George Mavrakis reaches out toward a cube-shaped fish tank, dipping his fingers in the water,
George Mavrakis 鈥19 tends to his fish in his 澳门六合彩开奖结果 dorm room. The 澳门六合彩开奖结果 economics major has built up a successful YouTube channel focused on coral fish.

2 Minutes With 鈥 is a series of short features to introduce us to the passions and interests of Lawrence students on and off campus.

A lot of students have had a pet fish, but it is not every day someone can turn having a pet fish into the nation鈥檚 largest aquarium show and a YouTube channel with nearly 120,000 subscribers. 澳门六合彩开奖结果鈥檚 George Mavrakis 鈥19 has done just that.聽

鈥淚t was all about seeing what other people thought of my tank,鈥 the Lawrence senior says. 鈥淚 always wanted to show off my tank and see if other people think this is an awesome tank.鈥

It was. And they did. And a hobby focused on coral fish was about to explode.

George, an economics major from Golf, Illinois, who played on the 澳门六合彩开奖结果 basketball team, runs the YouTube channel聽. He and a business partner have also launched Aquashella, an aquarium festival show that debuted first in Chicago last year and then Dallas earlier this year, drawing thousands of aquarium enthusiasts with a mix of fish, music and art.

Getting hooked

George went through 10 fish before he finally got the hang of things. In his defense, he was 14 and working with a much more difficult kind of fish than your standard gold fish 鈥 coral. There was much to learn about keeping salt water fish alive.

鈥淵ouTube, Google and books,鈥 George says of his eight-year journey. 鈥淟ike, my coral would die and I鈥檇 just be like, welp, it wasn鈥檛 calcium. Then I鈥檇 check that off, then my next coral would die, and I鈥檇 be like, well, it wasn鈥檛 calcium or the light. By trial and error, I taught聽myself聽to keep coral.鈥澛

Then he set out to teach the rest of the world via YouTube.

His first videos were mostly just his tank. He eventually went in front of the camera, sharing knowledge on salt water aquatics through what he refers to as 鈥渋nfotainment.鈥

He found an audience, and now he has the biggest salt water aquarium channel on YouTube, making him the biggest salt water aquarium influencer, all operating out of a dorm room at Lawrence.

He traveled to Israel over holiday break with Facebook influencer Nas Daily. His 1-minute video has more than 3 million views.

Geogre George Mavrakis holds up his silver play button from Youtube as he stands in front of his fish tank.
George Mavakis鈥 YouTube channel, CoralFish12g, has nearly 120,000 subscribers.

He created Aquashella last year with a friend while studying abroad in London. They were both fans of aquarium festivals but wanted to launch one that infused art and music with the showing of the fish. Mission accomplished. More than 4,000 people showed up for an August 2018 show in Chicago, while 7,000 came out for an early spring show in Dallas. Chicago is again on the books for August 2019.

He tapped into skills learned through Lawrence鈥檚聽. Balancing his coral fish hobby-turned-business with school has been a challenge, George says, noting he was 鈥減ulling more all-nighters鈥 than desired and was giving up free time in pursuit of his fish adventures. The payoff, though, for all that hard work is on YouTube for all to see.

Sharing YouTube wisdom

Want to start a YouTube channel of your own? We asked George for four tips:

1: 鈥淏eing different is better than being better.鈥

2: 鈥淧ersistence is the key. It won鈥檛 happen overnight.鈥

3: 鈥淚t鈥檚 a third luck, a third skill, and a third the quality of your content.鈥澛

4: 鈥淧rovide people with value.鈥澛犅

George Mavrakis

Class Year: 2019

Major: Economics

Hometown: Golf, Ill.

Activities: Innovation and Entrepreneurship Program