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How Much Money Did Buster Douglas Make

American online media production visitor

Aqueduct Awesome, Inc.
Industry Online media
Founded April 2008; fourteen years agone  (2008-04) (as That Guy with the Glasses)
Founders
  • Mike Michaud
  • Bhargav Dronamraju
  • Mike Ellis
Headquarters

Lombard, Illinois

,

United States

Key people

  • Mike Michaud
  • (CEO)
  • Doug Walker
  • (Actor and presenter)
  • Rob Walker
  • (COO and screenwriter)
Acquirement $150,000 (2009)
Website https://channelawesome.com

Channel Awesome, Inc. is an American online media product company based in Lombard, Illinois. The company was created in 2008 past Mike Michaud, Mike Ellis, and Bhargav Dronamraju. Aqueduct Awesome operated the That Guy with the Glasses website (oft abbreviated TGWTG ) until late 2014, when it was phased into the Aqueduct Awesome website. The site is best known for the comedic flick review series Nostalgia Critic, starring Doug Walker.

That Guy with the Glasses previously hosted boyfriend channels past Bar Fiesta, beginning in November 2009, and Blistered Thumbs, beginning in November 2010. Aqueduct Awesome currently hosts a YouTube channel of the same proper noun with an emphasis on content produced by Doug Walker and his brother Rob. All of Channel Awesome'south content was hosted by Blip or YouTube prior to the former's shutdown in Baronial 2015. Afterward a series of scandals, nearly all affiliated creators severed ties with Aqueduct Crawly and departed in April 2018.

Origins

Mike Michaud, Mike Ellis and Bhargav Dronamraju created Channel Awesome afterward they were laid off from Excursion City in 2007. The three discussed the idea of such a company while still employed, simply their dismissal was the impetus to put their plans into activeness. Michaud has stated that "if [they] didn't lose our jobs, [the business organisation] wouldn't have happened anytime before long".[1] [ii]

At around the same time, Doug Walker, an thespian, comedian, writer, and moving-picture show critic, began posting several satirical video reviews of films and other media on YouTube under the web name "Nostalgia Critic". Initially, Walker viewed making the videos equally a side hobby, rarely interacting with his fans and not revealing his real name until a video responding to the Northern Illinois University shooting. Walker'south channel had its content withdrawn from YouTube post-obit complaints from 20th Century Fox and Lionsgate over alleged copyright infringement.[3] Walker attempted to re-upload his content by assigning each video a new, carve up channel. Notwithstanding, due to continuing issues, Walker decided to leave YouTube altogether and create the website That Guy with the Spectacles, with Michaud acting as webmaster.

That Guy with the Glasses

That Guy with the Glasses was launched in April 2008. It showcased satirical reviews of movies, television shows, music, comic books and video games. The website was congenital around the work of Walker, including Nostalgia Critic (comedic recaps of bad movies), 5 2nd Movies (hyper-edited characteristic films), Ask That Guy with the Glasses (a comedy question and reply show) and Bum Reviews (humorous plot summaries of theatrical releases). Other videos and written manufactures were hosted on the site, including some minor serial and sketches starring Walker. Videos were primarily hosted by Bleep after problems with earlier provider Revver.[4] The website featured videos from a number of other content creators who were steadily added every bit contributors over the course of several years.

In December 2008, Walker appeared in a commercial for the PBS documentary Brand 'Em Laugh: The Funny Business organization of America, performing a serial of cursory imitations of famous comedians, from Charlie Chaplin to Stephen Colbert.[five] In 2009, Doug and Rob Walker, forth with Brian Heinz, produced an iRiff of The Panthera leo Rex for RiffTrax. In March 2009, the iRiff was chosen equally the winner of the website's RiffTrax Presents competition. The performers received $1,000 and, with pedagogy from Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Spud and Bill Corbett, recorded a commentary for the film Batman Forever.[6]

