How Come Anthony Padilla Is Never in a Smosh Video Ever Again

American YouTube comedy channel

Smosh
Smosh.png

Smosh creators Ian Hecox (left, in 2020) and Anthony Padilla (right, in 2019)

Origin Carmichael, California, U.Due south.[one]
Website www.smosh.com
YouTube information
Channels
  • Smosh
  • Smosh Pit
  • Smosh Games
  • SmoshCast
  • Shut Up! Cartoons
  • ElSmosh
  • Smosh France
Years agile 2002–nowadays
Genre Sketch comedy (Smosh/ElSmosh)
Gaming (Smosh Games)
Animation (Shut Up! Cartoons)
Subscribers 45.9 million (combined)
Total views 16.3 billion (combined)
Network Mythical Entertainment (previously Defy Media)
Associated acts
  • PewDiePie
  • Gus Johnson
  • Jacksfilms
  • Rhett & Link
  • MatPat
  • Flula Borg
  • Jenna Marbles
  • Harley Morenstein
  • Fine Brothers
  • The Valleyfolk
  • Joe Bereta
  • I Set up My Friends on Burn

Creator Awards

YouTube Silver Play Button 2.svg 100,000 subscribers
  • 2007 (Smosh)
  • 2011 (Smosh Games)
  • 2011 (ElSmosh)
  • 2019 (SmoshCast)
YouTube Gold Play Button 2.svg 1,000,000 subscribers
  • 2009 (Smosh)
  • 2011 (Smosh Games)
  • 2011 (ElSmosh)
YouTube Diamond Play Button.svg x,000,000 subscribers 2013 (Smosh)

Updated: May 12, 2021

Smosh is an American sketch comedy YouTube channel co-founded by Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla.[2] In 2002, Padilla created a website named "smosh.com" for making Flash animations, and he was later on joined by Hecox. They began to post videos on Smosh'southward YouTube channel in the autumn of 2005 and quickly became one of the most popular channels on the site. As of June 2021[update], the Smosh channel has over 9.9 billion views and over 25.one million subscribers, putting information technology just exterior of the top 9,000 most subscribed channels on YouTube.[3]

Since 2012, the Smosh brand has expanded to consist of multiple channels, including a Spanish-language channel (ElSmosh), a channel focused on video gaming content (Smosh Games), and a multifariousness aqueduct (Smosh Pit). The sketches have too included more actors. Padilla left Smosh in June 2017 to pursue independent ventures. The Smosh channel has experienced three different spans as the most subscribed YouTube channel. The start period spanned from May to June 2006, the second from April 2007 to September 2008, and the third span from Jan to August 2013.[iv] [5] [6]

On November six, 2018, Smosh's parent company Defy Media abruptly closed without warning.[seven] Six days later on, the Smosh cast released a video announcing that production of Smosh, Smosh Pit, and Smosh Games content was notwithstanding ongoing, and that existing videos would be finished and other content would be released independently by Smosh on their YouTube channels.[8] They subsequently joined Mythical Entertainment after their visitor was purchased by Rhett and Link on February 22, 2019.[9] As of 2019, the channel's cast has a core group of Hecox, Courtney Miller, Damien Haas, Olivia Sui, Keith Leak Jr., Noah Grossman and Shayne Topp who run the bulk of content.

On September 2, 2020, they launched a Twitch aqueduct named after one of their YouTube channels, Smosh Games.

History

2002–2006: Formation and lip sync videos

Padilla (left) and Hecox (correct) at the 2d almanac Streamy Awards in 2010

The franchise began when Anthony Padilla congenital a website in 2002, smosh.com,[ten] and made several dissimilar Flash animations. He has stated that the name "Smosh" came from an incident where he mistook a friend explaining a mosh pit as a "smosh pit".[11] Other content creators in the pre-YouTube era would too upload videos to smosh.com, including future YouTuber TomSka. Later on, his friend, Ian Hecox, joined the venture. Padilla and Hecox first met in their sixth grade scientific discipline class. They became friends, and quickly discovered their knack for one-act. In 2005, they joined YouTube and made several videos together, lip syncing the theme songs to Mortal Kombat, Power Rangers, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. At first, these videos were not intended to exist posted online, but after they sent them to their friends, they started a YouTube channel.[11]

