Jason the Wii isn't one person, at least not in the way you think. Everything Jason does plays into a bigger performance, a career built on turning himself into different characters online. Sometimes he's a cringy Tik Tocker, others he's an IRL streamer or a musical artist.
It feels like every few months he's on to an entirely new thing. And yet, every time he changes character, the crowd gets bigger. But what if I told you none of it happened by accident?
The cringe, the characters, the constant reinventions, all of it was a part of a plan. In truth, it was never about the views or fame. Jason was chasing something else.
>> Like, I got to be successful quick so that he can live a happier life. And I never told him that. [Music] >> For Jason Win, the American dream smelled a lot like acetone.
It was the life his parents, immigrants from Vietnam, painstakingly built inside a small nail salon in Fort Worth, Texas. Jason spent plenty of afternoons there, doing homework on the counter with the buzz of nail drills in the background. He was a quiet kid, the kind that got straight A's, one spelling bees, and never really caused any trouble.
From elementary school through high school, he mostly flew under the radar, but he couldn't ignore what he saw at home. His parents were older than everyone else's. They never took a day off, and every dollar they earned came from hunching over a manicure table.
Somewhere along the way, he made himself a promise. Retire them. Get mom and dad out of that salon for good.
The only problem was he was 15. No license, no job, no way to make real money. Then 2019 rolled around and a new kind of gold rush showed up on his phone.
It started when a company called Bite Dance bought this massive but relatively dead app called Musically. They gutted it, rebranded it, and Tik Tok was released. The app as a whole work differently than any other social platform.
Videos were meant to be short, less than a minute in length, and instead of you, the user, choosing who to follow and what kind of content to see, the algorithm really chooses for you. Within a year of their release, Tik Tok hit the top of the download charts like a nuke. In the blink of an eye, you had kids like Charlie D'Amilio, going from filming Tik Tok dances in her bedroom with zero followers to just a few months later moving to LA, starring in Hulu show, Super Bowl commercials, signing multi-million dollar deals with Duncan, Hollister, and Morphe Cosmetics.
And Jason thought, well, why not me? But here's the thing. Social media algorithms feed on flare.
They boost the stuff that grabs your attention, creates urgency, stirs FOMO. And honestly, Jason didn't have that kind of personality. There wasn't much about him that really created conversations.
So, what does he do? Well, he became someone else. Now, this kind of seems a lot more like an internet 101 video than a Jason Wayne documentary at this point, but pay attention because this all ties in here in a minute.
You see, those cringy, over-the-top personalities online aren't anything new. Actually, it goes all the way back to 2009 to iCarly. >> Hey, it's Fred and I'm going to be on I Carly.
>> Fred is really one of the OGs of this. It's this annoying, polarizing, eccentric character which love it or hate it, it stops your scroll. For whatever reason, it makes people comment, share, and talk about it.
And we've seen this same strategy a million times since Red. From Neon to I show Speed, it's a tried and true way to rack up some views on social media. And Jason weaponized this, creating some of the most hard to watch nails on a chalkboard type videos.
>> Mommy, mommy, I need milk. >> It didn't really take too long before these Tik Toks were pulling in millions of views, and Jason was growing an actual audience. And with a few viral videos and a snowballing fan base came the sponsors.
>> Oh, eating plant-based nuggets. Well, for about a year or so, Jason kept up with this, creating cringey videos, trolling online, and for a while, it was great. But then two problems hit.
First, his Tik Tok accounts kept getting banned. No warnings, no appeals. One day, he'd have hundreds of thousands of followers.
The next, gone, deleted like they never existed. >> Um, Tik Tok, what's going on? >> Second, even with the views, the money just wasn't there.
Tik Tok was still too new. Brands weren't shelling out fat checks for sponsored posts yet. So, after graduating high school in that summer limo before college started, Jason made a decision.
If he wanted real money, like retire your parents' money, he had to pivot to a new platform, Twitch. Now, growing on Twitch, that's a different beast. It's not like Tik Tok where one lucky post can shoot you into the algorithmic stratosphere.
Twitch is slow, brutal, and unforgiving. And in my opinion, it's probably the hardest platform to build an audience on, which is exactly why Jason had to get strategic. He'd been casually streaming since he was 14.
