6 seconds of fame: Canadians who owe their celebrity to Vine - Action News
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Entertainment

6 seconds of fame: Canadians who owe their celebrity to Vine

Twitter announced Thursday that it's killing off Vine 'in the coming months,' but the news isn't likely to stop those who launched their careers on the short-video platform.

Twitter announced Thursday it's pulling the plug on the short-video platform 'in the coming months'

Toronto-born, Florida-raised internet star King Bach, seen here hosting the 6th annual Streamy Awards in Beverly Hills, Calif., is just one Canadian who found a huge following on Twitter's soon-to-be-defunct video platform, Vine. (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

The timer has finally run out on Vine.

When Twitter launched the micro-video feature back in 2013, it quickly became a viralenigma, challenging users to cram as much comedy, or culture, into each 480480 pixel frame.

After three years, Twitter announced Thursday that it's killing off the short-video platform"in the coming months."

But the news isn't likely to stop those who jump-started their careers making snappy six-second videos with the service.

Vine royalty

Toronto-born, Florida-raised Andrew Bachelor is likely the biggest Canadian to rise out of the looping patchwork of videos.

Best known by his online alias King Bach, Bachelorreigns as the most followed person on the app. He amassed more than 16 million Vine followers with his offbeat, slice-of-life comedy.

The business and film school graduate leveraged his Vine fame into wider social media celebrity, generating at one point an estimated$10,000 to $15,000 US a month just for ads on his YouTube videos.

He's also made the leap to traditional media, landing recurring roles onThe Mindy Project and in movies likeMeet the Blacks.

Eh Bee Family

Family-friendly but still funny Vine videos launchedthe Toronto-area Eh Bee Family into internet stardom.

Now the family of four has branched out, making moneyacross all of its social media profiles including a recent digital campaign forGlaxoSmithKline, reports AdWeek.

Shawn Mendes

From his humble beginnings inPickering, Ont., international pop star Shawn Mendes can credit his career to Vine's short, looping clips.

Mendes rocketed to social media celebrity when he was just 16 after posting a six-and-a-half-second snippet of himself performing Justin Bieber'sAs Long as You Love Me.

"I woke up the next morning and my following was just blowing up," Mendes told CBC News in 2014.

Now 18, the Juno Award-winning multi-platinum artist dropped his second album last week.Illuminate debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard charts.

Brittlestar

Stratford, Ont.'s Stewart Reynolds also hitched his family's wagon to Vine's star. Though, judging by a recent tweet, he's since upgraded his wagon for a Lamborghini.

The video-producing patriarchand family have racked up millions of views with their wholesome videos for such big name brands as Disney, Subway andWalmart.

When word of Vine's demise hit Thursday, Reynolds admitted that his family was "bummed" but pointed fans to his Facebookand Instagram instead.

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