One of Smosh's earliest videos, "Pokémon Theme Music Video," was released on November 28, 2005. Information technology followed the same way as their other earlier videos, featuring the duo lip-synching the original English theme vocal for the Pokémon anime. All the same, the video instantly became much more popular than any of their other videos; over the form of its lifetime, information technology gained over 24 million views, becoming the most-viewed video on all of YouTube at that fourth dimension.[12] [13] [14] [15] It held that championship until it was dethroned by Judson Laipply's "Development of Dance". It was afterwards removed for copyright.[15]

The success of their Pokémon video and other videos led Smosh to exist featured in the "Person of the Year: You" issue of Time, published December thirteen, 2006.[14] In March 2007, a user named Andii2000 (at present renamed every bit Ahmed Yahya) re-uploaded the original Pokémon video; it has over xv.nine one thousand thousand views as of November 2016[update].[sixteen] Due to the channel'due south continued success, and Smosh's partnership with YouTube, the two recreated the video in Nov 2010, this time irresolute the words to be critical of The Pokémon Visitor taking downwards the Pokémon theme video.[17]

2006–2012: YouTube success

Hecox (left) and Padilla (right) performing at Vidcon 2012

Over the course of the next few years, Smosh began to diversify. They started making curt YouTube skits, such as their almanac video series Food Boxing [18] and That Damn Neighbor. Smosh continued to abound in popularity and became 1 of the most subscribed channels on YouTube.[nineteen] In 2009, Smosh prepared a massive redesign of Smosh.com, added a games section, and put extras in the video section. In January 2010, Smosh launched the "Smosh Pit" feature, a web log that consists of various pieces of popular-culture trivia, and written one-act. In improver, 2010 saw the aqueduct launch 3 different Smosh-based web series: Ian Is Bored, which started as a collection of comedic videos by Hecox, simply then turned into both Hecox and Padilla making vlog like videos, and renamed Smosh Is Bored; Ask Charlie, where people ask Charlie, from their January 2010 Charlie the Drunkard Republic of guinea Grunter video, random questions; and Lunchtime with Smosh, a comedy serial featuring Smosh getting and eating food from diverse places, and answering Twitter questions from their fans on Twitter. Some of Smosh'south most popular video series include Pokémon in Existent Life and If ____ Was Real.[20] Likewise in early 2010, Smosh created the "iShut Upward App" for Android phones as part of a Google sponsorship; information technology eventually made its way to the iTunes app shop. In 2011, the number of views grew past 40% when Smosh was caused by Alloy Digital (later inverse to Defy Media).[21] [15]

2012–2017: Expansion

Hecox (left) and Padilla (right) at VidCon 2014

In 2012, the duo started iii new YouTube channels, ElSmosh, with Smosh videos dubbed in Spanish, Shut Upward! Cartoons, with various blithe videos, and Smosh Games, with gaming-related content hosted alongside Mari Takahashi, David "Lasercorn" Moss, Matthew Sohinki, and Joshua "Jovenshire" Ovenshire.[fifteen] [22] [23] [24] [25] Some of Smosh's most popular videos are video-game themed music videos.[26] [27] These songs (forth with other original songs) take been released in 4 albums to date – Sexy Anthology (2010), If Music Were Real (2011), Smoshtastic (2012), and The Sweet Sound of Smosh (2013). In Jan 2013, the Smosh aqueduct surpassed Ray William Johnson in subscribers.[28] Smosh released Super Caput Esploder X, a video game for iPads, iPhones, and iPods, in February 2013,[29] [30] and in July 2013 started an Indiegogo entrada for an iOS and PC game, Food Boxing: The Game.[31] [32] Hecox and Padilla raised $258,777 to hire video game producers to create a game based on their characters and the foods used in their annual Nutrient Battle series. Smosh donated x% of the funds to three charities[33] [34] in Nov 2014, besides equally releasing the game.