Nothing serious, just testing out the waters. But in August of 2022, he made the call, fully committing his sights on streaming. And in his very first month, he averaged 71 viewers per stream.
For Twitch, that's an incredibly promising start. But here's where Jason's strategy kicks in. You see, Jason had an audience on Tik Tok.
1 million followers to be exact. And he began the slow and steady process of converting those followers from Tik Tok to Twitch. Over the next month, he would stream Valerant gameplay, but instead of keeping it one-dimensional, he got a bit creative.
>> Um, >> there was this website called EAL where you could essentially pay girls to play video games with you. Weird. Yes, I know.
But that was a part of the character, the bit that Jason played. >> Now, my pants, my pants. >> He brought the same TikTok persona into these streams.
Awkward and always the line between cringe and comedy. He would try to ri the girls up Midame, leading to some of the most painfully uncomfortable moments imaginable. But that was the point.
Jason wasn't just streaming to entertain live viewers. He was streaming for clips. After each stream, he'd post dozens of these videos to Tik Tok, and the views continued to snowball.
Then the next time he'd start up a stream, he'd also go live on Tik Tok for the first hour or so. then end the Tik Tok live and tell his followers if they wanted to keep watching to come over to Twitch. The brilliance of this two-step approach paid off because by October of that same year, he was averaging over 1,000 viewers per stream and had nearly 25,000 followers on Twitch.
From there, Jason only hit the gas. He began collaborating with bigger streamers like Prod, Sneo, and Shanks. He began evolving his content to audiences broader than Valerant.
He started hosting Eates and added in IRL segments. But as 2022 came to an end and 2023 wrapped the corner, an entirely new shift to Jason's online presence came into the picture. >> Every time I talk to you, my mind goes blank because you're just so beautiful and I just lie.
I can't really think straight. You know what I mean? >> Jason first met Eugene during what should have been just another e- dating stream.
Something about her was different. The flirting and chemistry came naturally, and before long, their on-screen chemistry carried over into real life. They began dating.
And for Jason, this was his first genuine relationship. And soon his audience was just invested in them as they were in him. These days, broadcasting your relationship online is almost like a growth hack, another way to hook viewers.
But for Jason, it didn't work that way because over the next year, his viewership actually became stagnant, hardly growing over the course of a year. So why am I mentioning this? Well, because in those moments with Eugene, at times the mass began to slip.
Maybe he was just comfortable in the relationship or was finally starting to feel comfortable in front of a camera. But viewers were beginning to see the more genuine side of Jason, especially during the breakup. Over time, having their relationship play out in front of thousands started to weigh on them.
Jason's content still revolved around flirting with eirls. And for Eugen, that was hard to ignore. Eventually, both decided to step away from the relationship, marking the end of a chapter that quietly reshaped how Jason came across to his audience.
It's funny how life works, how sometimes what feels like a new low can be the exact moment you're on the brink of something higher. Over the next few months, Jason took every successful element from his streams and dowled it up to the max. He brought his Discord e dates into the real world, traveling from state to state to host in-person dates with different girls.
Saw, Selena, and Alyssa all became recurring personalities, and fans were quick to dub this era of content the bop arc. During this period, Jason's channel exploded in popularity. Just a month after his breakup, his average viewership nearly doubled, soaring from 2,700 to 5,300 viewers in what felt like a blink of an eye.
And the growth didn't stop there. Stream after stream, the numbers kept climbing. While attending college full-time, he was streaming an average of 160 hours a month, pushing his momentum farther than ever before.
But just beyond that wave of success was something even bigger. An opportunity that would take everything Jason had built and launching into another universe. He was going to join Faze Clan.
[ __ ] Do you have to manhandle me, bro? Holy, man. What do I even do?
spitballs, pranks, disruptive outbursts, mogging. Normally, under these circumstances, you would be expelled immediately, but your father has given a very generous donation to the university. >> My father?
>> Now, a little backstory for those who don't know, Faze Clan can be credited with pioneering a lot of what you see on social media today. What started as a small group of gamers making YouTube trickshot videos turned into something entirely new. Eventually, the group bought a house in New York and all moved in together, arguably creating the first content house the internet had ever seen.
