In January, the threshold for entry into the list was the highest it's ever been, but viewership for the top 10 shows dropped 26% as compared to the record-breaking month of December.
If you've been keeping track in previous months, you won't be surprised to see that Fred and Happy Tree Friends have again topped the list. Also notable: CollegeHumor and video game-themed shows collectively took up half the list. There weren't any new series on the list in January, but a couple that dropped off in the past made a comeback. We also learned that the majority of viewers for the top 10 shows were male.
Here's the complete chart with video clips included for each series. We provide some deeper analysis below.
The Chart: January 2010
Rank
Last Month's Rank
Title
Studio
Genre
True Reach View Count
% Change in Views
Sample Episode
1
1
Fred
n/a
Comedy
24,719,556
-28%
2
2
Happy Tree Friends
MondoMedia
Animation
17,697,316
-15%
3
4
Smosh
Deca TV
Comedy, Sketch
13,151,356
13%
4
5
The Station
The Station
Comedy
4,317,575
-24%
5
Back On Chart
POV
CollegeHumor
Comedy
4,146,733
Back On Chart
6
10
Hardly Working
CollegeHumor
Comedy
3,562,906
32%
7
9
Jake & Amir
CollegeHumor
Comedy, Sketch
3,275,001
6%
8
Back On Chart
Red Vs Blue
Rooster Teeth
Animation, Comedy
3,224,802
Back On Chart
9
8
The Guild
n/a
Comedy, Gaming
3,209,027
-17%
10
7
Key Of Awesome
Next New Networks
Comedy, Music
3,150,905
-39%
*The Visible Measures Top 10 Webisodes Chart focuses on digital studio-driven Web series that appear on Internet video-sharing destinations. Each Web series is measured on a True Reach™ basis, which includes viewership of both studio-syndicated video clips and viewer-driven social video placements. The data are compiled using the Visible Measures Viral Reach Database, a constantly growing repository of analytic data on more than 100 million Internet videos across more than 150 video-sharing destinations.
Note: This chart does not include vloggers, interviews, how-to series, news shows, or product review shows. View-count results are incremental by month.
To notify Visible Measures of an upcoming Web series, or for an end-to-end assessment of your campaign's overall performance, please contact us directly.
If you're interested in exploring this data further, go to visiblemeasures.com/mashable.
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Consistently On Top: Fred
The teenager with the high-pitched voice has topped the list again, and he managed to do it even though he only put out one new video in January. That new episode garnered 1.7 million views, so the rest of the 24.7 million were all thanks to old content that people are still discovering or re-watching.
You can't fault Fred completely for dropping from his December high of 34.2 million views; he didn't have topical holiday content to work with this time. It's still impressive that a 16-year old actor with a webcam is beating each and every show from web TV networks like Next New Networks and CollegeHumor.
We mentioned earlier that the majority of top 10 show viewers are male; it's interesting to note that Fred has the highest ratio of female viewers at 45%.
CollegeHumor's Mark Is Hard to Miss
CollegeHumor is straight up mainstream now thanks to two cable TV deals in the works with MTV, and its online performance is as impressive as ever. It's the only network with three series on the list — POV, Hardly Working, and Jake & Amir. They've all appeared on the list before, and together they racked up just shy of 11 million views.
All three of these CollegeHumor series saw growth since last month; POV didn't appear on the December chart at all, but now it's back. Hardly Working is actually working hard; it cranked out several new videos in January and grew 32% as compared to last month. Jack & Amir experienced a modest 6% growth.
The Guild and Red Vs. Blue: The Gamer Niche
Video game-themed programming has always been a significant genre in web TV. Because web series are usually cheaper to produce and viewership expectations are lower than would be the case with over-the-air shows, web series find it advantageous to serve a deep and narrow niche. Gamers are a great audience because there are just enough of them, and because they have their own dedicated ecosystem of social media and blogs to spread the word.
The Guild and Red Vs. Blue aren't performing as well as they used to, but the gamer audience is still obviously alive and well since these gamer shows take up two of the top 10 spots. Red Vs. Blue just started airing new content, so it returned to the list after a hiatus. Conversely, The Guild is off-season so its numbers have declined.