Average Homeboy

"Average Homeboy" polarized viewers and critics, who were divided between praising the inherent entertainment value of a sincere, clean-cut teenager in 1980s attire attempting to rap, and denouncing the excesses of the era, absurdity of the rap, and ineptitude of its star, yet it garnered the attention of several prominent news and infotainment entities, including Time[3] and VH1,[4] as well as men's culture magazine Complex, which, in a 2011 article, included it in its list of the 100 Best Viral Videos of the 2000s.

In 2005, the video was uploaded to YouTube by 'K-Maxx' (who claimed to be an MTV employee),[7] and as its popularity skyrocketed, it came to the attention of Hazen who was working behind the scenes in radio and television production in the Cleveland/Akron area.

[8] Hazen reclaimed his property, and ultimately embraced his new-found fame, reuploading "Average Homeboy" to YouTube in 2006,[9] along with other earlier efforts "Blazin Hazen",[10] and "Like a Seagull",[11] and new ones such as "White as Rice",[12] "Black Men Can't Swim",[13] and a remixed version of "Average Homeboy".

[14] Hazen's popularity as Blaze[15] grew to where he received numerous invitations to attend music and internet culture-related venues and gatherings across the country, including the NY Music Festival at Madison Square Garden in 2006,[16] ROFLCon 2008 (an internet meme convention in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he appeared with other live musical acts of similar origin, including Group X, Leslie Hall, Lemon Demon, and Trocadero),[17][18][19] He has been a fixture on various internet culture programs, both on television and online, including CollegeHumor,[20] G4 TV's Attack Of The Show,[21] and Tosh.0 (as the subject of one of Daniel Tosh's 'Web Redemptions').

[22] On March 8, 2014, Hazen posted a documentary short on his alter ego's origins and journey to internet fame.