I Did a Thing

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Alex Apollonov
Apollonov in January 2021
Personal information
NationalityAustralian
YouTube information
Channel
LocationAustralia, Sydney
Years active2016 – present
GenreComedy
Subscribers5.05 million[1]
Total views687 million[1]
Associated acts
100,000 subscribers
1,000,000 subscribers

Last updated: 28 March 2024

Alex Apollonov is an Australian YouTube personality and comedian, better known for his online presence as I Did a Thing,[2] and his YouTube channel of the same name. He is also the co-star of Boy Boy which he created with fellow comedian Aleksa Vulović who also stars in his videos.[3] Much of his content involves using his engineering and fabrication skills to design and build a variety of projects, including recreating the Utah monolith in Australia, simulating the Aurora Borealis in his kitchen with a high voltage transformer to parody The Simpsons, and making a scaled-up chainsaw powered Beyblade with a giant circular blade that is spun by a chainsaw motor. Other projects have included building a laser guided drone that drops steel darts[4] creating a hammer that uses blank rounds to drive nails,[5] and strapping a submachine gun to a robot dog.[6]

Many of Apollonov's projects have gained widespread media attention in Australia, including his trip to North Korea to get a haircut, his successful attempt to enter Star casino in Sydney with overt COVID-19 symptoms, and for recreating the Utah monolith in Australia. His content is often uploaded by the comedy group The Chaser, and has collaborated with other internet celebrities and YouTubers including Boyinaband, maxmoefoe, William Osman, IDubbbz, Hasan Piker, and the comedy group Aunty Donna.[7] Many of Apollonov's videos also star fellow comedian Aleksa Vulović, as the two are very close friends and often work on their individual projects with help from one another. Apollonov also has an active X (Twitter) following of 215,900 followers.[8]

In May 2022, Apollonov participated in the Creator Clash event set up by fellow YouTuber Ian Carter (iDubbbz) alongside many other YouTube personalities. He fought against Robert James Rallison (TheOdd1sOut) and won.

Early life[edit]

In the January 2021 episode of the 'Cold Ones' podcast, Apollonov stated his family arrived in Australia from Siberia.[9] He later clairified that both his parents were Chinese-born Russians, and he was born in Australia.[10]

Before starting his career as a comedian and YouTube personality, Apollonov had begun five separate university degrees and had failed to complete any of them. He had also held over thirteen jobs, eleven of which he was fired from.[11] In one job at a restaurant, Apollonov was caught eating cheese out of one of the restaurant's fridges, and had admitted to giving his friends free drinks.[11] He also admitted he sometimes failed to turn up to work.[11] In a 2022 stream with Hasan Piker, he called himself a socialist.[12]

Boy Boy (2016–present)[edit]

In 2016, Apollonov and fellow comedian Vulović founded the YouTube channel Boy Boy. Much of the content centered around myth-busting sensationalist claims in Australian media, while also using comedy to bring light to issues of such as climate change, colonialism, police violence, and racism. Boy Boy's patreon says as of 2024 that they are "making communist propaganda for idiots".[13] One video produced by this channel included Apollonov calling an Australian anti-terrorist hotline and reporting Vulović for wanting to join a violent militaristic organisation with ties to violence in the Middle East, which at the end of the video was revealed to be the Australian military.[14] Due to the low traffic of the Boy Boy channel, Apollonov created a new channel in 2018 titled "I did a thing", although he still uploads videos to Boy Boy on a less frequent basis. Much of the content on this channel was inspired by Louis Theroux and The Chaser's War on Everything.[11]

The Haircut (2017)[edit]

The short documentary-style movie titled The Haircut (2017)[15] was the most successful comedic project produced by the Boy Boy channel and would gain widespread coverage from Australian media which would help launch Apollonov's comedy career. In the movie, Apollonov and Vulović both travelled to North Korea to investigate dubious claims in Australian media that North Koreans were either forced to cut their hair like Kim Jong Un or that their government orders which hairstyles their citizens are allowed to have.[16] During their investigation, neither Apollonov and Vulović could find any evidence to support the claims of government-mandated hairstyles and came to the conclusion that these stories were most likely fake.[17] "When we started to look into some of those media stories we found out that a lot of them weren't true."[18] Apollonov further described his opinions on Australian/USA relations with the DPRK, saying that "North Korea has tested four [nukes], and that is very scary… but imagine how scary it is for them to think that the US alone has tested 1,032 nukes? … We've used ours… against real people."[19] Vulovic shared Apollonov's opinions, saying that "What the haircut law and all these other 'amazing' stories share in common is at the very centre of this media whirlwind, they are based on absolutely nothing."[20]

