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Streamable Creator Spotlight: BurgerPlanet

A creator profile of BurgerPlanet, the long-running IRL comedic variety streamer whose current Burger Planet Asia run lives mostly on Kick after years across YouTube and Twitch.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightBurgerPlanettwitchkickirlyoutube

Who is BurgerPlanet?

BurgerPlanet is one of those internet names that makes more sense if you remember how messy IRL streaming used to be. His own bios keep it simple: YouTuber since 2007, IRL streamer since 2015. Twitch describes him as an IRL comedic variety streamer since 2015, and Kick uses the same line.

Viewers watch BurgerPlanet because the stream is not trying to be smooth. It is long walks, hotel rooms, food, errands, travel days, random conversations, strange little plans, and a creator who has been doing live internet long enough that the camera feels like part of his daily life.

The Twitch account still matters for the queue because it is a Partnered English-language channel with about 20.5K followers. SullyGnome listed 20,548 followers, Partnered status, mature flag on, English language, and a March 28, 2017 creation date. TwitchTracker also lists Partner status and the `IRL Comedic Variety Streamer Since 2015` profile line.

But BurgerPlanet's current live activity is mostly not on Twitch. Kick is where the recent stream hours are. So the honest profile is this: Twitch is part of the history, YouTube is the archive, and Kick is the current live room.

The current Burger Planet Asia run

The current hook is Burger Planet Asia. Kick search results showed a recent `BURGER PLANET ASIA` stream that ran more than 11 hours and had about 1.9K views. Streams Charts showed July streams around `BURGER PLANET ASIA`, `Floating Market & Clothes Shopping`, and `All-Day IRL Outside Adventure`, with 11-hour-plus airtime blocks.

StreamRecorder's Kick page makes the Asia stretch even clearer. It listed tracked videos like `Burger, Cris & Issa Exploring Bangkok Thailand`, `Huge Night Market - BURGER PLANET ASIA`, `Wooden Temple Tour & Aquarium`, `NEW Condo Tour!!!`, and multiple straight-up `BURGER PLANET ASIA` streams in June 2026.

That is BurgerPlanet's format at its best-understood level: take the stream somewhere, keep it running, let the day become the content. A floating market, clothes shopping, a condo tour, Bangkok, a night market, a temple, an aquarium, or just walking around can all become the show if chat is there for the person holding the camera.

The Asia run also gives newer viewers an easier entry point. You do not need every old internet reference to understand a travel IRL stream. You can just click in and see where he is, who he is with, and how long he has been live.

Kick is the live base right now

Kick is where BurgerPlanet's recent numbers are strongest. The Kick page showed 34.6K followers. Streams Charts' Kick profile listed Partner status, English language, USA, and recent stats around 187 hours streamed in 30 days, 44,766 hours watched, 240 average viewers, and a 2,460 viewer peak. Its FAQ also listed an all-time Kick peak of 22,679 viewers on January 22, 2025.

Those numbers line up with the stream schedule. Streams Charts showed long weekday blocks, often several hours a day, and the recent stream list was full of IRL sessions. StreamRecorder tracked 51 Kick streams, 407 hours and 56 minutes of airtime, 45 active days, and top categories of IRL with 45 tracked streams and Just Chatting with 6.

That is not occasional streaming. That is a lot of live hours. BurgerPlanet has a Twitch history, but the current creator story is much more about Kick IRL.

For fans, that matters because the channel's whole thing depends on being live long enough for random stuff to happen. Short clips can show the odd part, but the long hours are where the actual BurgerPlanet rhythm sits.

The Twitch chapter

BurgerPlanet's Twitch page is quieter now. Twitch snippets say he was last live last year, and SullyGnome showed zero Twitch streams in the most recent 30-day window. That does not make the Twitch page irrelevant. It just means the Twitch page is more historical than current.

TwitchTracker lists the channel as English-language and Partnered, created March 28, 2017. SullyGnome lists 20,548 followers and the same Partnered status. Twitch about snippets show 20.4K followers and the `IRL Comedic Variety Streamer Since 2015` line.

That history fits the broader IRL streaming timeline. BurgerPlanet has been around since the era when IRL streamers were figuring out what live mobile internet could even be. Some of that era was funny, some was uncomfortable, and a lot of it was completely unpolished. BurgerPlanet's name stayed attached to that world because he kept showing up.

The post does not need to relitigate every old clip or controversy. The current useful point is simpler: he has been doing IRL longer than a lot of current streamers have been doing anything live.

