Clockwise from left YouTube stars Rhett and Link, Lilly Sinh,Michelle Phan, Lindsey Stirling and Roseino gathered at the YouTube Space in Los Angeles. (Jamel Toppin for Forbes)
Read on to see their net-worth and brief details
1. PewDiePie: $12 million
For a guy who has nearly 40 million people subscribing to his “playing videogames with your bros” channel, this Swedish star, whose real name is Felix Kjellberg, is notoriously private, rarely granting interviews, Doing conferences or visiting the Los Angeles YouTube studios. Sorry, bro, but if you are making more than $10 million a year playing The Walking Dead, it’s going to be newsworthy.
2 (tie). Smosh: $8.5 million
Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla, childhood best friends from Sacramento, Calif., have reinvented themselves online as Smosh, a comedy act that got famous for live-action skits based on Pokémon games. It just got bigger from there: The pair runs 5 YouTube channels, including ElSmosh (Smosh
en Espanol). Their first full-length movie, Smosh: The Movie, came out in July.
2 (tie). Fine Brothers: $8.5 million
Benny and Rafi Fine first drew notice—and a Daytime Emmy Award—for their React video series, in which they film people watching over-the-top videos from the likes of PewDiePie and rapper Nicki Minaj. How meta. Now they are moving from the very small screen to the small screen: In 2014 Nickelodeon debuted React to That.
4. Lindsey Stirling: $6 million
She plays the violin. She dances. Then she does them at the same time, and it’s kind of amazing. Stirling began posting her videos of herself performing in 2007 after failing to be signed by a major record label. Now they are begging to sign her, but too late—she doesn’t need them anymore. Explains Stirling: “It’s a very loyal fan base that wants you to succeed because they found you. It wasn’t some big radio station or record label that shoved art down someone’s throat.”
Rhett McLaughlin and Charles Lincoln Neal III both earned engineering degrees from NC State and worked in corporate America before launching their comedy careers on YouTube relatively late in life (they are 38 and 37 respectively). The duo is famous for Good Mythical Morning, a send-up of morning television news shows. Nearly half of their earnings come from sponsored deals—they’ve shot sponsored clips for their channels for such brands as Gillette, Wendy’s and Toyota.
5 (tie). KSI: $4.5 million
The British videogame commentator, born Olajide Olatunji, has used his YouTube stardom—almost 11 million followers—as a springboard to a music career. His hip-hop single “Lamborghini” reached number 30 on the U.K. charts in April.
7. Michelle Phan: $3 million
The self-taught makeup artist established herself with tutorials teaching girls how to paint themselves like their favorite celebs, including Lady Gaga and Angelina Jolie. She’s playing a long game; she reinvests most of the money from her projects— including her cosmetics line and ipsy, a monthly makeup-subscription service— right back into her business.
8 (tie). Lilly Singh: $2.5 million
Also known by her YouTube name, Superwoman, Singh is a stand-up comedian who leans heavily on her ethnic background (her parents immigrated to Canada from India) and is also a singer, whose 2015 world tour, A Trip to Unicorn Island, hit 27 cities worldwide.
8 (tie). Roman Atwood: $2.5 million
As if Punk’d wasn’t annoying enough, Atwood has taken the concept to another level online—pulling pranks like using a stuffed skunk to spray bystanders and faux-flashing young children (while wearing a T-shirt that reads “Don't Do Drugs”). He has attracted over 7 million followers along the way. Nissan gets the joke— the company partnered with him for a video that ran last January—and
so do the customers of his online Smile More Store (sweatshirts, water bottles, tote bags, etc).
8 (tie). Rosanna Pansino: $2.5 million
A self-trained chef whose baking tutorials have taught millions the science behind a perfect cupcake will publish her first cookbook, The Nerdy Nummies Cookbook: Sweet Treats for the Geek in All of Us, this month. Earlier this year Pansino partnered with pan-and-tray-maker Wilton Brands on her how-to series, Nerdy Nummies.
Source: forbes
Photo Source: 2015 Getty Images
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