American production studio From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Corridor Digital is an American independent production studio based in Los Angeles, known for creating pop-culture-related viral online short-form videos since 2010, as well as producing and directing the Battlefield-inspired web series Rush and the YouTube Premium series Lifeline.[2][3] It has also created television commercials for various companies, including Machine Zone[4] and Google.[5]
Industry | Entertainment |
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Founded | May 17, 2010 |
Founders |
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Number of employees | 9 (January 2019) |
Website | corridordigital |
Corridor | |
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YouTube information | |
Channel | |
Created by | Sam Gorski, Niko Pueringer |
Location | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Years active | 2010-present |
Subscribers | 10 million[1] |
Total views | 2.03 billion[1] |
Last updated: November 2024 |
Corridor Digital has nine full-time employees (January 2019), including founders Sam Gorski and Niko Pueringer. As of November 2024, the channel has over 10 million subscribers and has won awards at several Streamys, including the "Visual and Special Effects Award" in 2017.[6][7][8] Its second channel, Corridor Crew,[9] consists of behind-the-scenes content, including the popular series VFX Artists React and VFX Artist Reveals, the latter of which is hosted by Wren Weichman.
Pueringer and Gorski began working together in junior high in Stillwater, Minnesota, making student films with an emphasis on visual effects.[10] In 2008 they moved to Los Angeles, where they focused on visual effects for other projects. In 2010, they released a Modern Warfare fan film, "Modern Warfare: Frozen Crossing", filmed in Minnesota, like many of their early projects.[11] In subsequent years, Pueringer and Gorski began creating more short-form content. In 2012, they created the viral hits "The Glitch" and "Minecraft: The Last Minecart".[12][8] They were featured in the 2012, 2013 and 2014 YouTube Rewind.
In 2016, they co-wrote, co-directed, and produced the Battlefield-inspired web series Rush.[2]
In 2017, Corridor produced and directed the YouTube Red series Lifeline, which was executive produced by Dwayne Johnson and a collaboration with his Seven Bucks Productions.[3] The show was an American science fiction drama web television series broadcast on the YouTube Red network[13] which began October 11, 2017.[14]
In 2019, the company published a book, Top 10 Games You Can Play In Your Head, By Yourself, released on Amazon and publicized with a commercial on its YouTube channel. The book is a collaboration between Gorski and author D. F. Lovett.[15]
In June 2019, Corridor released a video in which a robot in the style of Boston Dynamics is abused in a variety of ways before finally fighting back against the humans attacking it. The video, watermarked "Bosstown Dynamics" instead of "Boston Dynamics", went viral across platforms, although most versions dropped attribution to the original source, with many claiming it to be an authentic Boston Dynamics video.[16] Gizmodo wrote that the "real lesson from Corridor's fake robot video might be just how far [robot technology has] come in real life over the past decade".[17]
Rush, a Battlefield-inspired web series, was originally released for Go90 in 2016[18] and rereleased on Corridor's YouTube channel in 2019.
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