Digital Social Hour - Inside the Multi-Million Dollar Sidemen Empire: Secrets Revealed I Vikkstar DSH #500
Episode Date: June 17, 2024š Dive into the world of the Sidemen Empire with Sean Kelly on Digital Social Hour! š š„ In this episode, we go behind the scenes with Vikkstar, uncovering the secrets of the multi-million ...dollar Sidemen Empire. From their humble beginnings to becoming global sensations, this conversation is packed with valuable insights you won't want to miss! š š¬ "When we started, no one else was doing it!" Vikkstar reveals how the Sidemen transformed from awkward vloggers into a powerhouse brand. Discover how overcoming embarrassment and stepping out of their comfort zones led to their massive success. š š Vikkstar also shares his journey into the world of EDM, his unexpected DJ career, and the thrill of playing for thousands of fans. Plus, get the inside scoop on their Netflix documentary, charity football matches, and the crazy logistics behind their epic YouTube videos! š§š¶ Don't miss out on this eye-opening episodeāwatch now and subscribe for more insider secrets! šŗ Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more engaging stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! š āØ Tune in now and join the conversation. This episode is packed with valuable insights, relatable moments, and the authentic stories behind one of YouTube's biggest groups. Watch now to see why the Sidemen continue to dominate the digital space! āØ #DigitalSocialHour #SeanKelly #Podcast #Vikkstar #SidemenEmpire #YouTubeSecrets #EDM #NetflixDocumentary #WatchNow #Subscribe #InsiderSecrets #SidemenInsights #SidemenLifestyle #MultiMillionDollar #BuildingSidemenBrand #BehindTheScenes CHAPTERS: 0:00 - Intro 0:47 - Vikkstar Interview 7:24 - Netflix Documentary Insights 17:01 - Best Player at Charity Match 18:54 - Were You the Nerd in School? 22:08 - Boxing xQc for $1,000,000 27:35 - Minecraft Movie Discussion 30:26 - GOAT of the EDM Space 32:58 - Importance of Being Unique 35:19 - Most Spent on a Video 40:36 - Recent FaZe Clan Layoffs 41:49 - Outro APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com GUEST: Vikkstar https://www.instagram.com/vikkstagram/ https://www.youtube.com/@Vikkstar123 SPONSORS: Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
When we started, this is back in 2010, no one else was doing it. We were the first people to do it.
If you walked around holding a phone or a camera talking into it, people would think you were
not okay in the head. They would think you were unwell and you had that complete embarrassment
of everyone around you. Because we started them, because it was a weird thing to do,
because it took a lot of confidence and a lot of getting outside your comfort zone to do then,
that's why we were lucky and in the right place at the right time
to start building this career. Wherever you guys are watching this show, I would truly appreciate
it if you follow or subscribe. It helps a lot with the algorithm. It helps us get bigger and
better guests and it helps us grow the team. Truly means a lot. Thank you guys for supporting, and here's the episode.
All right, guys, this first podcast in the US.
We got Vixar here all the way from the UK.
Thanks for coming out, man.
Hey, thanks for having me.
It's good to be out here.
Yeah, dude.
You're out in Vegas a good amount, though.
Yeah, seemingly more and more.
Look, the clubs here, the nightlife, it's just you can't beat it.
You can't beat it.
Your DJ career has taken off.
Yeah, slowly but surely um yeah definitely it's uh it started as a bit of kind of a fun side quest and now it's becoming a whole lot more than that so it's like the main thing right yeah
i'm grateful for it and having a lot of fun a lot of new challenges i love it so it's great you just
dropped a video five days ago a new music video yes. Yes. Yes, I did. Filmed back in the UK for trying a little bit of a different style.
I think that's the fun part of music for me is I can come in and try lots of different
stuff and I don't really have a music identity yet, but I have my own audience from everything
else I've done.
Yeah.
So I'm having a lot of fun kind of experimenting different sounds and seeing what people like
and where I'm going to end up spending a lot of my
time in the music world. Have you always been big in music? Like, have you always made songs?
So I grew up playing music. I grew up playing the drums, the piano and the violin.
And when I got into YouTube, I kind of left all of that behind. Then during my whole YouTube career,
I discovered a love for EDM. I went to Miami Ultra Music Festival
with Spinning Records back in, I think it was 2014, 2015. They asked me just to film my experience
and meet some of their producers and DJs. I had so much fun at that festival. It was like, wow,
this is a big deal and really fell in love with the music. And then for about a decade, I was just a fan of EDM music,
going to all the festivals, meeting a lot of the talented people behind it. And it was, I would say
a year and a half ago, a good friend of mine, Alan Walker, he really pushed me and said,
you should do this. You have an audience, you love the music, just get involved, learn to DJ,
learn to start making music.