In February 2014, Smosh released a mobile app to access Smosh videos and other content from their website,[35] and in late 2014 an Xbox One app.[36] Later in 2014, a fan run channel Smosh France became an official Smosh channel.[37] In March 2015, Smosh re-launched the Smosh Games Alliance, a multi-channel network where fans join to enjoy network benefits in substitution for a percentage of the ad revenue.[38] In 2015, the duo announced Noah Grossman, Keith Leak Jr., Olivia Sui,[39] Courtney Miller and Shayne Topp[40] as new regular bandage members for Smosh videos. A sketch serial, called Every (Blank) E'er, has been released every two weeks since May 2015.[41]

In January 2016, a web sitcom was launched on the chief Smosh channel. Role Timers is a comedy-drama which takes place at a fictional children'south arcade and pizza place called Pork Eastward. Pino'south, which takes inspiration from Hecox's first job at Chuck Due east. Cheese's.[42] Each episode presents a claiming that the team must overcome to proceed the business going. The series features regular Smosh cast members, Grossman (equally Pete), Hecox (as Ian), and Padilla (as Anton), in improver to True cat Alter (as Mads), Jade Martz (as Ella), Casey Webb (equally Dinger), and Natalie Whittle (equally Lori).[43] The series was released every Monday on the Smosh channel from January to May 2016.[43] During the month of February, new bandage fellow member Boze was added to the Smosh Family, joining the bandage of Smosh Games.

2017–nowadays: Padilla'southward departure, Defy media shut-downwards, and network change

On June xiv, 2017, Padilla announced he would exist leaving Smosh to pursue contained video ventures due to a "lack in creative freedom".[44] [45] Hecox stated he would remain with Smosh, adding "I'm really looking forward to taking Smosh to the next phase, and we tin't look for people to run across what we have coming up."[46]

On November 6, 2018, Defy Media abruptly appear they were shutting down and laying off all its employees. Hecox said that Smosh was not "going away" and that plans were underway to find Smosh a new home.[7] Padilla released a video the post-obit mean solar day which went into more detail virtually his departure from Smosh and his issues with what Defy was doing with their employees and Smosh. He said that he and Hecox sold Smosh to Alloy Digital (which after became Defy Media) for stock, which had no monetary value considering the company never went public. Padilla also expressed dissatisfaction with how Defy treated its employees and stated the company exploited them financially, took over his Facebook page, tried to take over his Twitter account, prevented him from joining the Screen Actors Club, and that they had pressured them into starting a fundraiser for Nutrient Boxing: The Game earlier information technology had even been conceived, something that had at the time led to accusations of exploitation being levelled confronting himself and Hecox. He also explained that he had not previously shared this information because of worries that information technology would threaten the job security of his friends.[47] On November 12, Smosh released an update video reaffirming that Smosh was searching for a new owner, and that in the meanwhile, content would go along to be released independently past the Smosh team. The cast clarified that they still had a pregnant amount of content from earlier Defy Media's shutdown in post-product. They also did non rule out the possibility of filming new content and releasing it independently, calling such an thought "old school", alluding to YouTube's early days when content was less commercialized.[viii]

On Feb 22, 2019, Mythical Entertainment acquired Smosh.[48] This led to changes in the Smosh casts and crews, with some former members returning, while others accept departed.[ citation needed ] Smosh is currently operating out of Mythical Amusement'south Los Angeles part.[49]

Feature films

On September xviii, 2014, it was appear that a feature-length movie starring the duo was in development by AwesomenessFilms;[50] it would be later titled Smosh: The Movie, and was released on July 24, 2015 by what is at present known as 20th Century Studios Home Entertainment, with Netflix acquiring the film's streaming rights.[51] [52] Directed past Alex Winter from a story by Eric Falconer, it stars both Hecox and Padilla as fictionalized versions of themselves, alongside young man YouTube personalities Jenna Marbles, Grace Helbig, Harley Morenstein, Mark Fischbach, Dominic Sandoval, and the Smosh Games coiffure, with Shane Dawson only actualization in the Unrated version.[53] [54] Smosh also voiced the characters Hal and Bubbles respectively in The Angry Birds Movie, with Padilla only returning for the sequel.[55] Additionally, Smosh likewise created the picture Ghostmates for YouTube Premium that was released on December xiv, 2016.[56]

Channels

There are 10 Smosh-related channels exist on YouTube, though only 7 take scheduled content.