Nostalgia Critic averaged 100,000 to 300,000 viewers per week while on the site, and one million page views per month.[1] [7] This was expected to increment following Blip'south deal with YouTube in July 2009.[8] As of July 2009, the site earned more than $10,000 per month in advertising revenue and received more than than $11,000 in online donations. In the 3rd quarter of the 2009 fiscal year, Walker's shows earned $53,000, including $32,000 from Nostalgia Critic alone. This revenue was generated by run of network from Puma and Starburst.[ane] [8] The success of his shows has allowed Walker to brand a living performing and to quit his previous job as an illustrator, as well as pay the salary of Ellis, the site's co-founder and COO. The site was featured in Entrepreneur magazine in December 2009[9] where the history of the site was discussed as well as the plans for the hereafter.

A "team shot" of Channel Awesome producers with the president of the Commonwealth of Molossia Kevin Baugh, c. the 2010 filming of their 2nd anniversary feature-length special Kickassia

During 2011, Michaud was looking for warehouse space in suburban Chicago.[2] He told The New York Times, "My company has a lot of growing upwards to practice, but I believe that sometime in the adjacent one to two years someone will create that ane series that gets everyone talking... [and attract audiences] to the endless options of online video."[2] Every bit of June 2011, the company employed seven full-fourth dimension staff.[ii] According to Walker, "these people are inexpensive to get because we are happy to run across whatsoever corporeality of money". Aqueduct Awesome's ability to concenter a significant audience with a low expenditure was proclaimed to have an effect on video entertainment product.[viii]

The site gained a wealth of personalities and shows, apace reaching twenty plus. The first fourth dimension the producers made an initiative to put each other in the aforementioned fictional universe (or "Reviewaverse", as was coined by one of its quondam producers) was with their first anniversary video, which was a twenty-minute fight between each other, with set up and dialogue merely stating it was video game reviewers vs. movie reviewers, egged on by the Nostalgia Critic and Aroused Video Game Nerd rivalry that had been going at the time. A full-length site crossover movie was decided for the adjacent year's anniversary. It ended upwardly being a trilogy: Kickassia, which had the plot of the Critic getting a number of the personalities together to have over a micronation in Nevada; Suburban Knights, where the Critic got together much of the same personalities to find a mystical gauntlet via forced LARPing; and To Boldly Flee, where the Critic and TGWTG 'due south bandage travel to space to end a cosmic anomaly and fight corporate villains.

On June 28, 2012, Channel Awesome content producers Walker, Lindsay Ellis (The Nostalgia Chick; no relation to Mike Ellis), Brad Jones (The Cinema Snob) and Todd Nathanson (Todd in the Shadows) signed exclusivity deals with Blip,[10] which direct hosted nigh TGWTG and Aqueduct Awesome programming until it was shut downwardly in August 2015.[11] [12] The bargain did not impact the appearance of the producers' videos on TGWTG, and would assist the increase of upkeep of the four series, every bit well as provide technical improvements.[10] An extension of this deal was a Blip-run YouTube channel called "League of Super Critics", which also uploaded the unedited videos of all iv producers, with the exception of Jones, whose videos were edited down from the original version and so that the merely way one could meet the total video was to get to Blip.[13]

On Dec 3, 2014, the site shut downward and rebranded itself as ChannelAwesome.com.[14]

Subdivisions

Channel Crawly expressed plans to build on the success of That Guy with the Glasses with a network of subdivisions of the Aqueduct Awesome website, including Bar Fiesta for covering Chicago entertainment and nightlife, and Inked Reality for anime and comic books. Blistered Thumbs began in 2009 as a subdivision of That Guy with the Glasses for housing its video game content. It gained popularity and Blistered Thumbs launched as its own website on November iv, 2010.

Joe Vargas (Angry Joe), already an established video game reviewer on That Guy with the Glasses, was the initial editor-in-main. Staff writers were drawn from various websites including That Guy with the Glasses, TechRaptor and Normal Boots. Austin Yorski eventually replaced Vargas equally editor-in-chief.