And I started that for fun, but now it's seeming like it could be a whole, whole nother profession I take on at this point. No, it makes sense for you because I noticed on your socials,
you love to travel too. Yeah, that's a hundred percent. I think the two most exciting parts about
DJing, one is being able to connect with an audience in the real world. We have these huge
audiences of people that watch us online, but it's very difficult to do anything for that audience.
If you don't have a medium to perform, I can take hundreds of selfies, signatures,
but you can't really scale that beyond a few hundred people. And it takes a whole day to
meet a few hundred people. Whereas now I can play a show for a few thousand people, put on an experience. They come and see something that I'm doing. They listen to the music
that I like and it's a new challenge in that sense. So that's one side of it. And of course,
as you said, the other side of the coin is it's a fantastic way to travel, meet new people,
experience new places. So I'm loving it right now. I love it, dude. Yeah. I saw your Instagram.
You've been all over. You saw the Northern Lights recently.
This is also true.
Yeah, third time lucky.
I've been to, actually fourth time,
I've been in the Arctic Circle.
I've been to Iceland twice.
The fleeting trips completely clouded over.
Had been to Finland once before into Lapland,
which is way up in the Arctic Circle.
Didn't manage to see it,
but then fourth time round got to see it.
And I think it made it that much,
that bit much, that bit more special.
Yeah.
Just seeing it when you've been chasing it for so long.
That's crazy.
So you went there three times expecting to see it
and you didn't.
Yeah, yeah.
I was probably pretty unlucky.
They were short filming trips.
Yeah.
But when I saw it, it was spectacular.
You ever seen it?
No, I thought it happened every day. Is it like something you got a time? Yeah. It all depends on the kind of the sun,
the solar rays that are coming off, um, the solar flare, sorry, that are coming off the sun.
They fluctuate in strength and then it has to be a clear day. If it's cloudy,
obviously you're not going to see it. So yeah, we got the perfect combination while I was out there.
That's on my bucket list. That's a life goal for sure. A hundred percent. Yeah. It's something special.
So if you didn't live in the UK, where would you pick and why?
Ooh, that's a really good question. Cause yeah, the more and more I've been traveling around,
I've been trying to find a place. I'm like, where, where is a place I could see myself living?
Yeah. And it's really difficult. I think the UK is...
The only downside, I would say, is the weather.
It rains a lot, right?
Yeah, yeah.
And being out in Vegas,
it's such a nice way to be walking out in sunshine all day.
Outside the UK, that's tough.
I think maybe Canada.
I do really enjoy Canada.
To be honest, the East and the West Coast.
I've got some friends that live on the East Coastada to be honest the east and the west coast i've got some friends
that live on the east coast and uh some of the kind of wildlife and the lakes up in that part
of the world are just stunning so that's a rare answer it's cold there man it's cold during the
winter but during the summer it's so nice actually yeah yeah i know it's really nice
yeah i haven't been there so i can't speak on experience, but yeah, no, um, not the U S though. You wouldn't pick the U S no, I don't think so. I think the U S is,
I like to come and visit, get involved in the craziness and then I had to get out and go
somewhere else. So maybe Canada's, you know, a lot of people say, especially East coast of Canada
feels like that middle ground between the UK and the U S I feel like they've taken a lot of our
culture over. They've got a bit of French culture as well. It's a nice mix up. I enjoy that.
Got it.
I haven't been in the UK.
Is LA similar to London, you'd say?
That's a tough question.
I would say no.
I think LA and London are very, very different.
I feel like when I go to LA,
I see it as very kind of showbiz,
entertainment oriented.
Whereas I think London,
it has a lot of kind of arts and formative stuff.
But I would say more so it's the kind of financial world
that you see it as.
And I think it is also much more diverse
in terms of a place.
I feel like there's a lot more variety of things you can do,
people you can meet in London than you can in LA,
from my experience.
Got it. That makes sense.
Yeah, UK, I feel like they're big on social media, right? Compared to other European countries. people you can meet in London than you can in LA from my experience. Got it. That makes sense.
Yeah. UK, I feel like they're big on social media, right? Compared to other European countries.
I'm not sure that I would say the UK is any bigger, actually. I'd say all of Europe's pretty big into social media. One thing I find interesting is how different places use different social media.
Yeah. For example, like Snapchat is huge over here. In a lot of European countries, it's huge,
but in the UK, it's just not really, not as big as Instagram feels like to be the platform that
people use more. So I'd say kind of different regions use social media very differently.
Yeah. Snapchat's huge here. People are making a killing out here.
This is true. Yeah. I need to launch my backup.
But you're on another level, man. You're on Netflix.
Yeah. You just dropped on another level, man. You're on Netflix. Yeah.
You just dropped a documentary there, right?
Yes.
Yeah, that was really, really exciting.
We started that project ourselves
as our own funded documentary.
We thought that we've got tens of thousands of hours
of content uploaded to YouTube.
