Almost 11 years ago,twins sex videos Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla uploaded their first video to YouTube, a grainy lip sync to the Power Rangerstheme song.
Last year, the comedy duo starred in their first film, Smosh: The Movie. The production values were slightly higher.
In between, Hecox and Padilla became an internet sensation, known as Smosh, and signed on with Defy Media, one of the many companies that sprung up to produce and promote the rising wave of YouTube talent that has drawn young audiences away from TV.
Now, Defy Media has raised $70 million as it looks to expand production and make content that reaches far beyond YouTube. Keith Richman, president of Defy, said the investment would help the company take advantage of what he sees as billions of dollars in television money that is headed online.
"As good as the business might be today, we think of where the world is going and all this money that is up for grabs. That's what we're putting ourselves in a position to get, a piece of this $100 billion market," Richman said in an interview with Mashable.
Private investment firm Wellington Management Company led the investment. Defy's earlier investors include traditional media companies Viacom and Lionsgate, as well as ABS Capital and Zelnick Media Capital.
Defy is far from alone in receiving major financial backing for its youth-oriented online audience. Disney dropped $500m on Maker Studios, a deal that included another $450m in performance incentives, and Fullscreen is majority owned by AT&T and Chernin Media.
In addition to its crown jewel of Smosh, Defy is home to brands like Clevver, Screen Junkies and various others that produce more than 70 weekly shows. The company boasts a combined 100 million social followers across its brands, which generate more than 800 million monthly video views.
Once found only on YouTube, Defy's talent can now be seen on a variety of platforms, many backed by some of the biggest traditional media companies, which are looking to cater to the viewing tastes of younger people. Defy content is on Comcast's Watchable, Verizon's go90, Amazon Prime Video, Spotify and plenty of others.
Defy is even trying out its own subscription service, having launched Screen Junkies Plus. The $5-per-month service features an original scripted program and other content not published for free on YouTube.
The audacity to launch its own service hints at just how confident Defy is in its content. Richman said that there's still a ways to go, but that Defy now has the money and talent to take advantage of changing consumer habits.
"Because value is getting more directly attributed to success, a lot of people are going to be revealed as having irrelevant brands, small audiences and stuff people won't pay for," he said. "When we look at the world and we look at our position in it, we just get really excited."
CORRECTION: This post previously identified Anthony Padilla as Daniel Padilla.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Best tablet deal: Get the Google Pixel Tablet for $120 off at Amazon
Apple may retire the iPhone mini, but the small iPhone dream lives on
Yumi baby food subscription aims to disrupt a parenting industry
A photo of an egg beat Kylie Jenner as the most
'Severance' Reddit theory may have answered the 'Cold Harbor' mystery
Spiders in the sky appear to 'rain' in Brazil, but there's more to it
You don't need to be high to enjoy @ifyouhigh's Instagram account
That Dwayne Johnson interview where he bashed PC culture was fake
The Best Tech Deals and Discounts for Students
Netflix's 'Seoul Vibe' review: Fast, furious, and fun '80s action
Today's Hurdle hints and answers for May 5, 2025
Trump defends his choice to serve the Clemson football team '1000 hamberders'
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。