Principal channels

Smosh

"Smosh" is the original and main channel of all ten channels. It has over 25 1000000 subscribers and nine.8 billion views. The channel is where the Smosh squad posts sketches and other videos starring Ian Hecox, Noah Grossman, Keith Leak Jr., Courtney Miller, Olivia Sui, and Shayne Topp. Smosh has many complete and ongoing series which include:

  • Principal Videos (2005–nowadays)
  • Music Videos (2005–nowadays)
  • Charlie The Drunk Republic of guinea Pig (2009–2012)
  • If [Bare] Were Real (2009–present)
  • Every [Bare] Always (2015–present)
  • Food Battle (2006–2016)
  • Behind The Scenes (2014–2016)
  • Part Timers (2016) [2 Seasons]
  • Smosh Alive! (2016)
  • SMOSHTOBER (2016)
  • Smosh Animated (2016)
  • One Letter of the alphabet Off (2016–2017)
  • The Big What If (2016–2017)
  • This Week in Smosh (2017)
  • Smoffice (2017-present)
  • You Posted That? (2017, 2019–present)

Smosh Games

"Smosh Games" uploads numerous videos a week, consisting of Allow's Plays and video game commentary shows. When the channel was first created, Padilla and Hecox were regular features of these videos; still, over time they began to appear less regularly on this channel, with boyfriend Smosh Games members Mari Takahashi, Joshua "Joven" Ovenshire, David "Lasercorn" Moss, Matthew Sohinki, Amra "Flitz" Ricketts,[57] Wesley "Wes The Editor" Johnson,[58] Ericka "Boze" Bozeman and Damien Haas handling most hosting duties. The aqueduct has over seven.3 meg subscribers, and over 2.v billion video views equally of May 2021.[59] Takahashi,[threescore] Moss,[61] Sohinki,[62] Ovenshire,[63] Ricketts,[64] and Johnson[65] likewise have their own channels, which are not considered part of the Smosh roster. Since summer 2015, the channel has hosted almanac "Smosh Summer Games" and "Smosh Winter Games" events, primarily hosted on the Smosh Games channel with other videos posted to Smosh 2nd Aqueduct equally well. The first Summer Games in 2015 introduced Shayne Topp to the Smosh family as a referee, while the 2017 Winter Games introduced Boze to the lineup. Damien Haas joined later in 2017. In Baronial that year, Sohinki and Lasercorn announced that they would no longer be full-time members of Smosh Games, in club to focus on their new channel Toaster Ghost, and for Lasercorn to spend more time with his son. They have not ruled out appearing in future Smosh-related videos however, and have appeared occasionally in videos since and so.

Current and Former Smosh Games shows:

