.  The new media studio behind Boing Boing TV and Alex Albrecht’s Proect Lore “has invested in and become the exclusive business and production partner for Smosh.”

DECA CEO and co-founder, Michael Wayne praises Anthony and Ian for their “clean, funny content that attracts an enormous mainstream audience of teenagers and young adults.”  The twentysomethings have done an excellent job cultivating a sizable audience, and Wayne hopes to expose their family-friendly programming even further, helping Smosh “grow into the premier teen brand on the Internet.”

With Smosh’s viewership and consumer’s rabid consumption of teenybopper programming, that seems like an easy task.  But YouTube math sometimes gets a little fuzzy.  Like in the case of HBO Labs’ Hooking Up, numbers on individual YouTube channels don’t necessarily translate to big numbers someplace else.  Also, part of Smosh’s success stems from its endurance.  With exponentially more players in the game now than there were in 2005, it’s increasingly difficult to attract attention to a new media brand.

It’ll be interesting to see what new initiatives Ian, Anthony, and DECA undertake to stand out from the crowd.

Share
Published by
Joshua Cohen

Recent Posts

Minecraft is bringing life-sized biomes to TwitchCon Rotterdam–plus a Tubbo competition, community hangout, and more

Minecraft is headed to TwitchCon. The iconic sandbox video game will have a serious spotlight…

1 day ago

Have you heard? Sykkuno’s bad behavior, Mamdani’s Sidetalk inspo, and a Tax Day surprise.

Each week, we handpick a selection of stories to give you a snapshot of trends,…

2 days ago

deviantART says artists made $23 million on its platform last year, boasts that it was “100% right” to embrace generative AI

Back in the very early 2000s, deviantART was a tentpole of digital fandom. All sorts…

2 days ago

YouTube reshuffles clipping by removing viewer options while bringing Clips to Shorts

YouTube still wants its users to keep things brief, but it's reimagining the tools that…

2 days ago

Jesser makes moves off the court to turn his sports content empire into a business

A leading creator in the sports category is turning his channels and offline ventures into…

2 days ago

Reed Hastings leaves Netflix, which says it “really built our M&A muscle” during failed deal with Warner Bros. Discovery

There's just no winning with Netflix shareholders. After it reported 2025's Q4 earnings in January,…

3 days ago