TRENDING NEWS
Back to news
19 Apr, 2025
Share:
The slam dunk rise of YouTube’s Dude Perfect, from basketball trick shots to trusted brand
@Source: scmp.com
The five friends who now make up sports and comedy group Dude Perfect had no intention of creating a brand, or even a business, 16 years ago when they started making a video of basketball trick shots while they were attending Texas A&M University, in the United States. “My dad would say we were procrastinating studying for finals at that time, which he is 100 per cent correct [about],” says Coby Cotton, whose twin brother Cory is also part of the group. “We were just having fun, and that’s one thing that I am grateful to say has continued.” When they posted that first video on YouTube in April 2009, the clip was just a way to share with family and friends what they were doing with an US$80 portable basketball hoop they bought for the backyard. Things have expanded far beyond that small circle. And the tricks got much bigger, like their world record shot made from 856 feet (261 metres) high in Las Vegas, in the US state of Nevada, two summers ago. Dude Perfect now has more than 61 million subscribers on YouTube, with videos that have got more than 18.5 billion total views. An “Average Dude vs. Steph Curry” video, with NBA star Stephen Curry, posted just four months ago has 16 million views. The group’s family-friendly content has gone beyond just basketball shots and is now big business, ranking among the top 1 per cent of channels on the second most-viewed website in the world. Professional athletes, celebrities and musicians want to be part of their productions. Among those who have taken part in recent Dude Perfect projects are American footballer Tom Brady, basketball player Caitlin Clark and baseball player Paul Skenes; the pitcher was blindfolded when he struck out Cody Jones, the DP member known as “Tall Guy”. In 2024, the group hired its first chief executive after acquiring at least US$100 million in capital from a private investment firm. There are plans for a Dude Perfect theme park, and earlier this year the group opened a new headquarters. “A sports lover’s Barbie dreamhouse” is how new CEO Andrew Yaffe described the 80,000-square-foot (7,400-square-metre) facility. “If you ask the guys what they intended in 2009, I don’t know that this would have been in their wildest dreams,” says Yaffe, who was previously a senior NBA executive overseeing the league’s social, digital and original content. “We think about [how] this is what a media company looks like in 2025. And it’s really exciting to think about what that can be in 2030 or 2035.” Dude Perfect has evolved from that original video shot with a single camera into a successful content creator group, with a mix of sports and comedy that is more than just basketball shots. The group will embark on another live tour later this year. There have been nearly 50 episodes of “Overtime” since 2018, a variety show usually around 25 minutes with a variety of segments and often special guests. Curry in that recent episode took part in a three-point-shooting contest using items like an oval-shaped football, a pickle ball and a football before finally a basketball. There are occasional videos such as “All Sports Golf Battle” when on a course without actual golf clubs – including once at Augusta National Golf Club, in the US state of Georgia, when professional golfer Bryson DeChambeau used items like a tennis racquet and a pool stick. “Stereotype” videos poke fun at any number of groups or events. “They’ve built a media empire that brings families together, whether it’s trick shots, epic challenges, live events or experiences that truly redefine what it means to connect with fans,” says Brian Albert, who leads Google’s US YouTube video deals and creative teams. “They are creator trailblazers.” Even before each of the Dudes became fathers – there are now 16 children ages 10 and under between them, and another on the way – they wanted to be one of the world’s most trusted brands for families to enjoy together. “Early on, we met through some Bible studies and so we knew we weren’t going to cuss in our videos, we weren’t going to have alcohol promotion,” Jones says. “Early on, it actually hurt our brand because people were going to YouTube in order to kind of have that wild side of things. And since, it’s only helped because we’ve become brand-safe.” Tyler Toney, the bearded Dude often front-and-centre in videos, says that this is the best thing they hear from parents. “But it wasn’t until we had our own kids where we’ll be up here at the office filming, and then I go home and now I’m on my TV at home and my boys are watching,” Toney says. “I get to hear myself a lot and it gets old, and I apologise now to all the parents for how loud we are in a lot of the videos. But it’s cool to see that even in our families the importance of that, having that quality entertainment that we can enjoy with our own kids.” Dude Perfect’s first record for longest basketball shot came from the third deck of Texas A&M’s football stadium in the autumn of 2009. That came months after the initial video of trick shots, which had been followed by one they did at a Christian-based camp that summer. They made a basketball shot from atop the 561-foot-tall Reunion Tower in Dallas, also in Texas, in 2014, a record then broken by another group before Dude Perfect reclaimed it in Las Vegas. “We’re not hoping to have to improve on the world’s highest shot from The Strat [hotel] in Vegas any time soon,” Coby Cotton said. “That was an exhausting experience.”
For advertisement: 510-931-9107
Copyright © 2025 Usfijitimes. All Rights Reserved.