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TFS#243 - Ryan Hudson Gaining 1 Million Subscribers Turning Joke Ideas Into Short-Form Animations

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Manage episode 519344171 series 3211262
Content provided by Andy Mai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andy Mai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Ryan K. Hudson is an American writer, animator, and cartoonist best known for his darkly funny webcomic Channelate (2008). With a background in animation and design, he’s created viral short animations known for their absurd humor, minimal style, and sharp punchlines.

https://www.youtube.com/@RyanKHudson

https://www.instagram.com/ryankhudson

https://www.facebook.com/channelate

CHAPTERS:

0:00 – Introduction

0:59 – Meet Ryan Hudson

1:41 – Unusual sleep schedule and daily routine

2:48 – Transitioned from a regular job into animation and comics

3:34 – The animation and comedy studios Ryan has worked with

4:39 – Focused on over the past 6 months

5:45 – How long Ryan’s short-form animation videos usually are

6:06 – Why Ryan shifted from longer content to short-form animation

7:46 – How Ryan learned to create hooks, comedic timing, and pacing

10:03 – Ryan’s best advice for creators who want to go viral

11:56 – How Ryan interprets a clip that flops (luck vs. editing vs. delivery)

13:08 – Sora and AI animation tools

14:03 – Could AI eventually replace Ryan’s animation workflow?

15:45 – How Ryan fits voiceovers into the pacing of his animations

17:02 – How Ryan comes up with jokes and develops his ideas

20:05 – How many short-form animations Ryan makes per week

21:00 – What keeps Ryan motivated during slow view periods

22:30 – The leap of faith Ryan took when he stopped freelancing

24:59 – Why Ryan turned down freelance work to focus on creating content

26:00 – How Ryan tracks his performance on YouTube and Facebook

27:37 – Why Ryan thinks his views continue to rise over time

29:46 – Can creators survive financially on short-form content alone?

31:00 – Ideal short-form video length

32:17 – How Ryan adjusts joke length to fit the ideal runtime

33:14 – Quality vs. quantity in content creation

35:41 – Which strategy works better: uploading all clips or only the best ones?

36:43 – How algorithms behave after two years of posting

37:40 – Times when Ryan scraps animations mid-way because they don’t feel right

39:16 – How Ryan decides which jokes deserve 8–9 hours of animation work

41:05 – How Ryan picks jokes from his list of ideas

42:41 – How Ryan stores and organizes hundreds of joke ideas

44:18 – Ryan talks about being a “feeler” and managing creative stress

45:39 – Ryan’s mindset in his career while living his dream right now

47:53 – Balancing creativity, work, and being in a relationship

49:58 – How animation technically works (frame-by-frame vs. puppets)

51:15 – Andy’s Rick & Morty analogy: how writers create so many strong jokes

52:37 – Opportunities Ryan has received because of his online reach

54:53 – Ryan shares the story behind his 45M-view clip and how it blew up

57:39 – Whether Ryan edits or re-exports videos when reposting them

58:06 – Why YouTube doesn’t like reposted content even if it’s slightly edited

59:43 – Whether reposting is worth it on TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat

1:00:56 – Does the Facebook Shotgun Strategy actually work?

1:01:56 – 1,500-comic archive (2008–2021)

1:03:26 – Process for writing comics

1:04:51 – Why Ryan draws storyboard panels before writing dialogue

1:07:03 – Builds community through recurring characters and inside jokes

1:09:10 – What Ryan is known for: his characters or his own face

1:10:44 – The origin of Ryan’s art style for his animations

1:12:42 – What art style Ryan would choose if he created a TV show

1:13:29 – How Ryan’s characters progress and grow in their stories

1:15:19 – What Ryan’s next career chapter looks like

1:17:26 – Ryan’s plans for creating an animated series

1:21:33 – How lip-syncing works in animation

1:23:57 – Should Ryan launch new animated series on the same channel or separate ones?

1:26:16 – How Ryan grew his YouTube channel from 20K to 1M subscribers

1:28:23 – The origin story behind “Channelate”

1:30:11 – Recent discoveries

1:33:59 – Personal goal for the next six months

1:35:14 – Connect with Ryan Hudson

1:35:49 – Outro

  continue reading

322 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 519344171 series 3211262
Content provided by Andy Mai. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Andy Mai or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://podcastplayer.com/legal.

