Green brothers | |
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Born | William Henry Green II May 5, 1980 |
Alma mater |
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Occupations | Hank:
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Years active |
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Known for | Hank:
John: |
Notable work | |
Spouse(s) | Hank: Katherine Green (m. 2006)John: |
Children | Hank: 1 John: 2 |
Website |
The Green brothers, John (born 1977) and Hank (born 1980), are two American entrepreneurs, social activists, authors, and YouTube vloggers. The two have collaborated extensively throughout their public careers, beginning with a daily vlog project in 2007 titled "Brotherhood 2.0", in which they only communicated in vlogs posted to YouTube for a year. The Greens' portfolio of online work now includes their main Vlogbrothers channel, Crash Course, SciShow, their podcast Dear Hank & John, and several other projects spanning several forms of media.[1][2]
Both brothers have found success individually. John has written several books which have received widespread acclaim and popularity, including The Fault in Our Stars. The novel was made into a 2014 film adaptation, which was number one at the box office during its opening weekend and grossed over $307 million worldwide.[3][4] Hank has founded several companies, including "EcoGeek", a blog dedicated to environmentally beneficial advancements in technology. The blog was originally a class project of Hank's, while he studied at the University of Montana, but eventually progressed into becoming a major environmental publication, which would grab the attention of Time.[5][6] The company has since evolved into Complexly, the parent company for most of the Green brothers' projects. Hank co-founded the record label and e-commerce merchandise company DFTBA Records with Alan Lastufka and his debut novel, An Absolutely Remarkable Thing and its sequel A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor debuted as New York Times best sellers.[7]
Together, the two brothers are credited with creating what some have described as a "YouTube media" or "online multimedia" empire.[4][8][9] This empire, including projects centered on education, gaming, and activism, among others, has amassed an active fanbase known as "Nerdfighteria".[8][10] Other projects founded by the brothers include the online-video conference VidCon and the annual charity event Project for Awesome.