There's a real story here of how we all started
in our bedrooms, balancing YouTube life with our
studying or work that we were doing. And to take that from that point to now where we have hundreds
of employees, side businesses, a real, you know, content production team, I think being able to
tell some of that story was really exciting. And yeah, when Netflix asked to pick it up in the UK, that was a real kind of
wow moment because we went from filming ourselves with little phones and cameras
to putting together our own production that Netflix, one of the biggest streaming platform
in the world, wanted to pick up. That was something we didn't expect to happen. But
yeah, it was fantastic for us. And I think it was also a great way to really explain to people outside of our audience what we do, how it works, and why people
follow it. I think sometimes we sit there ourselves and look at the viewership numbers on our videos,
tens of millions, hundreds of millions. And it's hard to even comprehend or understand why people
watch the content in the way they do. But I think the documentary helped give it a wider understanding,
especially friends and family who don't have time to sit
and watch an hour-long Sidemen Sunday.
They could watch an hour and a half of the documentary
and understand what it is all about.
And also, I think it was quite nice for us to be able to show off the
behind the scenes and all of the people and the effort that goes into our content because I think
there is this common misconception that oh you can get tens of millions of views on YouTube
if you pick up a camera and do some stupid stuff and put it down so it was nice to be able to kind
of strip it back and say these are all the people behind the scenes yeah this is all the planning we
have to do these are the locations we have to. These are the things that can go wrong in videos. These
are the moving parts. This is how we argue between ourselves and make decisions. So it was, yeah,
it was a great, great experience and nice to explore a different format. That's cool. Yeah.
There's a lot that goes on to each video, probably 40 hours, right? At least. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, there's a lot that goes on to each video, probably 40 hours, right? At least behind the scenes. Yeah, definitely.
Yeah, some videos will be away for three days filming.
So like 72 hours will be away filming
to make one video piece.
So yeah, it's hard to build out a big editing team
and they get footage dumped on them sometimes
three or four days before it comes out.
So a lot of editors we've had join
the team they quickly tell us we can't deal with this we're not used to working in this environment
if they've come from elsewhere in film and editing to receive you know yeah 20 30 hours of footage
different angles and say okay this needs to be put together into a watchable video with music, editing, effects, grading within three or four
days. It's quite the ordeal. And yeah, fortunately the team we have now, they're super reliable.
They, they get the job done and that's a huge part of how we're able to do what we do and
react to things fast, faster than other media companies can and put on productions on a bigger
scale, shorter notice. And I think that's why the new media is replacing the old media.
We've dabbled in working with kind of TV production companies and they can't even get
their head around how quickly we decide ideas. We put them into production, we film them,
edit them and put them out. Sometimes it is a matter of days. And then these videos are getting up to 10 million views, which is more than some entire TV shows get.
For sure.
And we're doing that with a small team and kind of deciding it ourselves.
Absolutely.
It's a fun new challenge.
Yeah, that is very interesting. Yeah, because typical TV production probably spends months
on their editing and you guys are doing it in three days.
Yeah. And even more so ideation and getting things signed off. We have to, because of the nature of it, we do something different every week.
Yeah. We have to very quickly decide. And if something goes wrong, we, yeah, a member of
our group needs to change a day. We lose a venue or a studio or something goes wrong. We sometimes,
yeah, have a matter of days to turn around a video. On the Sidemen channel, since we started Sidemen
Sundays, I think it was probably, it might even be five and a half years ago, we haven't missed
a weekend upload since then. And that's with all seven of us trying to align our calendars to get
together, film, get it edited, released. That's impressive, man. Seven people. So walk me through
the creation process. Let's say there's a video idea.
Is it like a group vote on if you're going to pursue that idea?
How does it work?
So we effectively have a huge document of video ideas,
hundreds and hundreds of video ideas that we've submitted.
We've had creative people submit that we've all rated
the kind of how good we think the video is.
So then that gives them all a score out of 70.
Each of us rates them out of 10.
So then we have a list of video ideas we can look at
and say, okay, these are the top 50 video ideas
that we all agree are good ideas.
Then we'll go through and we'll pick
maybe one or two or three of them
in a meeting with all seven of us there.
And we'll sit and discuss and we'll work out the logistics of it. Is this a good idea on the surface? How do we take the title and thumbnail of the video, which people want to watch and turn
it into an entertaining piece of content? What spins can we add in to make it exciting? We decide
that between all of us. We then find a we can film it in we plug it into our
calendar with all of us which is an absolute mess of a calendar you wouldn't believe once we've done
that the video gets handed to one of the seven of us and we effectively become the exec producer
of that video so it's our responsibility to make sure that the venue is booked any extras that need
to be in the video is booked,
flights are booked, activities.
So it alternates just between the seven of you?
Yeah, we effectively work on a rotation
to try and create accountability and equalness and fairness.
