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Social Profile: How YouTuber Curry Barker Made Horror Blockbuster Obsession

YouTuber and filmmaker Curry Barker has emerged as one of horror's fastest-rising directors.
Curry Barker's journey from viral content creator to filmmaker (Image generated via AI)

When people talk about overnight success, they usually miss the years of work that came before it. That is certainly true for Curry Barker.


Before Obsession became one of horror's biggest breakout hits, Barker was better known as one half of the comedy duo "that's a bad idea," creating sketches for YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok alongside longtime collaborator Cooper Tomlinson. What looked like social media content on the surface was quietly becoming a training ground for filmmaking.


Today, Barker has emerged as one of the most exciting young voices in horror. His journey from internet creator to feature filmmaker did not happen through a traditional Hollywood route. Instead, it was built through viral videos, self-funded projects, and a willingness to upload ambitious work directly to YouTube.


From Mobile, Alabama to Online Content Creation


Born on September 22, 1999, in Mobile, Alabama, Curry Barker developed an interest in filmmaking at a young age. He has spoken about watching The Texas Chain Saw Massacre as a child and becoming fascinated by the feeling horror films could create. Later, he moved to Los Angeles to attend the New York Film Academy, where he met Cooper Tomlinson.


The pair quickly formed a creative partnership.


Rather than waiting for industry opportunities, they began producing their own content online. Their YouTube channel, that's a bad idea, combined sketch comedy, short films, and experimental storytelling. Over time, the channel grew to more than 1.2 million subscribers, while their Instagram account attracted nearly one million followers.


Key social media milestones

Platform

Audience

YouTube

1.22M+ subscribers

Instagram

948K+ followers

TikTok

1.3M+ followers

Videos Published

570+

What made Barker stand out was that he treated social content differently from many creators. Instead of focusing only on quick viral moments, he used these platforms to sharpen his writing, directing, editing, and acting skills.


The "that's a bad idea" channel helped Curry Barker and Cooper Tomlinson develop an audience of more than one million subscribers.
That's a Bad Idea YouTube channel (Image Credit: @thats_a_bad_idea)

Barker later described YouTube and content creation as "our film school outside of film school."


As the channel grew, Barker and Tomlinson benefited from the same creator ecosystem that has helped reaction videos, sketch comedy, and creator-led entertainment thrive across YouTube.


The Horror Short That Changed Everything


While comedy helped build an audience, horror became Barker's calling card.


In March 2023, he released The Chair, a psychological horror short about a man whose life unravels after bringing home an antique chair. The film blurred the line between supernatural horror and psychological breakdown, leaving viewers questioning what was real.



The response was enormous.


The Chair attracted more than 9.9 million views on YouTube and earned recognition from film festivals, including a nomination for Best Film at the Los Angeles Short Film Fest and a semi-finalist placement at the Burbank International Film Festival.


Unlike many viral shorts that disappear after a few weeks, The Chair attracted attention from people inside the film industry. Producers began reaching out after seeing what Barker had achieved with limited resources.


One of them was producer James Harris.


Harris later praised Barker's understanding of horror storytelling, saying:

"Curry is a really smart guy who gets genre. He really understood scares but also the depth that it takes in a project."

That endorsement would prove crucial to Barker's next chapter.


While mainstream audiences often discover horror through streaming services, Barker built his audience through original online releases rather than traditional distribution.


Milk & Serial Proved He Was More Than a YouTuber


Most filmmakers would have tried to turn The Chair into a feature film.


Barker chose a different path.


Instead, he created Milk & Serial, a found-footage horror film made for just $800. The project followed social media influencers dealing with the consequences of a birthday prank gone horribly wrong.



The budget was so small that it became part of the film's appeal. Barker wrote, directed, edited, produced, scored, and even acted in the project. Cooper Tomlinson co-produced, co-starred, and helped with cinematography.


The film eventually premiered on YouTube in August 2024 and generated more than 2.9 million views.


More importantly, it demonstrated what Barker could accomplish without studio backing. Critics and horror fans praised the movie for feeling authentic, unsettling, and surprisingly polished despite its microscopic budget.


The success of Milk & Serial led to representation from United Talent Agency and significantly raised Barker's profile within Hollywood.


Why YouTube Became Barker's Secret Weapon


One of the most interesting parts of Barker's story is his attitude toward distribution.


For decades, filmmakers viewed YouTube as a backup option. Barker saw it differently.


Speaking about releasing his work online, he explained:

"Just put it on YouTube and see what happens."

That mindset helped separate him from many independent filmmakers who spent years chasing traditional distribution deals. Instead of waiting for permission, Barker uploaded his films directly to an audience that already trusted his work.


The strategy worked.


Both The Chair and Milk & Serial reached millions of viewers, proving there was demand for Barker's style of storytelling long before Hollywood became involved.


Barker's decision to release films directly on YouTube reflects how the platform has evolved from a simple video-sharing website into a launchpad for creators and filmmakers, much like the transformation explored in our guide to the history of YouTube.


Turning Obsession into a Horror Phenomenon


The breakthrough finally arrived with Obsession.



After seeing Barker's earlier work, James Harris approached him about developing a feature project. Rather than expanding The Chair, Barker pitched a completely different idea, one that would eventually become Obsession.


The film tells the story of a lonely man whose wish for love spirals into a nightmare.

What happened next surprised almost everyone. Produced for less than $1 million and shot in just 20 days, Obsession premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival before attracting major industry attention. Focus Features acquired distribution rights in a deal reportedly worth more than $15 million.


The film went on to become one of the biggest horror success stories of 2026, earning tens of millions of dollars worldwide while receiving strong reviews from both critics and audiences. Perhaps the most impressive part of the story is that Barker served as writer, director, and editor, maintaining the same hands-on approach that defined his YouTube projects.


At a time when horror conversations are increasingly dominating online culture, from franchise debates to controversies surrounding major releases, independent projects like Obsession have managed to capture audience attention through originality.


What's Next for Curry Barker?


At just 26 years old, Barker has already achieved what many filmmakers spend decades pursuing. He is currently developing Anything But Ghosts, another horror project backed by major producers, while also preparing to direct a new reimagining of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre for A24. For Barker, the journey from content creator to filmmaker was never about chasing internet fame. It was about using every platform available to tell stories.


That approach turned a YouTube channel into a launchpad, a viral horror short into an industry calling card, and a filmmaker with an $800 budget into the director behind one of horror's most talked-about hits.


And if Obsession is any indication, Curry Barker's rise may only be getting started.

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