IMDb-BEWERTUNG
6,9/10
3339
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Zwei urkomische Jungs führten verschiedene Sketch-Comedy-Aufführungen auf, die die Massen erfreuen sollten.Zwei urkomische Jungs führten verschiedene Sketch-Comedy-Aufführungen auf, die die Massen erfreuen sollten.Zwei urkomische Jungs führten verschiedene Sketch-Comedy-Aufführungen auf, die die Massen erfreuen sollten.
- Auszeichnungen
- 3 Gewinne & 4 Nominierungen insgesamt
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Smosh is the most smoshtastic thing come to YouTube! Anthony and Ian make a great comedy team. It is a YouTube channel that actually makes me laugh. Smosh has great humor, great comedy and of course a great channel! Of course with all the help of their friends. Smosh is just a laugh out loud comedy channel! It is something that will cheer you up if you love humorous comedy! I recommend all people who just want to laugh, check out Smosh. They are one of the most popular channels on YouTube. So a great idea to watch their videos. They make Music videos, If it were real video's and they also have made theme songs! Go check out their channel!
Smosh is a web show created by two guys named Anthony Padilla and Ian Hecox. It's basically different comedy sketches. It kind of reminds me of MADtv (and I mean that in a good way).
It's hit and miss, but when it hits, it hits hard! Some of their best videos so far include: "Smosh Short 2: Stranded," all the "Food Battle" videos, "That Damn Neighbor," "That Damn Yard Sale," "That Damn Prison Break," "How Not to Act on a First Date," "Easy Step," "License Test," "Quest for the Scooter," Santa Is Real!," "Cat Soup," Left Handed," "Going to the Mountains," "A Hairy Situation," "A Very Hairy Situation," "Washington's First Video Blog," "The Ultimate Shoedown," and "If Movies Were Real."
It's hit and miss, but when it hits, it hits hard! Some of their best videos so far include: "Smosh Short 2: Stranded," all the "Food Battle" videos, "That Damn Neighbor," "That Damn Yard Sale," "That Damn Prison Break," "How Not to Act on a First Date," "Easy Step," "License Test," "Quest for the Scooter," Santa Is Real!," "Cat Soup," Left Handed," "Going to the Mountains," "A Hairy Situation," "A Very Hairy Situation," "Washington's First Video Blog," "The Ultimate Shoedown," and "If Movies Were Real."
Smosh used to produce some pretty decent comedy videos but lately they have lowered their target demographic. It's much easier to produce content for teens and preteens because they are less discerning and are more likely to simply follow a trend. Being held to a lower standard means you can produce more videos across a range of different channels, maximising views. More views means more money and making money seems to be Smosh's only goal these days.
Business is business, but once your credibility is lost, it is incredibly difficult to regain. Their videos are now crass, inappropriate and cringeworthy!
Business is business, but once your credibility is lost, it is incredibly difficult to regain. Their videos are now crass, inappropriate and cringeworthy!
Your YouTube channel goes down the tubes, that's what!
Let me start by saying I'm only rating their 2005-2013 videos a 7. All things considered it would be a 6 or 5.
My friend introduced me to Smosh in 2009 and was immediately hooked. The appeal of Smosh's earlier videos was in their simplicity and accessibility. They had so much charm because you could tell there were no cynical intentions; it was just two best friends having fun by making these simple and silly but very fun videos on this new website called YouTube. The classic age of Smosh, around 2005-2009, was extremely amateurish, with a low resolution camera, awkward acting, and bad effects, but they at least made up for it with the humor.
Around 2009 or so, they really hit their stride, leading to the golden age of Smosh, around 2010-2012. They got a better camera, a few friends to help, better effects, and Ian and Anthony had clearly gotten much more comfortable on camera. This is when they had the highest, most consistent quality content. Sure their videos had higher production value, but you could tell the heart of the show was still these two best friends having fun making these wacky videos. The humor kept getting better and better, and even more absurdist and juvenile. The screaming and yelling was more pronounced here, but never got overbearing.