We make every decision equally.
We share every bit of revenue and profit
and company ownership equally.
And we try to ensure that the workload is shared evenly.
So we have this rotor effectively that rolls around
and people jump in, they'll say,
this was my video idea,
I want to be in charge of putting it together.
Someone might say, actually, you have the right contacts
to put this video together.
And then we work with a wider team of about 10 people who help
put all the moving pieces into place. Then we turn up on the day, we film the video,
and that person is then responsible for going through their edits for the video and giving
feedback, notes, helping the editing team improve it, get it finished, polished package,
review the thumbnail title.
A lot of the time we do this together. Wow. Then the video goes out and then we do it all over
again. Dude, I'm so impressed because you guys were all friends before you started this, right?
Actually, no, there were three, um, there were two pairs of friends. So, uh, four of the guys
went to two separate schools together and grew up together. We all started our YouTube channels and we just started making videos together
and we were just having a lot of fun.
It wasn't really important the sizes of our channels, what was going on.
We actually started playing GTA 5 together
and our fans really enjoyed the idea of all of us together and the kind of the way the entertainment came across.
And they almost created us into our own brand. And they kind of started aligning around us and
said, oh, I love it when the Sidemen play GTA together. And that's effectively how the group
started. It was fans just enjoyed seeing us together. So we continue to do stuff together.
We took our logo, we printed it on
a t-shirt and took it to an event and sold a thousand t-shirts. And then all of a sudden,
we're like, hang on a second. Our friendship group and creating content together is actually now a
profitable business as well as just, we enjoy spending time together. So from that point
onwards, it was okay. How can we make better videos together?
A few of us moved into a house together and things grew and grew and grew.
Then we built a team around us and it's just been a consistent process of how can we try
something new?
How can we shake it up?
How can we make things better?
And we've built this amazing audience along the way.
I love it.
Now you're selling out soccer arenas.
Yeah.
Yeah. We've, yeah.
Our last charity football match,
we sold 63,500 tickets.
That's insane.
So what was the price on each?
I think they were around eight pounds a ticket.
And through the event,
we raised, I think, 2.7 million pounds for the charities we were
supporting almost 3 million yeah yeah that and that was that was really fun and exciting and
again like i said coming back to the djing thing the charity football matches for us are fantastic
because we can put on something for tens of thousands of fans to come along have an experience
right create big moments with creators
people would never see, expect to see together. You've got Mr. Beast, you've got Speed, you've
got KSI, you've got all of us running around on the same pitch. I think that's really fun and
exciting. And to be able to do that and also raise money for great causes, I think it's,
yeah, it's such a huge win for everyone involved.
Which player surprised you with their skill?
That's a good question.
Who was surprised?
Who surprised us?
That is a really good question.
I can't even.
Like, was someone good that you were like,
wow, I did not expect that?
You know what?
In one of our charity matches,
FaZe Adapt played.
Yeah, and he was on our team and he had he played in defense and he
was getting stuck into challenges had really really good stamina and fitness so actually yeah
I'd say he jumped out at me as someone that you wouldn't expect yeah he doesn't look that athletic
yeah and I don't believe he really played that much football or soccer so okay yeah he showed
up and he did well that makes sense I saw you score right you scored a couple times yeah yeah twice actually which is kind of absurd given that i'm the one of the seven in the group that
grew up not playing football not supporting a football team i was the kid at school in football
i would be picked last because i have no coordination whatsoever and in all of our
football videos we filmed over the years i am the the laughing stock of the group
which is fine that's my take is hey look it's fine for people to you know if you're doing something
badly and it's funny it's fine for people to laugh it's entertainment yeah don't take yourself so
seriously and that made me into the underdog in those videos so when I did something great in a
football video a crossbar challenge I'd hit the crossbar, penalty challenge, I'd score a penalty. It was this, wow, big, entertaining reaction. I would
be like, oh my goodness, I can't believe that happened. So then when the charity football
matches came about, that was kind of the precedent was, wouldn't it be ridiculous if Vic scored?
And in both games that I scored, I had absolutely no business scoring. I'm not nearly as skilled as any of the
other players, but I think it was just one of those right place at the right time. It was the
moment was right. And, uh, yeah, you popped off the comments were freaking out. I saw that.
Definitely. Um, so were you like the nerdier kid in school growing up?
I would say so. Yeah. I was, I was the, the, the kid who sat at home in front of his computer,
talking into a microphone playing video games yeah
that was weird people i would be in school and people would say that's so weird why do you talk
to yourself on a microphone at home film yourself playing games yeah it wasn't the same way it is
now where everyone understands social media tiktok instagram youtube you want to be i think a vlogger
is or a youtuber or content creator is the most popular job young people want
to do nowadays. But when we started, this is back in 2010, no one else was doing it. We were the
first people to do it. I remember when we started vlogging ourselves, if you walked around holding
a phone or a camera talking into it, people would think you were not okay in the head. They would
think you were unwell and you had that complete embarrassment
of everyone around you thinking,
what is wrong with this person?
