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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Georgio Poullas
A creator profile of Georgio Poullas, the wrestler and live creator behind the Take Me Down challenge, Kick streams, YouTube videos, and combat-sports clips.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is Georgio Poullas?
Georgio Poullas is a wrestler, combat-sports creator, and live streamer who has turned one very easy-to-understand idea into a full online identity: try to take him down. His public YouTube channel, `@TheKidGeorgio`, showed 196K subscribers and more than 157 million views when checked on July 5, 2026. That channel is the clearest public proof of the size of his audience, and it also explains why fans recognize him even before they land on his Kick stream.
Fans know Georgio for the `Take Me Down` challenge format, where wrestling stops feeling like a closed gym sport and starts feeling like something anyone on the sidewalk can understand in three seconds. The premise is simple enough for Shorts, Reels, TikTok, YouTube, Kick clips, and live chat: Georgio is the wrestler, someone tries to put him on the mat, and everybody watching gets a quick read on whether that person had a real shot.
That simplicity is why the content travels. A lot of combat-sports creators need viewers to know records, promotions, weight classes, rankings, or old drama before the video makes sense. Georgio's best-known format does not need much homework. You can be a wrestling fan, an MMA fan, a gym person, or just someone scrolling through clips, and the hook still lands.
His public profiles make the identity pretty clear. The Kick page describes him as a wrestling content creator and points to `georgiopoullas.com`. Instagram shows a much larger social following, with the short bio line built around wrestling and the $1K takedown idea. Linktree points fans toward Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, training programs, Snapchat, and creator links. The live channel is one piece of a bigger wrestling-content machine.
How wrestling became the hook
Georgio's videos hit harder because the wrestling background is real. Cleveland State's public wrestling roster lists him as Georgio Poullas from Canfield, Ohio, at 157 pounds during the 2018-19 season. Rider's 2019-20 recruiting announcement listed him at 165/174 after Cleveland State and noted the high-school resume that wrestling fans care about: Ohio state champion at 152 as a junior, 2017 Ohio state runner-up, 2016 Ironman champion at 160, and top finishes at FloNationals and NHSCA.
That matters because the internet version of Georgio is loud and built for short clips, but the clips have a real base under them. He is not only pretending to wrestle for the camera. He has the college mat time, the high-school hardware, and the kind of movement that makes random challenge videos feel unfair in the funny way fans expect. When someone larger steps up, the viewer already knows the trick: size helps, but wrestling timing is its own thing.
The public format also does something good for wrestling. It makes the sport readable to people who did not grow up around singlets, brackets, folkstyle scoring, or tournament weekends. Viewers do not need to know what a re-shot is to understand that someone just got snapped down, sprawled on, turned, or dumped into a bad position. Georgio turns those details into moments that can fit inside a clip without making the sport feel smaller.
That is probably why his YouTube page has so many short, direct titles around teaching moves, fighting, challenging bigger athletes, and testing whether people can actually take him down. The channel page checked on July 5, 2026 showed hundreds of videos, a 196K-subscriber audience, and a huge public view count. The public numbers make it pretty clear that the wrestling challenge is not only a one-video bit.
The live side
Kick is where Georgio's wrestling videos turn into a live room. His public Kick profile showed `georgiopoullas` at 1.9K followers, last live within about a day of the July 5, 2026 check, with the page describing him as a wrestling content creator. That Kick count is smaller than the YouTube and Instagram audience, but it is useful because it shows the live version of the same thing fans already know from clips.
Recent public VOD tracking gives a better feel for the stream rhythm. StreamRecorder listed recent Georgio Poullas Kick streams with titles like `OPEN HOUSE,TRAINING, DAY OUT`, `TRAINING W JEANE MARIE`, and `GIRLS FIGHT NIGHT`. Those titles are exactly what fans would expect from someone who lives between wrestling rooms, creator houses, training days, and social IRL streams. It is not a detached desk stream. It reads like the camera is following whatever physical, social, and occasionally ridiculous thing is happening that day.
That is a strong live-streaming fit because Georgio's content already depends on reaction. You want to see the person step up, the crowd lean in, the quick scramble, and the immediate argument after. Live chat gives that format another layer. Fans can talk through whether someone had a real attempt, whether the size difference mattered, whether Georgio was playing around, or whether the next challenger looks dangerous.
