GLITCH

Glitch Productions (also known as GLITCH and formerly Glitchy Boy Productions) is an Australian independent animation studio based in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.[1] Founded by Kevin and Luke Lerdwichagul on May 27, 2017, the studio is known for making computer-animated and machinima web series for the internet, primarily YouTube. It's work includes its Super Mario 64 machinima parodic series SMG4[2], its computer-animated series Meta Runner, Sunset Paradise, and Murder Drones, and its live-action series Hobo Bros and Hitbox.

Glitch Productions
GLITCH
FormerlyGlitchy Boy Productions (2017-2018)
FoundedMay 27, 2017 (2017-05-27) in Sydney, New South Wales
Founders
  • Kevin Lerdwichagul
  • Luke Lerdwichagul
Key people
Websiteglitchprod.com

History

Founder and chief content officer Luke Lerdwichagul uploaded his first YouTube video on May 7, 2011, on his YouTube channel SMG4, and has since been in continuous operation. Over the years, the channel has grown popular, and as of May 2019, the channel has over 3,000,000 subscribers. Subscriber milestones have all been celebrated with special random videos known as ssenmodnars, the most recent having fan-submitted suggestions. Glitch Productions was first announced on May 24, 2017, in Big Things Are Happening (AND TONS OF AWESOME FAN ART!) - SMG4 Mail Time #10.[3]

On July 12, 2019, in preparation for the release of Meta Runner, the channel's name was changed to SMG4 // Glitch Productions. It was later renamed back to its original name following the launch of the GLITCH channel, with Meta Runner and other web series being uploaded there from now on.

As of February 21, 2020, the company has moved to a new head office in an undisclosed location in Sydney, as the old office house would be used completely as a residence for the Lerdwichagul brothers. It was briefly closed during the COVID-19 pandemic, but reopened to staff on July 3, 2020. Later on August 28, the third official channel for the company, titled "GLITCH", was launched, which would show original programming provided by the company.

The SMG4 channel reached 4 million subscribers on September 27, 2020, and as of October 2020, it is the 31st most subscribed YouTube channel in Australia, just after Jalals at 29th (Unknown at 30th). The SMG4 channel reached 5 million subscribers on November 13, 2021.

Web Series

Ongoing Web Series

on [4]SMG4

Show name Date started Other names used Notes
SMG4 May 4, 2011
  • Super Mario 64 Bloopers (2011 to 2014)
  • SM64 Bloopers (2015 to Feb 4, 2017)
  • SM64 (Dec 8, 2012 to Feb 25, 2017)
  • SMG4 (since 2017)
Show was taken over by Glitch in 2017.
Hobo Bros December 3, 2016 NA Show was taken over by Glitch in 2017. (currently on hiatus)
Hitbox September 22, 2018 NA The show is on a hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

on [5]GLITCH

Show name Date started
Meta Runner July 26, 2019
Ultra Jump Mania September 4, 2020
Sunset Paradise March 26, 2021
Murder Drones October 29, 2021

Canceled shows

Show name Date started Date ended Reason for cancellation
TheAwesomeMario 2013 2017 Harry Brown (former video editor and machinima artist) no longer works on the channel's content and Luke and Kevin wanted to focus on bigger projects.
The Wacky Wario Bros. 2013 2016 Merged into the SMG4 series
Sonic the Derphog 2014 2016 Merged into the SMG4 series
Guards N' Retards 2014 2018 Merged into the SMG4 series as seen in SMG4: Mario's Prison Escape
SMG4 Gaming 2014 2016 No longer exists, was replaced by "Hobo Bros"
Retarded64 2013 2017 No longer exists, was merged with Super Mario 64 Bloopers to create the current SMG4 series
The Mario Channel 2017 2018 Presumably ended or merged into the SMG4 series, possibly due to YouTube's new video policy

Crew Members

Leadership

Current Crew

Former Crew

References

  1. "Inside The Mario House That SMG4 Built". Kotaku Australia. 2019-07-25. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  2. "TheAwesomeMario - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  3. "Glitch Productions (Creator)". TV Tropes. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  4. "SMG4 - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
  5. "GLITCH - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2022-04-29.
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