Why are they talking into their phone?
Whereas now it's completely flipped.
But I think that because we started them,
because it was a weird thing to do,
because it took a lot of confidence
and a lot of getting outside your comfort zone to do then,
that's why we were lucky in the right place at
the right time to start building this career over a decade ago that now people who are just starting,
it's impossible for them to have that headstart. It's impossible for them to be in a space that's
as unsaturated as it was when we started. When we started uploading YouTube videos,
you couldn't monetize them. We were just getting views because we thought it was cool to get views and learn the skills of commentating and editing and filming and I think that really
helped us develop through our careers because we were doing it as an experience to learn and a
challenge rather than as a job and then fortunately for all of us monetization came in and then we
could sit back and say hang on a second we've been able to succeed in this as a hobby.
Now we have the financial incentive.
We can leave studying and put our all into it.
And I think that came at the perfect time for all of us.
Yeah, you spent years without making a dime, right?
100%, yeah.
You stuck through it.
I remember feeling a lot of shame,
even for playing video games growing up from my parents.
Oh, I used to get in a lot of trouble. I was told unless I got perfect grades at school,
I was not allowed to play video games. And it was, yeah, I'm super grateful for the fact that
I did play video games. And I think even in video games, I learned a lot of skills.
And I've been able to apply those to my life and my career since.
I love that. Yeah.
You were good at COD and Minecraft and stuff, right? A hundred percent. Yeah. I mean, I played
the game so much. I always love a new learning curve and a challenge. I like to try and get very
good at things. Then I get bored and move on to something else. That's the way I like to do things.
I feel like, yeah, a learning curve is very rewarding. And at the first it's terrifying
because you feel so out of your depth. Then you start picking it up you it gives you I feel
like a good sense of purpose and yeah chasing that is always good there's a lot you can learn
from video games did you play runescape growing up yeah that was my game economy I learned simple
economy trading watch out for people are gonna scam you and do I think, yeah, there were a lot of lessons.
Yeah, RuneScape was the one.
Dude, that was the OG.
What are you playing these days?
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Pretty much the only video game I play at the moment is Dota 2. And I don't record it. I don't stream it. I just sit and I play that game. And I love it. It's so complex. You always can get
better at the game. I think I'm nearly in in the top few percent of players in the world.
Wow. Just from sitting and grinding. Why don't you stream that? You get too pissed or something?
I feel like I also, for me, it's often been a game that I kind of escaped to. And like when I just
want to kind of disconnect from everything, I just get locked into the game. I think another part of
it is a lot of people just want to watch the best players in the world play it and i'm still
nowhere near that level so it's i feel like it's mobas tend to people really care about the best
of the best of the best got it not so much the entertainment side of it um so yeah for me i just
kind of enjoy the challenge of it and i just enjoy it being kind of a detachment of everything else
i'm doing that makes sense that game's similar to League of Legends, right? Yeah, yeah, definitely.
Did you ever play that?
A tiny amount, but all of my friends growing up played Dota.
So that was just the MOBA that I got into.
So you don't play Call of Duty anymore?
No, no, I haven't touched it in years, which is crazy.
I would say during lockdown, it was pretty much all I did.
I was streaming probably 12, 13 hours a day on average,
playing in all of the tournaments. It was a fantastic
time. I really enjoyed it. But I think once we got out of lockdown, I was much more excited to kind
of see the world and try other things. And also I feel like that game didn't innovate enough
and it became quite stagnant in a sense of the best people
became so unbelievably good that I couldn't keep up without continuing to play for 10, 12 hours a
day. And it just got to a point where that wasn't what I was interested in anymore. So kind of left
that world behind. And it's weird. I spent 10 years making multiple gaming videos every single day so to now not be making any gaming videos at
all on my own is weird but I think I reached a point in my career where I said I'm not going to
force myself to pretend to enjoy games to really try and you know um put on this side of myself
that I'm not I want to only play and stream and record games if I'm really enjoying them now that's
kind of the merits
of my career being as long as it has I've you know earned the right to be able to do that and I feel
like it's more genuine to my audience rather than me jumping on pretending to be in love with the
game I'm playing um I feel like more and more nowadays people see through that kind of behavior
yeah being genuine is usually the case you have a ton of Minecraft videos I saw on your channel
yeah yeah thousands of Minecraft videos.
That's crazy.
Yeah.
Is there really that much to do in that game?
I've never played it, but it looks simple.
A hundred percent.
It was the perfect open world engine.
We made all of our own games within the game.
We launched our own servers
where our fans could join and play alongside us.
And yeah, it was absurd.
I remember, yeah, I was posting three Minecraft
videos every single day at one point in time, every single one would get 200 to 400,000 views.