YouTube is the archive

BurgerPlanet's YouTube side is important because it shows how long the project has been running. The YouTube about page says `Youtuber Since 2007. IRL Streamer Since 2015.` Social Blade listed the `@burgerplanetlive` channel at 28.3K subscribers, about 9 million views, 2.2K videos, and a July 6, 2017 creation date for that handle.

The YouTube channel itself points to Kick, Twitch, Discord, Twitter, and more. It also has playlists around Burger Planet Asia, Burger Planet USA, Burger Planet Travels, Burger Planet Studios, and Burger Planet Network. That is a lot of structure for a creator people sometimes only remember through random IRL clips.

The Josh McCutchen Show channel is part of the same public web too. Search results listed it at about 8.46K subscribers and 377 videos, with Burger Planet Travels and Burger Planet Asia appearing there as well.

So even if the live platform changes, the archive gives the whole thing a longer shape. BurgerPlanet is not only whatever today's Kick stream title says. He is a creator with years of videos, streams, travel clips, and side channels behind him.

The public creator identity

BurgerPlanet is also Josh McCutchen in several public profiles. Instagram search results list Josh McCutchen at `burgerplanet`, with a bio around artwork, comedian, writer, artist, and BurgerPlanet on social media. The X profile says Burger Planet has been a YouTuber since 2007 and an IRL streamer since 2015, with location listed as the United States and Kick as the main website.

That mix is useful because BurgerPlanet is not a clean one-platform streamer brand. It is comedy, IRL, travel, live internet, YouTube, Kick, Twitch, and older web-personality baggage all in one pile.

Fans who like the channel usually know that. They are not looking for a polished gaming desk stream. They are watching because BurgerPlanet has a specific live-camera weirdness to him: part travel vlog, part street stream, part long-form hang, part unpredictable internet relic who still knows how to keep a stream running.

That can be polarizing, and it has always been polarizing. But it is also why he is still recognizable. A lot of creators from older IRL cycles vanished. BurgerPlanet kept moving platforms and kept streaming.

Why viewers watch BurgerPlanet

Viewers watch BurgerPlanet because the stream feels like it could go somewhere strange without warning. That is the whole IRL appeal. A market, a hotel room, a food stop, a random street, a new person, or a travel plan can become the reason people stay.

His channel is also very clearly not built for everyone. Some creators try to make every viewer comfortable. BurgerPlanet's appeal is rougher than that. The stream can be awkward, funny, slow, loud, boring for ten minutes, and then suddenly exactly the kind of weird live thing people clip.

The Asia streams show why the format still works. A long IRL travel stream gives viewers a place to drop in and out all day. You can check in during a floating market, come back during clothes shopping, leave, return later, and the stream is still moving.

That is why the long-hours number matters. BurgerPlanet's recent Kick activity is not about one clean viral moment. It is about staying live through enough ordinary and odd situations that viewers start treating the stream like a running channel they can keep open.

Where to follow BurgerPlanet

The main live place right now is Kick under `burgerplanet`, where the Burger Planet Asia streams and long IRL sessions are happening.

Twitch under `burgerplanet` is still the Partnered account that qualifies this backfill row, but public pages show it has been quiet recently. YouTube under Burger Planet is the better archive for long-term videos, travel uploads, and older material.

X, Instagram, and Discord are the supporting public pages. For stats, TwitchTracker and SullyGnome cover the Twitch history, while Streams Charts and StreamRecorder are more useful for current Kick activity.

The quick version

BurgerPlanet is a long-running IRL comedic variety streamer also publicly identified as Josh McCutchen, with a creator history that goes back to YouTube in 2007 and IRL streaming in 2015.

His Twitch account is Partnered, English-language, and around 20.5K followers, but it is mostly historical right now. The current live base is Kick, where public pages show 34.6K followers, heavy recent IRL hours, and the Burger Planet Asia run.

The channel is travel IRL, comedy, awkward live internet, long streams, Kick, YouTube archives, Twitch history, and a lot of camera-on daily randomness.

Streamable is happy to support BurgerPlanet's streams and help keep them running clean so he can stay live without dealing with tech issues.

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What does this guide help with?

A creator profile of BurgerPlanet, the long-running IRL comedic variety streamer whose current Burger Planet Asia run lives mostly on Kick after years across YouTube and Twitch.

How long should this setup take?

Most users can complete this in about 7 to 9 minutes, depending on their current setup.

Where should I start first?

Start from the first section in this guide and follow each instruction in order.

What if the issue still is not resolved?

Re-check each setting in this guide, restart OBS, and test again. If needed, contact Streamable support or join Discord for help with your exact setup.

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