Darren Watkins Jr., far better known as IShowSpeed, has attained a kind of fame that’s hard to wrap your head around. The 20-year-old streamer, named Rolling Stone‘s most influential creator of 2025, doesn’t just have 135 million followers online. He also gets mobbed and chased by fans wherever he goes, from Europe to South America and, most recently, just about every corner of the mainland U.S. In August, Speed embarked on a 35-day tour of 25 states — and the camera was never off, even while he slept. The marathon livestream came to an end on Tuesday night at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, where friends, family, and other celebrities came to attend the premiere of his new YouTube series, Speed Goes Pro.

On the red carpet (actually green, to fit with the football stadium venue and sports content of the series), a member of Speed’s team tells Rolling Stone that one of the streamer’s favorite movies is The Truman Show. It’s only a halfway apt comparison to Speed’s situation: Unlike Jim Carrey’s unwitting reality show star, Speed is well aware that he’s a household name who shares almost every waking minute of his life with the world — and he thrives off it. Earlier that day, he had been filming around town, going for a spin in a low rider, hanging out with rapper YG, and seeing where admirers had mocked up a star for him on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. While he was hyped for the crowds (including some who trailed his car on electric scooters for a chance to appear on his stream), in quieter moments, he yawned and remarked on how tired he was. It’s exhausting to be this much of a public figure, even with stamina like his. Nonetheless, one of the members of his team tells me, Speed recently floated the idea of streaming nonstop for an entire year.

After some apparent delays, Speed’s massive tour bus, trailed by a convoy of black SUVs, rolled up to the entrance of the Coliseum, where it was greeted with a rah-rah routine from University of Southern California cheerleaders and a drone filming his big entrance from above. The L.A. youths who had been shadowing and filming Speed through the afternoon found themselves shut out of the event as he prepared to rub elbows with the likes of Justin Bieber and Kim Kardashian, who brought a few of her kids. Also in attendance were Olympic gold medal gymnast Suni Lee and WWE wrestler Randy Orton, both guest stars on Speed Goes Pro. Speed himself took to the carpet in a suit and black Yeezys, surrounded by his camera crew, and appeared totally re-energized as he glad-handed with producers and posed for pictures.