The Hooligans (2018)[edit]

To investigate news of violence among Russian football hooligans, Apollonov and Vulović travelled to Russia together to interview fans of various Russian football clubs and embedded themselves within groups accused of hooligan violence. Apollonov said that his reasoning for creating this short documentary was that "As a film maker I'd never miss the opportunity to film my mate (Vulović) getting beaten up overseas."[21]

Covid casino stunt (2020)[edit]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Apollonov and Vulović partnered with The Chaser to create a comedic investigation where they attempted to enter The Star Casino in Sydney while displaying as many symptoms as possible to see whether they would be allowed inside during the pandemic.[22] In one attempt, Vulović tried entering the casino while dressed in hospital surgical garbs, dragging an IV drip stand on wheels, with a high forehead temperature. Despite telling the casino staff that he had come straight from a nearby hospital, he was allowed to enter the casino where he spent his time using the gaming machines while wearing a white shirt saying "I have covid" in bold black letters.[23] "When I rocked up with my hospital gown and drip, the first thing they asked me was whether I had a Star Casino gold membership card". Apollonov followed Vulović into the casino with a forehead temperature of 48°C, or 118.4°F) (achieved using heat packs), which the staff detected with a temperature gun and was still allowed entry to the casino. "My head was still really hot after I got inside", said Apollonov. "I must have drunk 3 or 4 of their complimentary water bottles. They're obviously very used to catering for sick customers". When asked about possible legal repercussions over their comedic stunt, Vulović replied: "There's no point suing us, we already lost all our savings on big wheel during our filming breaks".[24] Vulović and Apollonov were subsequently given life bans from entering casinos operated by Star Entertainment Group.[25][11]

I Did a Thing (2018–present)[edit]

In 2018, Apollonov's new channel "I did a thing" would become far more popular than any of his previous comedic projects and would become the channel he is most famous for. Although this channel belongs to Apollonov, most of his content still features and includes Vulović, with whom he created the Boy Boy channel. This new channel features Apollonov using his engineering and fabrication skills to complete a variety of home-designed projects.[11]

Some of Apollonov's projects investigate political issues, such as creating a homemade air quality test to investigate the pollution in Sydney and using a compressed air cannon to test less-than-lethal ammunition. Many of the videos contain apolitical titles while the content of the videos discuss political issues, a strategy which Apollonov uses to bring apolitical people into discussions they would not normally encounter.[11] Among other projects, Apollonov has created steel-toed Crocs, experimented with planting trees using rockets, trained wild lizards to eat cockroaches in his home, crafted flamethrowers from trash, and snuck into an arms dealing conference.[11] In 2020, I did a thing reached one million subscribers, awarding Apollonov the Gold Play Button award.[26]

According to Apollonov, "I Did a Thing was mostly for boys like me who might have ADHD and want to make things and break things - do things they aren't allowed to do".[11] In one instance, police searched Apollonov's mother's home in search of a "supersonic tampon gun" that Apollonov had created.[11]

2020 Monolith project (2020)[edit]

In 2020, a mysterious metal monolith of unknown origin appeared in Utah, dubbed the Utah monolith. As more of these monoliths appeared across the globe in England, Romania and the Netherlands, Apollonov teamed up with Australian comedy group Aunty Donna to create their own metal monolith which they planted in Australia.[27] The monolith was planted outside Melbourne, Australia.[28] Aunty Donna jokingly said that their monolith and the collaboration with Apollonov was to promote their upcoming Netflix show.[29][30]

Trademark clashes with Jeremy Clarkson (2022)[edit]

In early 2022, Apollonov got involved in a clash with the former host of Top Gear, Jeremy Clarkson, over the latter's attempt to trademark the phrase "I did a thing".[31]

