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VidCon is an annual convention for influencers, fans, executives, and online brands.The event primarily features prominent video stars from across the internet. It was founded by veteran YouTube creators John and Hank Green (Vlogbrothers), and was later acquired by Viacom (now Paramount) in 2018 and later acquired by Informa in 2024.
Videocon Industries Limited is an Indian multinational conglomerate, headquartered in Mumbai. [3] The company was founded in 1979, by Venugopal Dhoot.The group had 17 manufacturing sites in India and plants in Mainland China, Poland, Italy and Mexico.
Smosh: The Movie premiered at VidCon in Los Angeles on July 23, 2015, and was released the following day on VoD on July 24, 2015, by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, to generally negative reviews.
VidCon unveiled the first round of featured creators confirmed to its flagship convention in Anaheim, Calif., in June 2023. VidCon reveals initial list of creators slated to appear at June 2023 ...
James Louderback (born 1961) is the CEO of VidCon, and was previously the CEO of Revision3. [1] He has had numerous jobs in media companies involved in technology, most notably with TechTV and editor-in-chief of PC Magazine.
Camp Unplug was a series of thirty-six Vines which follow thirteen Viners who grudgingly attend a "digital detox camp", filmed at Camp Wandawega.Described as Vine's "first long-form original series", Camp Unplug was released on June 23, 2016, during VidCon, after the six-second limit on Vines was lifted.
Hecox (left) and Padilla (right) performing at Vidcon 2012. Over the course of the next few years, Smosh began to diversify. They started making short YouTube skits, such as their annual video series Food Battle, which shows Hecox using a pink-frosted sprinkled doughnut and Padilla choosing a variety of foods voted on by fans, [16] [17] and That Damn Neighbor, which were primarily filmed in ...
This is a list of multi-genre conventions. [nb 1] These cons typically do not cater to one particular genre (i.e., anime, science fiction, furry fandom, etc.), but instead cover the gamut of these pop culture phenomena without specifying itself as a specific convention of that variety.