In late November 2014, the Blistered Thumbs website was close downward.[ citation needed ]

ChannelAwesome.com

The new Channel Awesome website debuted in late 2014. All content from TGWTG was relocated to the newly established ChannelAwesome.com. Each week in that location is a Spotlight Department to promote a website producer, as well as a Featured Blogger.

In January 2015, 4 of the site's long-time associates departed, including Andrew Dickman, Kyle Kallgren (Oancitizen),[15] Allison Pregler (Obscurus Lupa) and Phelan Porteus (Phelous).[16] Dickman, Porteus and Pregler went to existence exclusively on Phelan'south site, Phelous.com, while Kyle went to producing videos exclusively for Chez Apocalypse. Later on that same month, Lindsay Ellis ended her long-running testify The Nostalgia Chick, which had premiered equally a companion show to Nostalgia Critic in September 2008.[17] She intended to go along producing videos for League of Super Critics on YouTube and her own website, Chez Apocalypse.[18]

Noah Antwiler, and his reviewer persona "The Spoony 1", went to being exclusively on his site, The Spoony Experiment, a niggling before the fourth ceremony film, but nonetheless had a prominent part in it with his consent.

Long-running shows

Nostalgia Critic

Nostalgia Critic is the well-nigh popular video series created past Doug Walker, in which he plays the titular reviewer. The show is written past him and his brother Rob Walker. The serial was initially launched on YouTube earlier moving to Blip TV in 2008. It is the flagship show for Channel Awesome, which has since congenital on information technology with additional content, boosted websites and the spin-off evidence Nostalgia Chick.[xix]

Atop the Fourth Wall

Atop the Fourth Wall (AT4W for short) was the leading comic volume review show on the site, hosted by Minnesota native Lewis "Linkara" Lovhaug. His nickname came from a character he created when he was a teen, writing amateur fantasy novels. His show is one of the tamer in tone on the site, equally Lovhaug has one of the more than wholesome and low-cal-hearted personalities.

Existence one of the bigger patrons of sci-fi and fantasy shows and movies, such every bit Doctor Who, Star Expedition, Babylon 5, etc., he is ane of the strongest users of a story-line, which he features in the same videos every bit his reviews, where he is an important and high-ranking agent against paranormal and extraterrestrial threats in the Channel Awesome universe. He is likewise a major fan of Power Rangers and Pokémon, and once featured the glitch MissingNo. as a villain on his evidence. He besides hosts a split up bear witness where he discusses the history of Power Rangers.[xx]

In March 2018, Lovhaug announced on his website that he had left Channel Awesome.[21]

He once admitted he was a conservative, although in contempo years he has expressed more liberal observances. These include his wife Viga existence African-American, his support of transgender rights, and his beingness a feminist.

The Angry Joe Show

Jose "Angry Joe" Antonio Vargas hosts the leading video game review show on the site. It by and large consists of reviews by Vargas stating his honest opinions of current releases of video games, mixed with sketch comedy. These include recent troubles he sees in the games manufacture such as title exclusivity to a certain console, cutting off previously present and willing buyers, done due to what he says is the misguided preference of console producers' money as opposed to consumers' coin;[22] and what he observes every bit triple-A game producers taking compatible parts of what used to exist a finished game only months before release, and releasing them afterwards as downloadable content, in gild to artificially increase profit.[23] [ improve source needed ] The evidence has a satirical running gag of Vargas fighting "The Corporate Commander" (a spoof of The Cobra Commander from One thousand.I. Joe), a masked villain who wishes to ruin the gaming community by forcing them to pay substantial amounts of money for subpar games.[ citation needed ] Vargas is the founder of "The Aroused Army", a community specializing in online gaming.[24]

In April 2018, Vargas announced his departure from the Channel Crawly website.[25]

