Zach King | the best | installation magic

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  • Опубликовано: 3 июн 2020
  • In 2011, he posted a video titled Jedi Kittens on RUclips that he produced with a college friend. The video showed two cats fighting with lightsabers. The video gained over a million views in three days and went on to have over 18 million views. A sequel of the video titled Jedi Kittens Strike Back gained over 27 million views. A third part of the video, Jedi Kittens - The Force Awakens was posted in 2013, which has gained over 28 million views. King's official RUclips channel is FinalCutKing.
    He was named by RUclips as one of the 25 most promising young film-makers in America in May 2013. As part of its Next Up Creators contest, RUclips awarded King $35,000 as well as a trip to New York City for a four-day RUclips Creator Camp. His submission to the contest was titled Contest Entry Gone Wrong. In the video, he appeared to dodge an assault by airstrikes and ground fire as he pleaded his case to be selected for the RUclips award.
    Vines
    King made his account on Vine on September 9, 2013, when he saw that many of his friends had an account on the social media website. After creating an account on Vine, he decided to create one Vine each day for the next thirty days. After the success of his first few Vines, he decided to continue with creating and posting new Vines.
    He appeared on The Ellen DeGeneres Show on January 29, 2014, and made several Vines with the crew of the show. As of 2014, King creates Vine videos for a living and works out of his garage. In an interview with The Independent, he said that he would want to direct feature films, preferably action-adventure movies, in the future.
    King has been featured in multiple media outlets for his Vines.Chez Pazienza wrote about King that "this guy's stuff is pure magic (or at least the work of some very clever editing.)" Mashable's Laura Vitto wrote of his work, "Vine star and filmmaker Zach King may not perform magic in the traditional sense, but his expertly-edited six-second videos could put David Blaine to shame."
    Writing for Complex magazine, J. Duaine Hahn wrote that "While people have hit Vine stardom for skits, or splicing together commentary with popular RUclips videos, King has gone the extra mile to use his six seconds to create magic, or the closest thing you can get to it with on a smartphone."
    In an interview, Zach said that producing a Vine usually takes upwards of 24 hours, with three to four hours of filming.
    TikTok
    King posted his first video to TikTok, formerly known as Musical.ly, on February 28, 2016 which was him escaping a jail cell. His video caption was "Need help posting bail, oh wait nevermind." He has amassed a following of 43.8 million followers on the popular app, making him the second most followed user on TikTok.
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