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November 14, 2008 10:09 AM PST

'Fred' creator, the Tiger Woods of user-generated video?

by Greg Sandoval
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SAN FRANCISCO--Lucas Cruikshank is to user-generated video what Tiger Woods was to golf or what Bobby Fischer was to chess when they were teenagers.

The 15-year old creator of the YouTube series Fred has become Internet video's hottest prodigy since last month, when the Fred channel amassed the most subscribers (585,506) on YouTube. He now has more than 645,000. Since launching six months ago, Fred clips have been watched more than 125 million times.

The series is a goofy satire of some YouTube video bloggers that Cruikshank considers self important. Fred is a fictitious teen with anger management problems, a strange voice, and a father serving time in jail. Cruikshank, a high school freshman in Nebraska, has parlayed his Web success into cash.

Lucas Cruikshank, the creator of YouTube hit series, Fred, answers questions from interviewers

(Credit: Greg Sandoval/CNET Networks)

He agreed to slip products, including the Zipit text-messaging gadget, into his videos as part of product-placement deals. An aspiring actor, the teen has appeared in commercials for the device and will appear in an upcoming Nickelodeon show. "I've had meetings with movie studios," he told me. "Some people even want to turn Fred into a TV show or movie."

Walking through the NewTeeVee Live conference venue here Thursday, Cruikshank was approached by numerous executives who asked to exchange cards with him. He is barely old enough for acne but Cruikshank appears the user-gen generation's version of a Hollywood player.

Talk to Cruikshank and one gets the impression his success is no accident. He's sharp and witty and isn't intimidated by adults in suits. During an interview with NewTeeVee's Chris Albrecht in front of hundreds of conference attendees, Cruikshank got some laughs after he was asked by a man about what kind of CPM, or advertising revenue, his clips were generating.

"I bet you would like to know that," Cruikshank said. He waited a beat before adding: "But I'm not going to tell you."

Greg Sandoval covers media and digital entertainment for CNET News. He is a former reporter for The Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times. E-mail Greg, or follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/sandoCNET.
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by sanenazok November 14, 2008 12:46 PM PST
Good for the kid! I would put him in the same category as any flavor of the month...eventually he'll become part of the Internet meme page on wikipedia along with the dancing baby and dog that rides rollerblades, etc. I actually looked up one of his videos and couldn't stand it for more than a few sentences. Guess I'm not the target audience.
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by jlopezcnet November 14, 2008 1:23 PM PST
I actually watched this for the first time 2 months ago. It seriously grows on you. The difference between him and "internet fads" is that he goes beyond viral and more into serial. I think the brilliance of it all is that the 15 year old writes and produces this all on his own. When I was 15 I had not fully grasped satire. He seems to run with it like it was all his own.
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