Alan Becker


Alan Becker is an American online animator, YouTube personality and artist, best known for creating the Animator vs. Animation web series, its shorts and its spin-offs Animation vs. Minecraft, Animation vs. YouTube, Animation vs. League of Legends, Animation vs. Pokémon and Animation vs. Super Mario Bros. on both Newgrounds and YouTube.

Life and career

Becker was born on May 18, 1989. Since his youth, Becker had been an avid fan of animation. With two of his favourite animated short film, s is the 1953 Looney Tunes short Duck Amuck and the 1959 adaptation of Harold and the Purple Crayon, both of these shorts contained animated characters using their surroundings to draw things out, which would serve as major inspirations for his later works. Growing up in a financially struggling family, Becker's family-owned merely one computer that was shared between him and his siblings. It was through this computer that he began experimenting with pixel art, beginning in 2001. Eventually becoming homeschooled in 2005, Becker received his first laptop, an Acer TravelMate, which he used to begin animating using Macromedia Flash ; his first official animation, titled Pink Army, was posted on Newgrounds in 2004, where it did well. On June 3, 2006, at the age of 17, Becker posted the hit animation Animator vs. Animation on Newgrounds, where it quickly went viral and led to it being re-uploaded on various media websites. According to Becker, an unnamed company offered him $75 for "exclusive rights" to "Animator vs Animation", but decided against it, heeding to the advice of Steven Lerner, owner of Albino Blacksheep. Later, he discovered that his animation had been uploaded to the notorious entertainment website eBaum's World without permission. After Steven Lerner used this as evidence in a legal battle against eBaum's World, Becker accepted a $250 payment for use of the animation. However, following a change of heart, he returned the money and had the animation removed.
Atom Films persuaded and funded Becker to create a sequel after the success of his first animation, and so he created Animator vs. Animation II. In 2007, 14-year-old Charles Yeh offered to create an online game based on the animation, and after looking at his impressive work, Alan agreed to collaborate with him. Soon, after many requests for a third animation, Animation Vs. Animation III was finally released in 2011 and Becker intended to make it the last in the series, stating that he "wanted to make sure that no sequel could come out of that" by "ending the video with the blue screen of death as if the computer itself was dead" and the animation series couldn't go any further. Despite this, he has stated that his animation teacher Tom Richner had inspired him to continue on YouTube after his internships to Pixar were turned down two years in a row. His fourth animation, Animator vs. Animation IV, received over $11,000 in crowdfunding on Kickstarter.
Becker has also created works related to the video game Minecraft, such as the video Animation vs. Minecraft and a server based on the Studio Ghibli film My Neighbor Totoro. Becker also created a series of "how-to" videos regarding animation based on the "12 basic principles of animation" which was uploaded on his secondary YouTube channel .
On November 21, 2017, Becker announced that he was working with Insanity Games to create a card game based on his animations. The card game was released on May 2018.
Starting on November 18, 2017, Alan Becker started making new short Minecraft animations due to the fact that Animation vs. Minecraft receives more attention, beating Animator vs. Animation as the most-viewed video on his channel. On June 30, 2018 at 09:44:52 EST, Animation vs. Minecraft reached 100 million views on YouTube, along with a video showing the upcoming spin-off, Animation vs. League of Legends.
On October 29, 2019, Becker joined #TeamTrees and created a fundraising video titled "Blue's New Superpower"; he donated $5100 to the organization.

Awards

In 2007, Animator vs. Animation II won a "People's Choice" Webby Award.

Filmography