From there, things snowballed. By 2018, FaZe had stepped far beyond gaming. Their roster, icons like FaZe Banks, Temper, Rug, Adapt, Rain, and Apex were everywhere.
They landed huge brand deals, made the cover of Sports Illustrated, and even IPOed at a billion dollar valuation. But then the empire cracked. Now, we've got a video up on our channel that breaks down exactly how and why everything fell apart, but here's the short version.
The founders had their equity diluted. Corporate overvalued the company, put the wrong focus in the wrong places, the content went stale, fans stopped caring, and eventually FaZe went bankrupt. The founders managed to buy the brand back.
And in early 2024, they set out to spark a full-scale revival. Step one, wipe the slate clean. Almost every single talent was dropped and a fresh roster was announced.
For OG fans who'd been watching for years, the bar for the new faces of FaZe wasn't just high, it was astronomical. One by one, names were revealed. Some familiar veterans and some complete newcomers.
And on that short list, nestled among a handful of new recruits, was Jason Len. Truth be told, no one believed in the new group. For most fans, this felt like just another lazy corporate driven sellout.
Exactly the kind of hollow move that had sunk Faze in the first place. >> What the is that sorry ass New Face Clan lineup, man? Who the are these people?
>> However, almost everyone was completely wrong about the new roster. Within weeks, public opinion began to flip. Clips of New Face started flooding Tik Tok.
From trips to Tokyo to monthlong subathons and a steady stream of content both as a group and as individual creators, the momentum was undeniable. >> That big lazy, bro. >> Jason, in particular, was breaking into a whole new tier of mainstream success.
In the closing hours of the month-long subathon, he hit 100,000 active Twitch subscribers, overtaking streaming heavyweights like Kaisenat and Jinxy, making him the number two most subscribed to Twitch streamer in the world. And Jason went on to close out the year strong. His average viewership would climb to over 15,000 viewers per stream, a 474% increase from the start of the year.
He closed in on a million followers on Twitch and even won the 2024 Breakout streamer of the year award. 6 months ago, I finally dropped out of school to pursue streaming. And today, I can say it was finally worth it.
Breakout train of the year. Let's go. Up to this point, a lot of Jason's success had been built around the persona I've been talking about.
the guy who will pull the most over-the-top stunts to riz up girls purely to send his chat into chaos. But there's a race game leaning too heavily on one gimmick to keep people entertained. Take Fred for example.
At first, the high-pitched squeaky voice and hyperedited ADHD style videos were hilarious. People couldn't get enough and it shot him into the spotlight. But over time, the bit started to feel repetitive, predictable, and eventually his audience moved on.
At some point, Jason realized this and decided to make a few changes. >> But yeah, I don't know if you knew this, but the girl content has been slowing down. Wait, why is the girl content slowing down?
>> Because, you know, I've realized, >> Jason, girl content not happening. I'm not subbing anymore. >> Wait, so you're quitting girl content?
>> I'm not quitting. I'm just slowing down. I just feel like, you know, it's time to evolve.
>> Heading into 2025, Jason started taking off the mask. Instead of chasing whatever performance would go viral or playing solely to what the chat demanded, he began building streams around what he genuinely wanted to do. The exaggerated persona took a backseat and his natural self started to come through on stream.
>> Who's your favorite Asian YouTuber? Just say it, bro. >> [ __ ] I didn't say that's his name.
That's his name. >> With the mask coming off, his content stopped being confined into four walls and the world itself became the stage. In South Korea, he met New Jeans, one of the biggest K-pop girl groups on the planet.
>> Yo, I'm not going to lie, this is crazy. >> From there, he took his journey to England where things truly snowballed. Within days of landing, Jason was filming with some of the UK's biggest creators, Angry Gen, Deji, and George Clark before stepping in front of a camera for a Sideman 20 v1 video.
>> Wing Guardian Pregnoto. >> You feel that? >> For any creator, being featured in a Sideman video is a huge milestone.
But the momentum didn't stop there. Just before the shoot, news had broken that he'd join the cast of Inside, a Netflix reality series created by the Sidemen themselves. And then came the moment that would put him in front of one of the largest audiences of his career, the Sideman charity match.