Slowly, around late 2013 and into 2014, the feel of the entire show began to change. The regular cast was expanding. They stopped filming in their house (a staple of all their earlier work) and were clearly using sets. The humor started changing, too. The insane, absurdist humor was slowly morphing into typical sarcastic millennial humor. It turned out Ian and Anthony stopped writing their videos and instead hired interns to continue writing. The overall quality of their videos slowly began to decline. Smosh had gone from a YouTube channel all about two friends having fun making silly videos to a cynical money-hungry business. Smosh was solidified as a brand when Anthony officially left, citing disappointment in his lack of creative control. Had this happened 5 or 6 years ago, Smosh would have been declared broken up or on hiatus, since he and Ian were the sole creative contributors. Today it's a different story. Ian remains as part of a large new ensemble cast that is projected to have actors come and go over the years and essentially turn it into an unfunny YouTube SNL.
I hope Ian and Anthony can work together in the future outside of Smosh because their chemistry, enthusiasm, creativity, and innocence were what made their older videos so great. Even in their more recent videos where they react to their old videos, you can still see the spark in their eyes.
Let me start by saying I'm only rating their 2005-2013 videos a 7. All things considered it would be a 6 or 5.
My friend introduced me to Smosh in 2009 and was immediately hooked. The appeal of Smosh's earlier videos was in their simplicity and accessibility. They had so much charm because you could tell there were no cynical intentions; it was just two best friends having fun by making these simple and silly but very fun videos on this new website called YouTube. The classic age of Smosh, around 2005-2009, was extremely amateurish, with a low resolution camera, awkward acting, and bad effects, but they at least made up for it with the humor.
Around 2009 or so, they really hit their stride, leading to the golden age of Smosh, around 2010-2012. They got a better camera, a few friends to help, better effects, and Ian and Anthony had clearly gotten much more comfortable on camera. This is when they had the highest, most consistent quality content. Sure their videos had higher production value, but you could tell the heart of the show was still these two best friends having fun making these wacky videos. The humor kept getting better and better, and even more absurdist and juvenile. The screaming and yelling was more pronounced here, but never got overbearing.
Slowly, around late 2013 and into 2014, the feel of the entire show began to change. The regular cast was expanding. They stopped filming in their house (a staple of all their earlier work) and were clearly using sets. The humor started changing, too. The insane, absurdist humor was slowly morphing into typical sarcastic millennial humor. It turned out Ian and Anthony stopped writing their videos and instead hired interns to continue writing. The overall quality of their videos slowly began to decline. Smosh had gone from a YouTube channel all about two friends having fun making silly videos to a cynical money-hungry business. Smosh was solidified as a brand when Anthony officially left, citing disappointment in his lack of creative control. Had this happened 5 or 6 years ago, Smosh would have been declared broken up or on hiatus, since he and Ian were the sole creative contributors. Today it's a different story. Ian remains as part of a large new ensemble cast that is projected to have actors come and go over the years and essentially turn it into an unfunny YouTube SNL.
I hope Ian and Anthony can work together in the future outside of Smosh because their chemistry, enthusiasm, creativity, and innocence were what made their older videos so great. Even in their more recent videos where they react to their old videos, you can still see the spark in their eyes.
I miss the Ian & Anthony sketches but this is still one of the funniest channels on YouTube! I've never seen a channel have a whole studio and format this videos like a tv show and it's freaking great! And then there's the iconic series in the forms of "Food Battle" "If ____ Were Real" "Every ____ Ever" "Eat It Or Yeet It" "Try Not To Laugh" and more. Yes I am well aware that some of if not all of these series have since ended, but I just wanted to mention them. That's really all I have to say I'm just dragging this on because of the stupid minimal character limit for reviews on here. Okay that's all I have to say.
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- WissenswertesIan and Anthony met in 6th grade in Science class.
- Crazy CreditsEach episode starts with "Smosh" Being spray painted on a piece of Cardboard, at the same time you can hear someone saying, or singing something stupid, followed by Ian yelling "Shut Up!"
- VerbindungenAlternate-language version of El Smosh (2012)
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