Todd in the Shadows

Todd in the Shadows is a music review show created and presented by Todd Nathanson. The bear witness's primary focus is on its three primary series: Todd'southward Pop Vocal Reviews, in which Nathanson reviews songs that, at the fourth dimension of review, were or had recently been loftier-charting; One Hit Wonderland, in which he examines and chronicles the careers of one-hit wonders; and Trainwreckords, in which he analyzes albums considered to have "ended [the] thriving careers" of their corresponding artists.[26] Cinemadonna, in which Nathanson reviews Madonna'due south feature filmography, was one of the testify's main serial until its conclusion in 2016.[27] In the show, Nathanson keeps his advent anonymous, filming himself in silhouette while sitting at an electronic keyboard in a dark room. When his face up is not in silhouette, he covers its upper half with a blackness cloth.[28]

Nathanson debuted the series in 2009 and joined That Guy with the Glasses the following year.[29] [30] In March 2018, he announced his departure from Channel Awesome on his Twitter account.[31]

The Movie theater Snob

The Cinema Snob stars Brad Jones every bit a pretentious art critic who watches and comments on obscure exploitation films and pornography, the majority of which were released between the belatedly 1960s through the early on 1990s. His association with Channel Awesome began with "E.T. The Porno" (January 7, 2010). Like many other shows on Aqueduct Awesome, Jones started his show on YouTube until he was confronted with a copyright claim from the filmmakers of Nail Gun Massacre.[32] Jones has also created additional shows for Aqueduct Awesome, including Brad Tries and Midnight Screenings.

Awards

On January half dozen, 2011, Doug Walker was awarded Entrepreneur of the Year in Las Vegas at the 4th Annual Mashable Awards.[33]

Activism

On Dec 5, 2009, the visitor held a donation bulldoze for the Ronald McDonald House Charities. The donation bulldoze lasted upward of seven hours and raised $26,400. During the event, calls were taken, prizes were awarded to people who donated large sums of money and videos featuring the talent on the site were aired. The donation drive was extended a few more days making the grand full $32,200.[34]

On December 15, 2011, Lindsay Ellis posted a video nigh Channel Awesome staff traveling to Washington, D.C. to lobby members of Congress about the Stop Online Piracy Act and the PROTECT IP Act. Ellis, Michaud, Rob Walker, and content producers Noah Antwiler (The Spoony I), Kyle Kallgren (Oancitizen and Brows Held High), Lewis Lovhaug (Linkara), Todd Nathanson (Todd in the Shadows), Paul Schuler (Paw Dugan) and Joe Vargas (Angry Joe) all traveled to Washington, D.C. to represent Channel Awesome and support liberty of speech on the net.[35]

Direction controversy

Initial allegations

Between October 2014 and January 2015, several long-fourth dimension content producers departed from Channel Awesome. In March 2018, several former producers alleged, via a series of Twitter posts, mismanagement and mistreatment by members of Channel Awesome'due south upper management, including the Walker brothers and Michaud. The allegations included a history of sexist behavior toward female producers as well every bit a history of unprofessional, aggressive and immature beliefs towards other content creators past Michaud, incompetence by the Walker brothers during production of the visitor's ceremony films, and failure to communicate with producers almost significant decisions affecting them.[36] I such allegation from Lindsay Ellis stated that during product on the moving picture To Boldly Flee, she was repeatedly pressured into looping a scene in which her grapheme was implied to be raped off-screen past Lewis Lovhaug'southward character. She further alleged that due to her and Lovhaug's protests over the scene'southward content, Doug Walker rewrote it so the implication of assail was less implicit. Ellis said that she was forced to perform the scene under intimidation.[36]

In March and April 2018, several more than producers—including Lovhaug (Linkara),[21] Todd Nathanson (Todd in the Shadows),[31] Daren Jackson (Rap Critic)[37] [38] and Mike Jeavons (MikeJ)[39]—departed from Channel Awesome.

