VidCon attracts online video makers and their fans
Topics: From the Wires, Entertainment News
In this Thursday, June 28, 2012 photo, Adi Sideman, CEO of YouNow, delivers his keynote "Two Way Television is Here" at the third annual VidCon conference and community gathering for online video in Anaheim, Calif. More than 6,000 people are expected to attend VidCon at the Anaheim Convention Center this weekend. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)(Credit: AP)ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — A long line of teenagers has formed inside a cavernous convention center.
They’re waiting to nab an autograph from Rebecca Black, the girl who achieved infamy with her nasally music video “Friday.” Over in the lobby, folks are sticking out their smartphones to capture a photo of Yogi the Welsh corgi, a dog who accidentally set a kitchen on fire, while others have surrounded a seated Paul “Bear” Vasquez, the man who unabashedly gushed over the sight of a double rainbow.
It’s the third annual VidCon, a gathering of online video creators, viral video stars and the people who click “like” on them. The circus atmosphere is the ultimate physical manifestation of activities usually reserved for the privacy of one’s lap or hand.
The event outgrew its previous digs at a Los Angeles hotel and has moved south to a convention center in the land of Disney’s Magic Kingdom, but the astronomical audiences these online celebrities are attracting and the real money they’re making are far from fantasy.
The event’s organizers, John and Hank Green, known online as the Vlogbrothers, launched VidCon three years ago to unite video bloggers in space and time. This year’s VidCon, which kicked off Thursday and continues through Sunday, is sponsored by the likes of Disney Interactive Media Group, the online video studios Maker and Revision3, and, of course, Google Inc.-owned YouTube.
“It’s a great opportunity to meet people who have the same passion as you, even if they make videos that are completely different than yours,” says 19-year-old Justin Stuart of Colorado Springs, Co. Stuart’s simplistically silly video of himself and friends falling down in public places has amassed more than 1.7 million views on his “JStuStudios” channel on YouTube.
VidCon organizers say attendance at this year’s sold-out event at the Anaheim Convention Center is more than double last year’s turnout, attracting 6,000 mostly teenaged attendees, many of whom were accompanied by their parents, compared to last year’s 3,600 con-goers.
The expanded offerings at this weekend’s VidCon include more panels, an open-mic room for budding musicians and an expo floor with exhibitors showing off the latest in gadgets and software as attendees excitedly swap Twitter names, Facebook pages and YouTube channels.



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