  • Gametime with Smosh [Later inverse to Smosh Games] (2012–2016)
  • Why We're Single (2012–2014)
  • Super Mari Fun Fourth dimension (2012–2014)
  • Backseat Gaming (2012–2014)
  • Top 5 Fridays [Later shorten to Summit five] (2012–2015)
  • Gamebang (2012–2018)
  • Boss Fight of the Week (2012–2013)
  • Smosh Games Reviews (2012–2013)
  • Dope! or Nope (2012–2014)
  • Gamer Nation [Later changed to PVP] (2012–2013)
  • I Accept a Raging Bonus [Later changes to Bonus Videos] (2012–2016)
  • Smosh Activity News Games Update Today [a.thousand.a. S.A.Grand.N.U.T.] (2012–2013)
  • Smosh Games Vs. (2013)
  • Cage Lucifer Claiming (2013)
  • Grant Theft Smosh (2013–2018)
  • Let'south Play Saturday (2013)
  • 16-Bit High School (2014)
  • Honest Game Trailers (2014–2018) [Purchased by Fandom and moved to the Fandom Games channel]
  • Maricraft (2014–2018; 2019–2020)
  • Push Bash (2014–2015)
  • Smosh SMASH! (2015)
  • Cell Outs (2015–2018)
  • Friendly Fire (2016)
  • Printing Beginning (2016–2017)
  • Reality Shift (2016–2017)
  • What're Those?! (2016–2017 SGA; 2017 SG)
  • Board AF (2016–present)
  • Smosh Games Live (2017)
  • The Damien and Shayne Show (2017)
  • Smosh & Order (2018)
  • Chaotic Gaming (2019–present)
  • Courtney Plays Sims 4 (2019–present)
  • Damien Breaks Games (2019–present)

Summer Games:

  • Smosh Summer Games (2015)
  • Smosh Summertime Games: Camp (2016)
  • Smosh Summer Games: Wild Westward (2017)
  • Smosh Summer Games: We Blew It! (2018)
  • Smosh Summertime Games: Apocoalypse (2019)

Wintertime Games:

  • Smosh Winter Games (2016)
  • Smosh Wintertime Games... Once again (2017)

On January four, 2018, Ricketts left the organisation later on existence accused by multiple women of sexual assault and rape.[66] [67] [68] Seemingly after Ricketts' departure, the channel has non continued its yearly tradition of hosting Smosh Summer and Winter Games, and early on in 2018, the channel's well-nigh consistently popular bear witness, Game Blindside, was paused indefinitely and was afterward implied to be cancelled. The channel became inactive afterward Smosh's parent company, Defy Media, folded. However, information technology was confirmed in an episode of Smoshcast that the channel would resume with a Mortal Kombat video on April 13, with the main cast being more involved and Lasercorn returning to the fold.[69] The video featured a lineup of Ian, Mari, Lasercorn, Courtney and Damien, with production staff Sarah Whittle and Matt Raub featuring in subsequent videos. It is currently unknown if any other former Smosh Games members will be involved with the channel. In an April 2019 episode of SmoshCast, Jovenshire explained that he had not been an employee of Defy Media since May one, 2018, and had been working freelance with Smosh Games since.[70] Nonetheless, he has reappeared in subsequent videos, including a Super Nail Bros. Ultimate competition on May xviii, 2019.[71] Mari and Lasercorn both left the channel in 2020 to launch New Element Six (NE6) with fellow Smosh Games alumni Flitz, Joven, Sohinki, and Wes. However, the group disbanded in mid 2020 and Mari has moved to Las Vegas to starting time her new life with her married man.

Smosh Pit

From "Smosh Pit" (originally named "IanH" and and so Smosh 2nd Channel, and was used at starting time for vlogs and other non-scripted videos), Hecox and Padilla upload their side series Smosh is Bored on Mondays, while the residuum of the squad uploads vlogs on Thursdays, and Put It In My Mouth and Smosh'southward Seriously Super Stupid Sleepover on Saturdays. It has over 7.ii one thousand thousand subscribers and over 2.four billion views.[72] Smosh Pit Weekly was a serial on the channel hosted past Mari Takahashi from Apr 2011 to August 2015, posted on Saturdays.

Current and Former Smosh Pit Shows:

  • Ian is Bored [Afterward changes to Smosh is Bored] (2010–2017)
  • Lunchtime with Smosh (2010–2017)
  • Smosh Pit Weekly (2011–2015, 2017–2018)
  • Team Vlogs (2015–present)
  • Put it in My Mouth (2015–2017)
  • Seriously Super Stupid Sleepover (2015–2017)
  • Smosh Lab (2016–2017)
  • The Show With No Proper name (2016–2018)
  • Try Not to Laugh (2017–present)
  • Day Jobs (2018)
  • two Truths 1 Lie Claiming (2018–present)
  • Eat Information technology or Yeet It (2019–nowadays)
  • Spelling BEE-Kini Wax (2019–nowadays)
  • Ranked (2019–present)
  • Hacking Off (2019–present)

On July 28, 2017, Ian Hecox announced that Smosh 2nd Channel would be renamed "Smosh Pit" in the near future, and that Smosh Pit Weekly would be revived, with Mari Takahashi returning as the host. Two other shows, WHOA! Nature Show, starring Courtney Miller and Olivia Sui, and One Hour Vocal Machine, starring Keith Leak Jr., were also announced.

