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Squeezie

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Squeezie
Squeezie in 2015
Personal information
Born
Lucas Adrien Hochet

(1996-01-27) 27 January 1996 (age 28)
NationalityFrench
OccupationYouTuber
YouTube information
Also known asSqueezie
Channel
Years active2011–present
Genres
Subscribers19.1 million[1]
Total views10.7 billion[1]
NetworkNone
100,000 subscribers2012
1,000,000 subscribers2013
10,000,000 subscribers2018

Last updated: August 28, 2024

Lucas Adrien Hauchard (French pronunciation: [lyka oʃaʁ]; born 27 January 1996), known professionally as Squeezie, is a French YouTuber. He is the second most well-known French-speaking youtuber, after Tibo InShape, with over 18 million subscribers and 10 billion views.[2] He became famous for his Let's Play commentaries and vlogs. He now makes videos where he plays real life games with other youtubers or personalities and videos where he tells real stories (most of the time horrific ones). He has a music career and occasionally makes music videos. He also collaborated with Cyprien Iov on Bigorneaux & Coquillages, which stopped activity in 2019, the channel has over 6 million subscribers as of January 2024.[3]

In September 2018, he launched a gaming channel titled Squeezie Gaming on which are exposed edited videos of his lives on Twitch. In 2022 he organized the GP Explorer, a Formula 4 competition; the second edition took place in 2023.

Early life and career

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Beginnings on YouTube

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Lucas Hauchard launched on YouTube in May 2008 with a first channel specialized in the game Dofus, Dofus Bouclier. This channel, inactive since June 2008, has two videos. In November 2010, he created another channel, TheVideobc, inactive since 18 November 2010, which has three videos; it also has a video game thematics.[4]

He created his current YouTube channel under the pseudonym Squeezie in 2011, at the age of 15. Focused on video games testing, his channel achieved a fairly high profile, making him the youngest French person to gain over one million subscribers on YouTube, at the age of 17. He reached about 300,000 views per video during this period, during which he obtained his baccalauréat.[4]

Growing popularity

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In April 2013, when he had half a million subscribers, he teamed up with Cyprien, another French YouTuber, to create the channel CyprienGaming (currently Bigorneaux & Coquillage).

In 2014, he was frequently accused of plagiarising PewDiePie, an accusation he refuted through a video. In March 2014, according to SocialBlade, Lucas Hauchard became the most popular French YouTuber, ahead of The Sound you Need, Cyprien, Rémi Gaillard and Norman. At the end of 2014, the same website reported that Squeezie's videos were viewed 70.7 million times, more than Rémi Gaillard, Norman and Cauet combined.[4]

He appears in the YouTube Rewind 2015, a video created by YouTube bringing together YouTubers and Internet personalities who marked the year.[4]

In 2017, he participated in Fort Boyard, with Cyprien. Squeezie peaked at more than 1,860,000 subscribers in 2017, adding more than a billion to its viewing meter. He surpassed Norman in number of subscribers in June 2018 and then Cyprien a year later, becoming the first French-language videographer in number of subscribers.[4]

On Twitch

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Squeezie started regular live broadcasts on Twitch in 2018. He has more than 3 million followers and he participated in the French-speaking live with the most viewers with a peak of 395,000 viewers with some of the biggest French streamers such as Gotaga and Locklear. In October 2022, Squeezie hosted a 22-streamer race using Formula 4 cars, averaging 400,000 viewers and reaching a peak of over 1,000,000, along with 40,000 spectators at the track.

Music

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Squeezie has created a lot of music over the years. He started selling his first album, named Oxyz, the 25 September 2020. He release his first song in 2017 in a YouTube video named “Placements de Produits” with Maxence.

In 2018, Squeezie released more songs such as, Freestyle de l'autodérision, top 1, Freestyle de potes feat. Maxenss and Seb, pas tout seul and 90 VS 2000 feat. Mcfly and Carlito.

In 2019, he released two songs, Le gaming c'est fini and Bye bye feat. Joyca. Squeezie and Joyca dilmed a video where they compose in collaboration a summer hit in 3 days, Bye Bye, in competition with Kezah and Freddy Gladieux, who composed the song Mirador with the same constraints. They are then judged by the singer/rapper Gims who designates Mirador as "winner". The two singles have had some success, going so far as to be performed live at the Solidays 2019 music festival by their authors. They are also broadcast in several nightclubs and on national radio stations such as Fun Radio. The two singles are classified in the sales rankings of several musical platforms and the title Mirador will even be officially certified gold.

Gaming

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Squeezie, along with Gotaga and Brawks, founded a French-based esports organization known as Gentlemates. They have multiple esports teams ranging from games like Valorant to League of Legends to Age of Empires.

Discography

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Albums

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  • 2020: Oxyz

Singles

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  • 2017: Placements de produits feat. Maxenss
  • 2018: Freestyle de l'autodérision
  • 2018: Top 1
  • 2018: Freestyle de potes feat. Maxenss and Seb la Frite
  • 2018: Pas tout seul
  • 2018: 90 VS 2000 feat. Mcfly and Carlito
  • 2019: Le gaming c'est fini
  • 2019: Bye bye feat. Joyca
  • 2020: Influenceurs
  • 2020: Guépard feat. Némir
  • 2020: Servis feat. Gambi
  • 2020: Tout
  • 2020: Mario Kart
  • 2021: Time Time feat. KronoMuzik and Myd (as Trei Degete)
  • 2021: Arrêtez
  • 2022: Adieu les filles
  • 2023: Spaceship (as Trei Degete)

Filmography

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Dubbing

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Cinema

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Web-series

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  • 2016: Les Kassos (episode 42, Irrito)
  • 2018: L'Épopée temporelle (season 2, episode 1, Le temps cassé) by Cyprien Iov
  • 2015: Technophobe by Théodore Bonnet
  • 2016: The Cartouche by Théodore Bonnet

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "About Squeezie". YouTube.
  2. ^ "Squeezie: l'usine à clics (et à fric) du Français le plus vu, son frère Charlie Arel et aussi son meilleur ami YouTube". lexpress.fr. 6 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
  3. ^ "Comment Squeezie est devenu le youtubeur préféré des ados". lesinrocks.com. Archived from the original on 29 February 2016. Retrieved 28 February 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e "Squeezie (Lucas Hauchard) Wiki, Taille, Âge, Petite Amie, Famille, Biographie & Plus - wikicelebre.com". 27 January 2022. Retrieved 28 January 2024.