Curdle Hill Farm Ltd, a company which Clarkson co-directs alongside his partner, attempted to trademark the phrase "I did a thing", a catchphrase that Clarkson often uses on his show Clarkson's Farm. Clarkson intended to use this trademark to sell merchandise containing the phrase such as hats and cups. Concerned that this would affect the I Did a Thing YouTube channel, Apollonov threatened legal action against Clarkson for the attempt to trademark his channel's name.[31] Using the I Did a Thing Twitter account, Apollonov told Clarkson to "GET FUCKED", and threatened Clarkson with legal action:

"My Cousin's girlfriend's Sister is a lawyer and she is pretty good. You better watch out."[31]

Clarkson responded to Apollonov by claiming that he was not aware of the attempt to trademark the phrase "I did a thing". Apollonov then jokingly threatened to trademark the phrase "Jeremy Clarkson" in Australia and put Clarkson's face on merchandise.[31] Apollonov then went onto a podcast published on the comedy/satire website for The Chaser to jokingly say that he would use his home-made DIY laser guided dart firing drone[4] to fire at one of Clarkson's very fast cars.[32]

Creator Clash boxing tournament (2022)[edit]

In 2022, Apollonov took part in IDubbbz's Creator Clash boxing tournament, which saw various YouTube personalities fight against one another. During the tournament, Apollonov scored an almost immediate victory against his opponent, TheOdd1sOut, defeating him during the first bell. According to reports on the match, Apollonov pleaded with the ref to stop the fight, while noting that Apollonov was far bigger and more muscular than his opponent.[33]

After the match, Apollonov said of Rallison:

"To get in the ring with someone and actually have them hit you in the face and have you hit them in the face is a terrifying thing to do," "He fought well, and good work for having the balls to get in the ring with me."[33]

He revealed in a later video that he had built a vibrating cheating device to put in the pants of a chess player (originally intended for Aleksa Vulovic, then later used by Myth) as a parody of the Carlsen–Niemann controversy (This was used in Ludwig Ahgren's Mogul Chess-boxing event).[34]

Apollonov was set to return to the Creator Clash boxing tournament in 2023 but ended up not on the fight card.[35]

I put a gun on a robot dog (2022)[edit]

In 2022, Apollonov travelled to Uvalde, Texas and created a video titled "I put a gun on a robot dog" featuring his attempt to transform a remote controlled robotic dog into a weaponised drone by strapping a Heckler & Koch MP5 to the back of the robot.[6][36] This was done in the aftermath of the Uvalde School Massacre, and was intended as political commentary to mock the argument of some American politicians that arming teachers would help prevent school shootings.

During the filming of I put a gun on a robot dog (2022), Apollonov worked with several other YouTube personalities, including Aleksa Vulovic of the Boy Boy channel, American engineer William Osman, and weapons expert Brandon Herrera. The weaponised dog performed poorly when shooting at static targets,[37] and much of the video consisted of comedic shots of the robot dog stumbling while Lacrimosa by Mozart plays.[6]

Speaking on the mixed success of putting a gun on a robot dog, Apollonov concluded:

"I intended to come here and make something really dangerous, but I've now realized that I can't compete with normal, everyday American life. So instead, I'm going to attempt to help and solve America's school shooting problem by strapping a gun to this robot dog."[6]

One writer for Forbes used Apollonov's robot dog with a gun as an example during a discussion as to whether such weapons would be practical in modern warfare.[37]

Boxing record[edit]

