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Average Homeboy (also known as Denny Blaze and Denny Blazin Hazen) is the creation and alter ego of Cleveland-based AV artist Denny Hazen. Hazen (as Blazin Hazen, a self-proclaimed "Suburban White Rapper") was the subject of a circa-1989 video demo tape that mysteriously appeared on YouTube in 2005, and achieved viral video status in a relatively short time. "Average Homeboy" polarized viewers and critics, who were divided between praising the inherent entertainment value of a sincere, clean-cut teenager in 1980s attire attempting to rap, and denouncing the excesses of the era, absurdity of the rap, and ineptitude of its star, yet it garnered the attention of several prominent news and infotainment entities, including ''
Time Time is the continuous progression of existence that occurs in an apparently irreversible process, irreversible succession from the past, through the present, and into the future. It is a component quantity of various measurements used to sequ ...
'' and VH1, as well as men's culture magazine ''
Complex Complex commonly refers to: * Complexity, the behaviour of a system whose components interact in multiple ways so possible interactions are difficult to describe ** Complex system, a system composed of many components which may interact with each ...
'', which, in a 2011 article, included it in its list of the 100 Best Viral Videos of the 2000s.


Background

Hazen, with the aid of self-purchased synthesizers and AV equipment, recorded, filmed, and edited "Average Homeboy", then sent a VHS copy to MTV, who reportedly shelved it in the same storage area as the thousands of other self-submitted recordings they had received, over the years. Hazen's video has been described as having been created around 1989, but a 1991 calendar appears in the video. In 2005, the video was uploaded to YouTube by 'K-Maxx' (who claimed to be an MTV employee), and as its popularity skyrocketed, it came to the attention of Hazen who was working behind the scenes in radio and television production in the Cleveland/Akron area. Hazen reclaimed his property, and ultimately embraced his new-found fame, reuploading "Average Homeboy" to YouTube in 2006, along with other earlier efforts "Blazin Hazen", and "Like a Seagull", and new ones such as "White as Rice", "Black Men Can't Swim", and a remixed version of "Average Homeboy". Hazen's popularity as Blaze grew to where he received numerous invitations to attend music and internet culture-related venues and gatherings across the country, including the NY Music Festival at Madison Square Garden in 2006, ROFLCon 2008 (an internet meme convention in
Cambridge, Massachusetts Cambridge ( ) is a city in Middlesex County, Massachusetts, United States. It is a suburb in the Greater Boston metropolitan area, located directly across the Charles River from Boston. The city's population as of the 2020 United States census, ...
, where he appeared with other live musical acts of similar origin, including
Group X Group X was a short-lived British artistic movement in the years after the First World War, which held an exhibition in 1920 and planned others that never happened. In 1920, some former members of the pre-War Vorticist movement abruptly left ...
, Leslie Hall,
Lemon Demon Lemon Demon is a musical project and band created by American comedian and musician Neil Cicierega in 2003 in Boston, Massachusetts. Lemon Demon's studio work is performed solely by Cicierega, who is the project's sole official member. Live per ...
, and Trocadero), He has been a fixture on various internet culture programs, both on television and online, including ''CollegeHumor'', G4 TV's ''Attack Of The Show'', and ''Tosh.0'' (as the subject of one of Daniel Tosh's 'Web Redemptions').


Present day

On March 8, 2014, Hazen posted a documentary short on his alter ego's origins and journey to internet fame.


See also

*
List of YouTube celebrities YouTubers are people mostly known for their work on the video sharing platform YouTube. The following is a list of YouTubers for whom Wikipedia has articles either under their own name or their YouTube channel name. This list excludes people who ...


References


External links

*
YouTube channel
{{DEFAULTSORT:Homeboy, The Average American Internet celebrities Midwest hip-hop musicians Musicians from Cleveland Year of birth missing (living people) Living people