Further departures

On April two, 2018, a group of quondam Aqueduct Awesome contributors and employees publicly released a document, entitled "Not And then Awesome", via Google Bulldoze. The document compiled grievances confronting the company, both those that had been previously made and ones that had not yet been publicly known. Over 20 onetime producers and employees, along with 2 individuals whose identities were kept anonymous, provided various allegations that were included in the document.[40] The subsequent response from Channel Crawly was criticized by fans and the company's former producers, as they felt the company was not apologizing or taking responsibility for their wrongdoings.[41]

On that and the post-obit days, more producers, including Omar Ahmed (Yomarz),[42] Nash Bozard,[43] Mathew Cadet (Film Brain),[44] Tony Goldmark (Some Jerk with a Photographic camera),[45] Elisa Hansen (Maven), Brian Heinz (The Concluding Aroused Geek),[46] Leeman Kessler (Enquire Lovecraft), Heather McDonald (Calluna),[47] Dominic Smith (The Dom),[48] Luke Spencer (Rocked) and Chris Stuckmann[49] left Channel Awesome, with some citing their dissatisfaction with the company's response to the controversy as their reason for doing so,[43] [48] lowering the number of producers for the website from twoscore to about ten by April 5.[fifty] Aqueduct Awesome'south planned tenth anniversary was cancelled every bit a consequence of the controversy.[45]

Second response and fallout

On April 11, 2018, Channel Awesome released a second response to the allegations equally a blog postal service on its website. Titled "Our Response", the mail service was intended to abnegate the "most egregious" of the allegations made by former producers, Holly Brown and Jane Doe, who are described within it as "disgruntled individuals with vindictive intentions".[51]

Within 48 hours of the response'southward posting, nearly all of Channel Awesome's remaining producers, including long-time veterans Joe Vargas (Angry Joe),[25] Bennett White (Bennett the Sage) and Lawrence Simpson (MasakoX), as well equally Gaming Wildlife,[52] Deal Male child, Ryan Molina (Battle Geek Plus),[53] Timid Jester,[54] DToons Productions (maker of the series Toons These Days)[55] and Eric Rodriguez (Blockbuster Buster),[56] also left the website.

Since April 14, 2018, the website listed ii remaining producers autonomously from the Walkers: Brad Jones (Cinema Snob) and Larry Bundy Jr. (Guru Larry); the latter stated that among his reasons for remaining were that "no one always really believed [he] was ever on TGWTG".[57]

On August two, 2021, Doug Walker acknowledged the controversy in an interview with Korey Coleman on Double Toasted. He admitted that Channel Awesome had gotten "also big" and thus resulted in poor communication among the staff and producers. Since and then, they had been consciously trying to proceed everything closer and more personal.[58]

References

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  50. ^ "Alen Blažeković on Twitter".
  51. ^ "Our Response". channelawesome.com . Retrieved April 11, 2018.
  52. ^ @GamingWildlife (Apr 12, 2018). "Hey guys, Mike here. I am so lamentable to the people involved in this chaos with #channelawesome we've simply had skillful experiences with its staff, and the reason for our delayed decision was that nosotros wanted to meet their issued response... That being said we've decided to function ways" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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  54. ^ The Timid Jester (April 12, 2018). "Hey guys- here's an update on u.s. and our decision to leave Channel Awesome". Retrieved June 28, 2018 – via Twitter.
  55. ^ Dtoons Productions (April thirteen, 2018). "I'd like to inform everyone that in lite of recent events, we have ended our affiliation with Aqueduct Awesome. Please refer to this list of content creators so yous tin can continue to follow and support them". Retrieved June 28, 2018 – via Twitter.
  56. ^ Eric Rodriguez (April 13, 2018). "I Quit Channel Awesome". YouTube. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
  57. ^ Bundy Jr., Larry. "Because I've been there for a decade and I've e'er been stuck in this Bearenstein Bears dimension where no one ever actually believed I was always on TGWTG. I never was included in fan art, I was never asked to be in a crossover, I was never asked to be in any ceremony movies". Archived from the original on April 15, 2018. Retrieved April fifteen, 2018 – via Twitter.
  58. ^ DOUG WALKER (NOSTALGIA CRITIC) INTERVIEW | Double Toasted. YouTube. Double Toasted Interviews. Baronial 2, 2021. Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. Retrieved August half dozen, 2021.

External links

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_Awesome

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