And it was just a case of YouTube was so undersaturated in gaming. The more videos I
posted, the more views I could get. And it got to a point where I would record a half an hour
Minecraft video. I would maybe edit two minutes
out of it myself, hit render, set it to upload. As soon as that was done, I'd start recording the
next one. And it was this low effort, easy game to play and record and create content on. And the
audience loved it at the time. So yeah, you were growing fast because of those, right? Yeah, yeah,
definitely. And we created our own little group of friends
who I'm still friends with to this day from all over the world.
And we used to get on and play that game together.
So yeah.
So you met people that you met online?
You met them in real life?
Yeah, I was with a group of some of my best friends called The Pack.
So that is a guy called Lachlan, a guy called Preston.
I'm sure you know Preston.
Bajan Canadian, Jerome ASF, and Mr. Woofless. That's cool.
Yeah, we were from Canada, America, Jersey, Texas, Australia, London, and we all came together and
we would make, yeah, make, you know, 10, 15, 20 videos together a week and people couldn't get
enough of them.
That's awesome.
Yeah. We all got millions and millions of views in that time. And we stopped making those videos
together, but we're still really, really close friends. We all travel to visit each other all
over the world. And that's something really special that I got from that period of content
creation.
That's cool.
Yeah. And yeah.
My parents never let me meet my online friends you know oh i remember the early
days uh the first gaming event i went to was called euro gamer in 2011 yeah and one of my friends uh
calyx who i had never met at that point he used to upload some of my clips to his community call
of duty channel to help me get subscribers i remember he had had to talk to my mom on a Skype call and get my
mom's, explain to my mom that they weren't strangers who were going to kidnap me. I was
just going to meet them at a gaming event and we're going to play games together.
I love it. Shout out to moms being protective, man.
Yeah, a hundred percent.
You saw their drop in a Minecraft movie?
I did. Yeah.
You're going to watch it?
I'll definitely watch it. Yeah.
Jack Black's in it, I think.
Yeah. and he's
been playing the game to actually get involved with the community and i like that as well because
hollywood actor involved with the game they've got to understand the game and seeing him taking
the effort to do that absolutely that's really important for sure it's gonna be good if ksi
offered you a million dollars to box xqc would you do it no no i've said this many a time uh
influencer boxing is all the rage,
but there's no amount of money you could pay me
to let someone else hit me in the face.
I just, it's not, it's not for me.
I also, I very rarely have disagreements with other people.
And I just don't think I could walk into the ring
with someone else.
And to be a good boxer,
you have to want to hurt the person you're boxing.
Right. It's so true. and i think a lot of influences and influence of boxing struggle to separate those two parts of it as the entertainment side of it but when push comes to shove you're
either a fighter or not and i'm 100 not so massive kudos to everyone that does do it i feel um but i
prefer to uh put myself out of my depth and other scenarios where I can't,
can't get hurt. Yeah. So I can't even picture you talk actually now that you've said this.
No, it really doesn't come naturally to me. I tend to try and get on with most people.
Who do you got winning the Jake Paul Tyson fight? Um, you know what? I think Jake Paul does win again. I just think the age differential there is so huge that that does sit in Jake Paul's favor. And Jake Paul is, I think he's talented. I think he's done really, really well. He commits himself to his training and his camp. He's put on great fights before. So I think he wins that again. But isn't that the joy of the boxing who knows who will win yeah yeah
if I had to choose I'd choose Jake Paul absolutely any artists you want to make a song with
oh artist I'd like to make a song with that's a very good question there are there are so many
artists that I love and enjoy I'd rather name a handful um some of you know I've been able to
work with some of
my favorite artists in the electronic music scene people like afrojack alan walker steve aoki um
i would say any of those guys i've already made a record with alan walker which was a crazy
experience my first single yeah i learned so much my first single yeah um it which has had, I think, like 60 million streams now, which is mind-blowing.
And that was really a massive springboard.
So I'd love to continue to work with, I think, some of those guys.
I think, yeah, Steve Aoki or Afrojack would be great to work with because they've been so helpful,
effectively mentoring me in entering this new and scary world of the music industry.
So, yeah, it'd be fantastic to do something
with those guys at some point.
Who's considered the goats of the EDM space?
I don't listen to any EDM.
There are so many goats of the EDM scene.
I don't even know.
Okay, Marshmello, right?
Yeah, Marshmello, Skrillex, Alesso, Zedd, Martin Garrix.
The list is endless.
There's so many talented people in the space
all with their own different sounds. And I's so many talented people in the space all with
their own different sounds. And I enjoy so many of the different DJs and what they do.
Yeah, I love going to festivals and different stages and different kinds of music.
And to be able to, yeah, start working on it myself is really fun.