All 90,000 seats at Wimbley sold out. Over 2. 7 million tuned in live.
The roster included titans like Mr Beast, Logan Paul, I show Speed, and Kaisen. And for the first time, Jason wasn't the weird kid trying to make a name for himself on social media. He was one of them.
He was now a part of the club he once watched from the outside. He had the numbers, the clout, the collaborations, Wembley Stadium crowds, Netflix credits, his name alongside the biggest creators on the planet. But none of that was the finish line.
Because long before the Twitch records, FaZe Clan, and charity matches, this all started in a small Texas suburb with a quiet kid who promised himself one thing. Retire mom and dad. My dad sacrificed a lot.
My mom sacrificed a lot cuz I think my my dad was always telling me that if he stayed in Vietnam, he could have been like super rich cuz he had like businesses out there. But he moved there because, you know, he wanted to start a family with my mom and with me. So I kind of he kind of put everything into onto me and sometimes I would feel like I would need to be like I need to be successful due to you know all my parents' uh sacrifices.
You see success and sacrifices are like two faces on the same coin inseparable each defining the other. One side shapes you into someone capable of winning while the other validates every hard choice you've made to get there. Think of just about any successful person.
Not the rare one hit wonder, but the ones who've truly built something lasting. All of them have paid a steep price. A big chunk of their life traded away in exchange for a shot at the position they're in today.
For Jason, sacrifices worn many faces over the years. And since middle school, it's often come in the form of relationships. >> Uh, honestly, in middle school, they used to call me Chino cuz I was surrounded by a lot of Mexicans.
>> Okay. >> So, there's not a lot of Asians in my my school. So, I had I'd have to, you know, um I guess adapt or learn new cultures.
>> So, that was also a struggle. Like sometimes I would be scared to speak Vietnamese on the phone because some kids I knew they would make fun of me, things like that. But in middle school, I'd be like self-conscious.
>> Yeah. like and I'd sometimes want to be like I guess not want to be a different race but like try like dress I dress a certain way I do my hair a certain way things like that >> and you mentioned that your dad had like left behind a lot of stuff to come here >> were you born there or born here? >> Born here.
>> And you mentioned that like there was some amount of like pressure that you were feeling. >> Yeah. Yeah.
So, I'm I'm getting the sense of you of like the clock is kind of ticking. >> I'm also getting the sense that your parents like sacrificed and you're like an only child. So, so it's kind of like you know, you get one shot, right?
>> And so, kind of like it has to count like everything's on your shoulders. >> Yeah. >> So, when you tell your parents like let's say like I'm going to pretend to be you for a second.
Okay. Let's do a little bit of role play. >> You okay with that?
Hey, mom, dad. Like, I'm concerned that y'all are getting a little bit older and I'd love to spend more time with y'all before, you know, it kind of gets too late. Like, I know that y'all made a lot of sacrifices for me and I'm grateful for that.
I feel like grateful and indebted to you and you guys have done so much for me and like I want to give that back and I'm afraid that I'm running out of time to be able to give that back. So, I feel like this immense pressure to be like really successful like today because I don't have a whole lot of time to tell you how grateful I am. >> Yeah.
I I'm pretending to be my dad. >> Yeah. What's it like to hear that?
First of all, >> I feel really emotional. Feel like, damn, I I I should tell him that I want him to know that um this is why I'm doing this. Since blowing up over the past couple of years, he kept that promise in motion.
He's bought his parents new cars, surprised them with $10,000, and is now on the path to fully retiring them. For Jason, making content is about giving back to the people who've been in his corner since the start. Not personal success or to stroke his own ego.
Last year, he became Twitch's number one most subscribed Asian creator, but instead of keeping the spotlight all to himself, he used his platform to highlight other Asian creators and musicians. Ever since Jason has taken his next level, he's putting a lot of Asian people on. For real, for real.
>> In doing so, he's become more than just a streamer. He's become someone Asian kids growing up in America can look up to. Someone who proved you can be yourself and still win.
And he's done it without bending to the old pressure to fit in. The very things he once tried to hide are now the things he stands out for. Jason's only 21, but his stories already prove enough.
In the end, every sacrifice, every late night, every hard choice was worth it.