I have kind of a thick skin.

Howard Stern is one of my idols.

YouTube opened up a lot of doors.

I think Jake Paul doesn't know who I am.

I'm just an innocent guy with a dirty mouth, I guess.

I lost a lot of weight, when I was 18, on Jenny Craig.

I started making videos when I was, like, seven or eight.

Don't kill yourself, kill the part of you that you don't like.

I think competition turns people into what they normally wouldn't be.

I've wanted to make movies ever since I was a kid. I knew that was my goal.

It sounds super cliche, but staying true to yourself and what you are works.

Love who you want to love. Life is short. Nobody's going to hate you for it.

There's nothing creepier to me than a student who hangs out with the teachers.

The biggest thing I learned is directors don't make a lot of money on a movie.

You don't need to figure out exactly who you are right now. Just live your life.

The one time I'd ever babysat, the kid ran into a glass door and got a concussion.

I can honestly say that I am open to love in any way. I guess that makes me bisexual.

I get it, okay? I shouldn't be doing this. I shouldn't be giving Jake Paul a platform.

I love interviewing people and getting them to talk about things they've never talk about.

For the record, I don't really hate myself, but I do hate the way I portray myself online.

I have spoofed celebrities before, but it's hard for me because I picture them watching it.

I don't think I'm too mean to celebrities. I poke fun, but I think in the end, they always win.

Make the videos that you want to watch. Don't think about who is going to be upset or offended.

I was morbidly obese. It was a way for me to create a shell around me so that nobody would look at me.

It's fun to be around people who don't think I'm creepy for making videos in my bedroom on the Internet.

'Mad TV' is one of my most favorite shows of all time and is a huge part of my obsession with sketch comedy.

I would never put a movie on YouTube unless the funding was right, or unless YouTube paid for it or something.

I want to know the psychology of a YouTuber... do you think, to be a YouTuber, you have to have something off?

Even if I get into television and movies, I'm never going to quit YouTube because of the bond I have with my viewers.

Throughout whatever I do, I always just say "Director" first. I am directing the storylines and I'm creating what it is.

If you go through my Instagram feed, it's like a flip book of me thinking I'm way more attractive than I am. It's nauseating.

I have a P.O. Box that I get about 50 letters a day that my mom picks up, and a lot of weird gifts I like to show on my videos.

Every year I try to pitch a show, and I try to do something outside of YouTube, and sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't.

I've made a lot of crazy comedy videos and said a lot of crazy things. If it's too offensive, I apologize and move on, but I do comedy.

Youll never know where life is gonna take you. Youll never know where your life is gonna go. But youll never be able to find out if you end it.

I think I'm used to competition. YouTube is a daily competition. I'm used to that, and I'm used to hate coming from everywhere on the Internet.

Now I put up something, and I have to think, 'Oh, there are millions of people watching, and some of them could be affected by the jokes I make.'

I've always just wanted to tell stories, and create stuff, and I think "Creator" or "Director" would probably be the two words that I go to first.

Being a comedian, it's hard. People hear 'YouTuber,' and they automatically think, 'a social warrior,' and you have to stand up for all these things.

People feel completely anonymous online. They can say whatever they want, do whatever they want, why not go the next step and kill people through the Internet?

I started pitching shows and sold a show, 'Losin It,' about my Jenny Craig days. It never was made. I think it didn't work, partially because I didn't write it.

I think celebrities are kind of put up on a pedestal and we don't really know much about them. I feel like my fans know every part of me because I've shown them.

There are a lot of coming out videos of people who are gay or lesbian, and they're so confident. But it made me cry because I'm not that. I don't know who I am 100 percent.

I used to spend $25,000 of my own money on my short films, and I wouldn't make that back, not even close. So I think the Vimeo thing, because it's pay to download, that helps

I'm just really excited to promote the movie [I know The Chair ] and the show in a different way, and not just the typical Hollywood way, which I don't think I'll ever fit into.

I think a lot of people haven't even seen my videos but just hearing my name are like "Oh, that's that dumb Internet thing." And I'm definitely trying to shake that a little bit.

I have always been a director first and the whole acting thing just happened because none of my friends wanted to be in my videos, so I had to do it myself and wear a bunch of wigs.

The Internet gave a place like, 'Oh, I'll do whatever I want now. Nobody's going to see it anyways.' Oddly enough, people started watching and I got more confident, comfortable with it.

YouTube has a stigma about only kids watching it. That's true. It is mostly kids and teenagers who watch it. But I've never made videos for teenagers. They should not be watching my videos.

It's fun to act, but for me, it's more fun to actually create the character and act it out knowing that I know everything about this character. That's more fun to me than just reading lines.

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