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