![]() ![]() SEE ALSO: Lane Kiffin tests positive for COVID-19, will miss Ole Miss season opener The duo spends Saturday's locked in watching SEC football hoping an obvious theme will arise. The theme is often simple but producing the videos is chaotic. Their videos rarely single out a player in a negative light or make fun of a coach's job status. In a multi-million dollar industry where fan bases' passion borders on obsession, Snead and Clay must walk a fine line. ![]() "We know that teams do watch them because we never hear directly from them but people will tell the network and then the network will tell us." Snead said some coaches have admitted to watching the videos. "Before we were just like this would be cool to be on TV and that was enough for us but then when people were like, 'Hey will you know this can be your job," then it felt real, people starting to come up to you on the street and how much they like it that's when it really starts to feel real I think," said Snead.įans aren't the only ones watching the videos. Four years ago, Clay and Snead took SEC Shorts out on their own and eventually signed a deal with the SEC Network. The couple first gained notoriety when their videos began airing on The Paul Finebaum Show. "Never in a million years did we think this was going to blow up to anything," said Clay, an Auburn graduate who would later attend film school in New Orleans, "It was just cool to put videos out there and have people comment, 'I like that.'Įight years later their videos regularly garner over half a million views on YouTube. The two, who met editing videos of medical lectures, decided on a whim to film a parody video after the 2013 Iron Bowl. Robert Clay and Josh Snead's parody films are well known to SEC football fans but the videos themselves started off as a joke. ![]()
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