Jake Shane had a big month earlier this year. The 23-year-old, who is perhaps better known by his TikTok handle, Octupusslover8, had been slowly gaining traction on TikTok with funny reviews of his favorite food, octopus, for months. But on February 20, he branched out from mollusk critique and posted a deadpan one-man comedy skit where he played Bill Clinton denying his relationship with Monica Lewinksy. The video got 2 million views. Five days later, Octupusslover8 hit 100,000 followers. Over the next week, Shane kept the skits coming: the aggrieved president who didn’t make Mount Rushmore, a put-upon Moses parting the Red Sea. On March 5, he hit 1 million followers. On March 29, the 23-year-old signed to blue-chip talent agency WME. Then he began to figure out what this means for his life plan.
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TikTok is saturated with people desperate to become famous, and Shane may have distinguished himself by simply not trying that hard: Unlike other comedians on the platform, Shane’s videos are not scripted, edited, or even really produced. It’s just him, his roommates, and the background giggles coming from his friends behind the camera. You almost feel like you are in the room with a group of friends being silly on their Saturday night.
Now, though, his feed also features some incredibly famous people being silly. Nick Jonas duetted a video of Shane’s in which he personified a shocked Diet Coke finding out about Coke Zero. (Jonas played full-sugar Coke delivering the bad news.) A few days after that, Joe Jonas hopped in as “Scott,” the imaginary Coca-Cola higher-up who devised the plan. Naturally, the videos blew up.
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But Shane, who has struggled with OCD and anxiety since the age of seven, tells GQ that all this success has not been without downsides. He knows his rise to fame isn’t normal. And as much as he is enjoying his new found stardom, the TikTok star was already battling his own demons. He caught GQ up with how he's dealing with that—plus 1.7 million followers commenting on, critiquing, and adoring everything he does.
GQ: What was your first reaction when you started to blow up?
Jake Shane: I was loving it. When it happens, at first, you're not thinking, All right, well, I’m going to be a TikTok star now. You just think it’s fun. You don’t think anything is going to happen. So I started posting on TikTok 10 to 20 times a day, anything I could think of. I would just grab my phone, be like, “dududu, post” and put it down. I wouldn’t do a caption half the time because I have really, really bad anxiety and really bad OCD, so creating captions is sometimes hard for me. It really triggers part of me. So I decided to not have captions and people can do what they will with it. Slowly, slowly, slowly, it started climbing.
As someone who already struggled with OCD and anxiety, how has all of this affected your mental health?