The comedy content creator talks about his journey, his process of work, his milestones and a lot more
Vishnu Kaushal is one of the favourites among the Gen Z when it comes to comic content on Instagram. When he started off on his content creation journey, Kaushal had only a few thousand followers on YouTube and Instagram. Today, he has 2.3 million followers on Instagram, and is popular among the youth for his funny portrayal of teacher-student conversations, banter between cousins, and Bollywood vs reality videos, among others.
Apart from content creation, in the past couple of years, Kaushal has featured in an online TV series called Feels Like Home, and has started his own clothing brand called Peach By Vishnu, owing to his love for design. In conversation with Forbes India, the 25-year-old talks about how he started off his content creation journey, his thoughts on the growing competition, brand collaboration, favourite fan moments and more.
Q. How and when did you start your journey?
I started around 2014-15, while I was still in high school, studying 10-12 hours a day, and making content was a fun break. As a kid too, I always enjoyed recording myself enacting funny characters. My cousins and I would make funny videos. We didn’t have a good camera back then, but that didn’t stop us. But, at the time, we didn't post them anywhere. After high school and hours of study, my friends and I decided that we should do something fun. We thought that we'd either start a YouTube channel or a music band. Then, we thought we aren’t talented enough to start a music band, so we made a YouTube channel. That was how it began. Eventually, my friends went on to do their own thing, outside of content creation, but I enjoyed being in front of the camera, and talking to people, so I continued with it. I made a lot of YouTube videos, did podcasts, did a host of things for five years but I didn’t have a huge audience then. I started making proper Instagram short form content in 2019. And my content on Instagram blew up in early 2020, when the pandemic hit.