Ryan K. Hudson is an American writer, animator, and cartoonist best known for his darkly funny webcomic Channelate (2008). With a background in animation and design, he’s created viral short animations known for their absurd humor, minimal style, and sharp punchlines.

https://www.youtube.com/@RyanKHudson

https://www.instagram.com/ryankhudson

https://www.facebook.com/channelate

CHAPTERS:

0:00 – Introduction

0:59 – Meet Ryan Hudson

1:41 – Unusual sleep schedule and daily routine

2:48 – Transitioned from a regular job into animation and comics

3:34 – The animation and comedy studios Ryan has worked with

4:39 – Focused on over the past 6 months

5:45 – How long Ryan’s short-form animation videos usually are

6:06 – Why Ryan shifted from longer content to short-form animation

7:46 – How Ryan learned to create hooks, comedic timing, and pacing

10:03 – Ryan’s best advice for creators who want to go viral

11:56 – How Ryan interprets a clip that flops (luck vs. editing vs. delivery)

13:08 – Sora and AI animation tools

14:03 – Could AI eventually replace Ryan’s animation workflow?

15:45 – How Ryan fits voiceovers into the pacing of his animations

17:02 – How Ryan comes up with jokes and develops his ideas

20:05 – How many short-form animations Ryan makes per week

21:00 – What keeps Ryan motivated during slow view periods

22:30 – The leap of faith Ryan took when he stopped freelancing

24:59 – Why Ryan turned down freelance work to focus on creating content

26:00 – How Ryan tracks his performance on YouTube and Facebook

27:37 – Why Ryan thinks his views continue to rise over time

29:46 – Can creators survive financially on short-form content alone?

31:00 – Ideal short-form video length

32:17 – How Ryan adjusts joke length to fit the ideal runtime

33:14 – Quality vs. quantity in content creation

35:41 – Which strategy works better: uploading all clips or only the best ones?

36:43 – How algorithms behave after two years of posting

37:40 – Times when Ryan scraps animations mid-way because they don’t feel right

39:16 – How Ryan decides which jokes deserve 8–9 hours of animation work

41:05 – How Ryan picks jokes from his list of ideas

42:41 – How Ryan stores and organizes hundreds of joke ideas

44:18 – Ryan talks about being a “feeler” and managing creative stress

45:39 – Ryan’s mindset in his career while living his dream right now

47:53 – Balancing creativity, work, and being in a relationship

49:58 – How animation technically works (frame-by-frame vs. puppets)

51:15 – Andy’s Rick & Morty analogy: how writers create so many strong jokes

52:37 – Opportunities Ryan has received because of his online reach

54:53 – Ryan shares the story behind his 45M-view clip and how it blew up

57:39 – Whether Ryan edits or re-exports videos when reposting them

58:06 – Why YouTube doesn’t like reposted content even if it’s slightly edited

59:43 – Whether reposting is worth it on TikTok, Instagram, and Snapchat

1:00:56 – Does the Facebook Shotgun Strategy actually work?

1:01:56 – 1,500-comic archive (2008–2021)

1:03:26 – Process for writing comics

1:04:51 – Why Ryan draws storyboard panels before writing dialogue

1:07:03 – Builds community through recurring characters and inside jokes

1:09:10 – What Ryan is known for: his characters or his own face

1:10:44 – The origin of Ryan’s art style for his animations

1:12:42 – What art style Ryan would choose if he created a TV show

1:13:29 – How Ryan’s characters progress and grow in their stories

1:15:19 – What Ryan’s next career chapter looks like

1:17:26 – Ryan’s plans for creating an animated series

1:21:33 – How lip-syncing works in animation

1:23:57 – Should Ryan launch new animated series on the same channel or separate ones?

1:26:16 – How Ryan grew his YouTube channel from 20K to 1M subscribers

1:28:23 – The origin story behind “Channelate”

1:30:11 – Recent discoveries

1:33:59 – Personal goal for the next six months

1:35:14 – Connect with Ryan Hudson

1:35:49 – Outro

  continue reading

322 episodes

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