I didn't realize how big it still was because when I was in high school was huge,
but I feel like it kind of took a dip and I didn't realize it came back. Yeah. I would say from the way I look at it, what is EDM music
diversifies, diversified massively. So back in 2014, 15, 16, a lot of people talk about that
as the golden era of EDM, big melodic, euphoric musics, Swedish house mafia, that kind of stuff
was massive. And I think now
there's a lot of different niches where people want stuff that's, you know, more like much harder.
There's a huge bass house fans now, techno, drum and bass, everything, progressive house. It's all
kind of separating out to a degree. But for me, I love that original and in a lot of ways, outdated
sound. But the nice part for me is
I've got my own audience of people who really support everything I do. And I'm so lucky that
that means I can actually do something very different to other people in terms of the music
I'm producing. And I can take it back. And, you know, if you watch my DJ sets on YouTube,
I'm playing a lot of stuff from five, six years ago that a lot of other DJs, if they played that,
people would say, oh, you're so out of date. You're supposed to be the cutting edge. But then a lot of people
saying, oh, this takes me back to, you know, 2015, 2016, when I used to love this kind of music. I
wish people would play this kind of stuff more. So yeah, that's a lot of the kind of music I'm
trying to make and play in my sets is that big old school, melodicic euphoric EDM that maybe isn't seen as cool
nowadays but I've you know done so much in my career I don't care about being cool I want to
make stuff I love and put it out and find people that resonate with that and I think that's a really
important part of content creation is to try not to chase what's trending too much to try and forge your own path because you can
get lost and you're competing with so many other people trying to chase the cutting edge right
it's challenging to do but if you can find something that's unique and something that you
love then you're doing it for you and you'll find other people that love it for that same reason
that's bars because there's so many people that chase and just put on a show and they're not that person. A hundred percent through it these days. Yeah. And you'll, you'll burn out
so fast pretending to be someone or do something that you're not. And I think, yeah, it's so
hyper-competitive now that a lot of people do want to just chase what's popular, chase what
everyone else is doing. But doing that and standing out is a thousand times
more of a challenge. For sure. Dude, so many people copy your Sidemen videos. It's crazy.
Yeah, definitely. And I think that's fine. It's inspiration. And a lot of people do put their own
unique twists. And I think that's one thing that we've always taken inspiration from elsewhere.
For example, some of our most successful videos, we did a cheap versus expensive holiday that now has over 110 million views on YouTube, which is a two hour
video. I don't think there's any other two hour video over a hundred million views. And what that
originally was, was a Buzzfeed concept. It was, we saw they were doing the cheap versus expensive,
you know, $1 versus $1,000 stake. And we looked at that and we said, okay, people really enjoy this content. It's getting millions of views, but there's no personality
involved in it. People don't really know who the presenter is. They're here for the concept of that.
So we said, okay, how can we take this and throw in our personalities and really build it into a
bigger piece of content? So that was it. We said, okay, three of us go on a, you know, a $200 holiday to Europe.
Three of us go on a $20,000 holiday to Europe. And it's been one of our most successful series
because it creates this dynamic, um, this contrasting dynamic between both experiences.
It shows what you can, you know, the, all the fun you can have on a small budget, all the fun you
can have on a big budget.
And also it's the jeopardy.
It's the fact that we're all friends and we don't know what we're in for.
And we all have to make the most of it.
Some people have a breakdown.
It's real emotions.
We spin the wheel for real.
No one knows whether they're going to have a lavish experience or a budget one.
And yeah, it's stuff like that, that really, you know,
it's something that already existed, but we gave it our own spin and now it's been hyper successful.
So other people take it and put their own spins on that format. And a lot of people have,
we have no problem with that. I think it's great for the scene.
Yeah. What's the most you've spent on a video? Ooh, we filmed a YouTube video with Mr. Beast
about a year and a half ago.
Our previous charity,
it was actually probably two years ago
when he came over for our charity match before last.
And we effectively built our own version
of Takeshi's Castle in a studio.
And all of the set builds and lighting
and camera crew and everything uh it took two
weeks to build all the sets we were taking a leaf from his book there we said okay if he's coming to
england we can't yeah we can't film one of our mukbang videos where we sit in a restaurant and
eat for an hour i mean to be fair maybe maybe we should do that sometime with him because it'd be
a completely different side of him that would be a good video but we yes ben i think it was around uh five hundred thousand
dollars on that one video one video and that was yeah two weeks of people building all the sets you
can see it on youtube it was this big big production that's not actually the video came
out not really feeling like us yeah funnily enough it was more of the spectacle of okay these big sets
that we're playing these games on but it was was super successful. It's had tens of millions of views.
So it was a good investment.
Oh, so you made it back?
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
So one video can really make that much?
I didn't know that.
Yeah, yeah.
The biggest videos on YouTube can make, yeah, seven figures now.
Damn.