His streams also cross into other creator circles. Public Jeanemarie VOD titles from late June and early July showed Georgio's name in multiple stream titles, including date-style and collaboration streams. That kind of crossover is normal in the Kick IRL world, where a creator's best live moments often come from group settings rather than solo broadcasts. Georgio fits that scene because he brings an instantly understandable role into the room: the wrestler everyone wants to test.
YouTube is the main archive
Georgio's YouTube channel is the best place to understand the whole creator arc. The page uses the handle `@TheKidGeorgio`, showed 196K subscribers, and carried the plain channel line `Take me down get $1000` when checked on July 5, 2026. That is not fancy branding, but it is extremely clear. New viewers know what they are clicking before they watch a single video.
The public video page also shows how he moves between short challenge clips, full fight stories, training moments, and combat-sports crossover content. Recent visible titles included RAF-related videos, wrestling move clips, and challenge-style uploads. The range matters because it keeps Georgio from being only a street-challenge account. The channel can hold quick clips for casual viewers and longer uploads for people who want the story around a match, training day, or matchup.
That mix is a smart fit for a wrestler turned creator. Wrestling is not always easy to package for mainstream audiences. Tournament footage can be technical, and live matches can move too fast for casual fans to understand the hand fighting, hip position, and scoring. Georgio's channel solves that by making the stakes immediate. Either someone takes him down or they do not. After that, the deeper wrestling layer is there for anyone who wants it.
It also gives fans a clean way to move between platforms. A viewer can find him through a YouTube Short, watch the longer YouTube archive, follow the Instagram clips, then show up on Kick when he is live. That is the creator loop around Georgio: short-form reach, a big public YouTube archive, social proof on Instagram, and live sessions where the same physical comedy and wrestling confidence can play out without editing.
The combat-sports chapter
Georgio's public profile is not only creator challenges. Real American Freestyle lists him as a United States middleweight with a 1-2 RAF record, age 27, from Canfield, Ohio. RAF also lists Arman Tsarukyan vs. Georgio Poullas as a middleweight matchup on the RAF 07 event page. For fans who mostly know Georgio through social clips, that gives the online character a more formal combat-sports chapter.
That does not mean the live content suddenly turns into a traditional athlete documentary. Georgio's appeal is still very internet-native. He brings wrestling into spaces where the crowd might be half fans, half challengers, half people waiting for something weird to happen. The RAF profile just adds another public layer: he is willing to put the creator persona into scored competition, where the result is not only decided by comments.
That is a hard lane to sit in. Too much serious-sports framing can make the content stiff. Too much creator chaos can make the wrestling feel fake. Georgio's public pages sit in the middle. The college roster and RAF profile tell fans he can really wrestle. The YouTube and Kick pages tell fans he can make that wrestling watchable for people who would never open a normal wrestling bracket.
For fans, that combination is the point. They are not only watching a wrestler, and they are not only watching a streamer. They are watching someone drag wrestling into public places, creator houses, live streams, and short-form feeds, then dare people to find out how hard the sport actually is when the other person knows what they are doing.
Where to follow Georgio
The main public archive is YouTube at `@TheKidGeorgio`, where Georgio's channel showed 196K subscribers and more than 157 million public views on July 5, 2026. That is the best first stop for fans who want the full spread of challenge clips, wrestling videos, fight stories, and longer uploads.
Kick at `georgiopoullas` is the live room. The public page showed 1.9K followers and recent live activity, with VODs around training, day-out streams, and creator collaborations. That is where fans can look when they want the less edited version of Georgio's wrestling-content life.
Instagram at `@georgiopoullas` is the biggest public social page in the current profile, with the bio built around wrestling and the takedown challenge. Linktree at `Gpoullas` ties together Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, training-program links, Snapchat, and other public creator paths, so it works as the easiest map if someone is trying to find the right account.
The quick version: Georgio Poullas is a Canfield, Ohio wrestler turned creator with a 196K-subscriber YouTube channel, a Kick live room, a large Instagram following, public college wrestling roots, and a content format that makes wrestling easy for casual fans to understand fast.
Streamable is happy to support Georgio Poullas'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 Georgio Poullas, the wrestler and live creator behind the Take Me Down challenge, Kick streams, YouTube videos, and combat-sports clips.
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