1 fight 1 win 0 losses
By knockout 1 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
1 Win 1–0 TheOdd1sOut TKO 1 (5), 1:24 May 14, 2022 Yuengling Center, Tampa, Florida, U.S.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "About I did a thing". YouTube.
  2. ^ I, Did a Thing (15 December 2020). "I Did a Thing - YouTube Channel". YouTube. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  3. ^ Boy, Boy (15 December 2020). "Boy Boy Youtube Channel". YouTube. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  4. ^ a b Ozdemir, Derya (1 December 2021). "A New DIY Laser-Guided Drone System Can Drop Metal Darts for $1,000". Interesting Engineering. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  5. ^ Ozdemir, Derya (25 October 2021). "A DIY Man Has Built 'The World's Most Powerful' .22-Caliber Hammer". Interesting Engineering. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d Santana, Steven (9 August 2023). "A YouTuber came to Uvalde to strap a gun to a robot dog". My San Antonio. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  7. ^ Allen, Joseph (9 December 2020). "Australian Comedians Aunty Donna Take Credit for One of Those Monoliths". Distractify. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  8. ^ "@ididathing1". 7 August 2023.
  9. ^ I Did a Thing Does a Thing | Cold Ones, retrieved 24 April 2023
  10. ^ TikTok Pranksters Should Be Stopped (w/ Ididathing & Boy Boy) | Sad Boyz, retrieved 17 August 2023
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Wong, Kat (3 March 2023). "YouTube firebrands reveal why they make and break stuff". The West Australian. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  12. ^ I did a thing & Boy Boy Join HASAN (Full Segment 1/2) (Australian News REACTS). Retrieved 27 March 2024 – via www.youtube.com.
  13. ^ "Get more from Boy Boy on Patreon". Patreon. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  14. ^ Boy, Boy (9 September 2017). "Reporting my friend to the National Security Hotline". YouTube. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  15. ^ Apollonov, Alex; Vulović, Aleksa (22 April 2017). "The Haircut (2017) - "We Went To North Korea To Get A Haircut"". YouTube. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  16. ^ "Sydney Blokes Trek To North Korea To Test Their Insane Haircut Regulations". Pedestrian TV. 29 July 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  17. ^ Jeuniewic, Lexie (3 May 2017). "Why two Sydney students travelled to North Korea for a haircut". 9 News Australia. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  18. ^ Ristic, Biljana (9 June 2017). "Would you travel to North Korea for a haircut? These two Aussie students did". SBS Serbian. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  19. ^ Wang, Jessica (4 May 2017). "These Sydney Students Went To North Korea For A Haircut And Made A Documentary About It". Complex Australia. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  20. ^ "Two Sydney University students made documentary to debunk 'media-spectre' surrounding North Korea". news.com.au. 5 May 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  21. ^ "Australian filmmakers investigate Russian hooligan violence". Sky News. 14 June 2018. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  22. ^ Week, Media (23 September 2020). "Chaser stunt takes the piss out of Star Casino Covid safety". Media Week. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  23. ^ "Trying to get into Star Casino with Covid-19". YouTube. 20 September 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  24. ^ Lynch, Jessica (21 September 2020). "The Chaser takes the piss out of The Star casino's dodgy COVID-19 safety handling". The Brag Media. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  25. ^ Kat Wong (4 March 2023). "YouTube firebrands reveal why they make and break stuff". Canberra Times. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  26. ^ Blade, Social (15 December 2020). "I Did a Thing - Social Blade statistics". Social Blade. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  27. ^ "Monolith with cryptic engravings appears in Australia". Yahoo News. 11 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  28. ^ "Another monolith found in Adelaide". 9 News. 11 December 2020. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  29. ^ Carter, Reid (9 December 2020). "Aunty Donna and some YouTubers take credit for one (1) of those monoliths". AV Club. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  30. ^ Jones, Tegan (11 December 2020). "Grab a Cup of Morning Brown and Watch Aunty Donna Erect an Australian Monolith". Gizmodo AU. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  31. ^ a b c d Barr, Sabrina (29 January 2022). "Jeremy Clarkson denies knowledge of 'I did a thing' trademark as disgruntled YouTuber claims it could affect channel". Metro.co.uk. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  32. ^ "Arvo Chat: I Did A Thing is suing Jeremy Clarkson". The Chaser. 9 February 2022. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  33. ^ a b Corby, Donagh (15 May 2022). "YouTube boxer pleads with ref to stop fight after pummelling rival in ring". Mirror. Retrieved 9 June 2022.
  34. ^ Cheating at boxing in front of millions of people, retrieved 22 December 2022
  35. ^ Panigrahy, Subhankar (14 April 2023). "Creator Clash 2 2023 schedule, date, time, venue, fight card, lineup, tickets, live stream telecast". The Sports Grail. Retrieved 27 May 2023.
  36. ^ I put a gun on a robot dog, retrieved 26 May 2023
  37. ^ a b Hambling, David (16 August 2022). "Russia's 'Fake' Robot Gun Dog — And The Real Armed Robots". Forbes. Retrieved 27 May 2023.