Love who you want to love. Life is short. Nobody's going to hate you for it.
Shane Dawson
I was not really worried about what people thought of me or how offensive my jokes were. I was just kind of saying whatever I wanted, and that gave me the reputation of being this crazy, loose cannon, you know, psycho guy. It still kind haunts me to this day. Like, 'Oh, Shane Dawson - that guy's nuts.'
I can honestly say that I am open to love in any way. I guess that makes me bisexual.
I'm not really gay, and I can't sit here and say that I am, because that's not real and that's not genuine. But I also can't sit here and say that I'm straight. This is something I've come to the conclusion through therapy and from being honest with myself. I am bisexual.
I'm just an innocent guy with a dirty mouth, I guess.
No matter what somebody thinks about your videos or whatever, everyone can agree how much work it is.
Howard Stern is one of my idols.
I lost a lot of weight, when I was 18, on Jenny Craig.
I've been wanting to do some type of video about the idea that YouTubers have to have some kind of personality disorder, something right, to do what we do. Putting ourselves on camera all the time, being so open on camera all the time, having conventions with our name in it. There has to be something.
I don't think I'll be doing daily videos forever.
I was morbidly obese. It was a way for me to create a shell around me so that nobody would look at me.
I think competition turns people into what they normally wouldn't be.
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 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.
Not everybody is either gay or straight.
I thought I'd be on TV and movies - that's what I really wanted - and I can't believe I didn't need to do that. I did it on my own with just me and my camera. That's very, very weird.
I know what I do for a living is ridiculous.
There's nothing creepier to me than a student who hangs out with the teachers.
I'm not saying that I don't like the stuff I put out into the world, because I genuinely enjoy my videos and think they are funny. What I'm saying is that I embrace the fact that I have a punchable face, and that if I could punch myself without feeling it, I would.
'Mad TV' is one of my most favorite shows of all time and is a huge part of my obsession with sketch comedy.
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.
I have kind of a thick skin.
It's fun to be around people who don't think I'm creepy for making videos in my bedroom on the Internet.
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.
It sounds super cliche, but staying true to yourself and what you are works.
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.
On YouTube, you know, if you say something, you know, that triggers somebody, it becomes a whole controversy, a whole thing - and all the comments and everybody's upset, whereas a book, there's no comment section. There's no - there's nowhere for the audience to, you know, get mad at you for saying something.
Online, I'm this loud, outrageous, confident guy who acts like nothing bothers him, and he has the whole world at his fingertips. In reality, I'm a shy, quiet guy who would rather spend his nights lying in bed watching Netflix than being a valuable member of society.
YouTube opened up a lot of doors.
I always wished that I was gay, that I was just 100 percent gay - for so many reasons. No. 1, that means I would know who I was. No. 2, it would be a lot easier for me to be accepted by people because I wear wigs and dresses on the Internet, and I'm feminine and all these things. It'd be so much easier to be just like, 'Yeah, I'm gay.' But I'm not.
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.
I love podcasts, so I thought I'd try one.
I kind of made the decision early on to be extremely open about everything and just pretend like all of these people watching were my close friends that I could tell stuff to and be honest with.
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.
For me, it's always fun to have people that do the same thing as you or and have the same work ethic as you. A lot of my friends have YouTube channels, and I use them in my videos, and I'm in their videos.
I get it, okay? I shouldn't be doing this. I shouldn't be giving Jake Paul a platform.
I want to know the psychology of a YouTuber... do you think, to be a YouTuber, you have to have something off?
I started making videos when I was, like, seven or eight.
Anybody could be a sociopath. Anybody.
I'm proud that I don't make crazy jokes anymore.
I'd wanted to be a director since I was five and had been making videos since I was a kid. Then YouTube came around during high school. I was making videos, and it was just a place to put them, like storage.
I love interviewing people and getting them to talk about things they've never talk about.
I hate when people cheat.
For the record, I don't really hate myself, but I do hate the way I portray myself online.
The biggest thing I learned is directors don't make a lot of money on a movie.
Everybody loves a Keurig.
Make the videos that you want to watch. Don't think about who is going to be upset or offended.
I think Jake Paul doesn't know who I am.
I have spoofed celebrities before, but it's hard for me because I picture them watching it.
People who don't know me are going to be surprised by how much I don't take myself seriously.