And the perk for us is we make really long videos that get,
a lot of our videos have a 30 minute average view duration
and the average on youtube is probably about seven eight minutes so we're getting four to five times
more viewer retention right than other channels which means that advertising rates are higher
and it means we can really fund big production do you do the language thing mr beast does where
you're in like a bunch of different countries? So actually we tried translating our videos
to different languages.
We made a Spanish channel, Sidemen en EspaƱol.
Yeah.
And it was a massive disaster and a failed project.
Oh, wow.
We quickly realized that a lot of our humor
is very, very language-based.
It's English slang, English humor and memes.
And it just didn't translate well across to other languages.
Effectively, you'd have to have seven voice actors in other languages
that could create the same conversational chemistry
that we've created from knowing each other for 14, 15 years.
It's kind of impossible to do.
A very objective video that's, we are going to do this. Look at this. I told people to do this. A Mr. Beast video translates
so fantastically to other languages. We found that our content did not translate well. We had
a lot of fans saying, I speak Spanish and English. The Spanish just isn't it, guys.
Like we would rather watch you in our non-native language
because it's just not, it's not translating well. And we would have, we would have to spend
absurd amounts of money to get it translated well. And also our content is so long.
If you're getting an hour long, hour and a half video translated with seven different voices,
you're looking at so much money to do that for something that just doesn't convert well enough. So absolutely. It's probably a way to do it. We never really got into finding
the way to do it. So yeah, that makes a lot of sense. I didn't even factor that in, but yeah,
because Mr. Beast offers that to other clients and stuff, but for you guys, it's way different.
100%. What do you think of the recent phase stuff? There were some big layoffs like a few days ago.
Yeah. Phase has been a rollercoaster to to watch i almost joined at one point actually during lockdown when i was
uh doing big numbers on call of duty in streaming content they tried to recruit me
ended up it would have been a conflict of interest between sidemen and phase it wasn't going to work
out and shortly thereafter they had the whole um public listing fiasco that evidently did not go well.
And yeah, they're trying a whole new rebrand now,
which I think is good.
I think it's good for them to take power back within themselves.
I think they outsourced a lot of their management
and that turned out to be a disaster.
And that's a key difference between Sidemen and FaZe.
Sidemen has always been the same seven members
with equal voting decisions.
We effectively sit as a board
and everyone else within the company works underneath us.
We make all of the final decisions.
I believe with FaZe, it ended up investment.
Oh, what was that voice crack?
With FaZe, investment came in.
And to get that investment, you have to relinquish power.
And if you relinquish power to the wrong people,
people who don't understand your business,
things can turn sour very quickly.
And that's what we saw.
And that's something that we've always had to work to avoid with Sidemen.
So we've had huge investment offers.
We've had companies come in and say,
we'll take over the operation.
We'll run it for you.
And I'm now looking at what's happened with FaZe.
We're very glad to have turned down
every one of those offers and said,
no, you work on our terms.
Otherwise, we won't work with you.
And seeing them effectively take steps
to bring that power dynamic back,
hopefully it works out.
And I think they're on the right path.
But again, you can have fantastic ideas.
It's all about execution.
So time will tell how they execute this new phase,
this new era, this new phase of face.
There you go.
Oh, there we go.
Yeah, I love that.
Cause yeah, you probably got crazy offers.
Same with Mr. Beast.
He's probably been offered crazy money,
but then you give up that creative freedom.
So it's like a catch 22, right? A hundred percent. Yeah. It's very difficult to bring people into
our businesses because they change so fast. The understanding you can pick up from publishing for
your own audience for a decade, it would take other people years to even get close to understanding
that audience in the same way that you do. So yeah, if you're relinquishing power and decision-making and even creative decisions
to people in this space, things can go wrong very quickly. And it happens to a lot of creators where
they burn out and they say, I don't want to make the creative decisions, the logistical decisions
myself. I'm going to outsource this to this team of people. But very quickly, things can go very wrong.
And you see YouTube channels go from these huge, huge powerhouses
to irrelevancy in a few years.
It's always a scary, scary thought.
For sure.
There's not many still around from your time.
You're like one of a few left.
We've seen the rise and fall of so many channels.
But every time we see that, it allows us to learn a little more
and avoid those pitfalls.
Because there's
a hundred different ways you can kill a youtube channel and you know every month absolutely thick
it's been fun anything uh you want to promote or close off with um no i mean the sidemen channel
if you guys yeah watching are curious about what we do uh yeah the sidemen channel the documentaries
my own music um is a work in progress but if people are into EDM, hit it up on Spotify, SoundCloud, all that good stuff.
But no, it's been a pleasure being here and a fun, different way to chat because, yeah, a different perspective on the world.
Things are different over here and we're all about it.
Yeah. Thanks for coming on, man. That was fun.
I like everything below.
Yeah. Thanks for watching, guys, as always. See you tomorrow.