Currently, the channel predominantly hosts ongoing series "The Show w/ No Proper name", a weekly interactive serial that features 3 members of the Smosh cast every bit hosts on rotation, with members of Smosh Games occasionally appearing aslope the principal cast. The show features art drawn past the fans, along with questions submitted via Twitter for the cast to respond.

Arguably, Smosh Pit's nigh pop recent serial is the ongoing "Try Non To Express joy" video series, in which the secondary Smosh cast, usually with at least 1 invitee, perform various improvised scenarios directed at one cast member with a mouthful of h2o in an attempt to force them to spit it out. The most pop of these videos, as of June 2021, stands at 36.7 meg views.[73]

SmoshCast

As a part of the Mythical Entertainment rebrand, a podcast titled "SmoshCast" was launched. Each Wednesday a new episode is released on iTunes with Ian Hecox, or occasionally Courtney Miller, hosting alongside cohosts from the Smosh family. The episode will then be released every bit a video version on Friday, censored for YouTube Ads.

SmoshShorts

"SmoshShorts" is where shorts originally uploaded in TikTok are re-uploaded in the channel.

ElSmosh

On "ElSmosh", the squad uploads ElSmosh Pit de la Semana (Smosh Pit Weekly), Honest Game Trailers, a serial from Smosh Games narrated in Spanish, and new Smosh episodes that have been dubbed over in Spanish. It has over 3.7 one thousand thousand subscribers.[74]

Smosh France

"Smosh France" is a fan-run Smosh channel providing French subtitles for many Smosh videos.

Formerly associated channels

AnthonyPadilla

"AnthonyPadilla" hosted vlogs uploaded past Padilla. Most videos uploaded prior to 2016 were removed in 2016 when Padilla revived the channel to upload personal vlogs. Information technology has over 5.3 million subscribers.[75] Since Padilla'due south divergence from Smosh, the aqueduct is no longer associated with the brand.

Defunct or inactive channels

New AskCharlie

"AskCharlie", active from May 2010 to Dec 2011, hosts videos from the Ask Charlie serial, where an anthropomorphic guinea pig, named Charlie the Boozer Guinea Pig, answers viewer submitted questions. It has over 321,000 subscribers.

Smosh Games Alliance

The Smosh Games Alliance (SGA) aqueduct is used for extra content for the Smosh Games crew. Originally it utilized fan-submitted gaming content, spotlighting it on the channel, and offered tutorials in "Smosh University". Information technology continues to hosts more vlogs with the Smosh Games coiffure. It has over 249,000 subscribers.[76] No videos have been uploaded to the channel since December 30, 2016.

Shut Upwardly! Cartoons

"Shut Up! Cartoons" uploads a number of animated series, created by unlike animators. It has over 2 million subscribers.[77] The channel has been inactive since June 2017.

Upload schedule

Members

Timeline

Discography

Studio albums

Awards and nominations

References

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External links

  • Official website
Achievements
Preceded past

N/A

Virtually Subscribed Channel on YouTube
2006-2006
Succeeded past

Judson Laipply

Preceded by

lonelygirl15

Almost Subscribed Channel on YouTube
2007-2008
Succeeded past

nigahiga

Preceded past

Ray William Johnson

Most Subscribed Channel on YouTube
2013-2013
Succeeded past

PewDiePie

everhartparealeareed.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smosh#:~:text=On%20June%2014%2C%202017%2C%20Padilla,what%20we%20have%20coming%20up.%22

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