
Some stories have rather unexpected origins, and one of the internet's YouTube musicians had his beginnings in a place you might not expect.
There was an abundance of excitement surrounding the release of Apple's first iPhone, as the tech giant was taking a delayed yet innovative step into the smartphone market that other key companies regrettably didn't take as seriously as they should have.
Understandably, this excitement led people to start queuing up for hours outside their nearest phone shop, and camped in front of an AT&T in Dallas, Texas was none other than an 18-year-old named Marc Rebillet.
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Interviewed at the time by Fox 4, Rebillet reveals that he'd be sat in his deck chair waiting for the iPhone's release since six o'clock in the morning, and thus his spot in the line was worth 12 hours of his time.
It also then turns out that time is indeed money too, as one other impatient customer posed a question to Rebillet: How much would it take for you to sacrifice your spot in line?
Waiting with $100,000 in hand so that she could buy as many iPhones as possible, one woman was willing to fork up the cash to simply enter the store before anyone else, and only Rebillet was in her way.
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In the end they settled on an $800 sum for his place in line, which works out at $66.66 per hour for the time that he had been waiting - or the entire price of a new iPhone with at least $300 to spare.
Unfortunately for the woman in question, it was quickly revealed to her that this particular store had a one-per-customer rule for iPhones, and Rebillet managed to pick one up anyway as his two other friends sat behind him in line only wanted one between the two of them.
On top of this, he's also managed to have an incredibly successful career on YouTube and in the music industry nearly two decades later, as reported by UNILAD.
He's amassed over 2.42 million subscribers on YouTube where he posts various live streams, music videos, and comedic shorts, and he's also played a number of high-profile gigs and festivals across the world.
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Rebillet has also made roughly 98000% more than the initial $800 price for his spot in line in the last year alone, according to social media income tracking platform Hafi.
Across an overall audience of around 8.5 million users, Hafi estimates that Rebillet's earnings over the last year are anywhere between $784,819 and $1,041,264 - and that doesn't even include money earned outside of the internet.
If you position that original Fox 4 interview back in 2007 as the genesis of his fame, that now-measly $800 has certainly gone a long way, and was more than worth the effort of sitting in line for 12 hours.