He branded himself as “Dan Dangler” — leaning into the absurdity. His tagline: “I dangle on the edge of disaster so you don’t have to.” He cooked gourmet recipes he’d never seen, using tools incorrectly. He replaced a rolling pin with a wine bottle, a stand mixer with a power drill, and a sous-vide with a toilet tank (do not try this at home).
It became his most-watched video ever. Today, Dan Dangler has over 30 million subscribers, a cookbook ( Recipes I Haven’t Ruined Yet ), and a production company that mentors new creators. He dangles once a year, on the anniversary of his first video, as a tribute to his own absurd journey. dan dangler manyvids
So he pivoted.
His first video, titled “I Try to Make Eggs (I Have an MBA),” was a masterpiece of incompetence. He set the fire alarm off twice, used a whisk to peel a boiled egg, and accidentally lit a paper towel on fire. He didn’t edit out any of it. The final shot was him eating a charred, salty mess on his couch, whispering, “This is fine.” He branded himself as “Dan Dangler” — leaning
Brands noticed. First, a fire extinguisher company (sponsored). Then a meal kit service (he burned their box). Then, the big one: a sportswear brand paid him $50,000 to cook a five-course meal while wearing their new “grip-tech” gloves, dangling from a rock-climbing wall. By year two, Dan Dangler wasn’t a man; he was a genre. He had a studio (an old warehouse with reinforced ceiling hooks), a team (three camera operators, a safety coordinator, and a therapist on retainer), and 12 million subscribers. It became his most-watched video ever