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Streamable Creator Spotlight: jandro

A creator profile of jandro, the Kick IRL and Just Chatting streamer with long live hours, 20K-plus followers, clips, TTS, and a self-aware Kick bio.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightjandrokickirljust chattinglive streaming

Who is jandro?

jandro is a Kick-first streamer fans know for IRL, Just Chatting, long live blocks, and a channel bio that does not try to sound polished. His Kick about page says he is 27 and calls himself the best IRL streamer on Kick, with a tiny `:3` at the end, which tells you the tone pretty fast. It is cocky, unserious, and very aware of the joke.

Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed jandro above 20K followers on Kick. Kick listed the channel around 20.7K followers, while Streams Charts listed the Kick follower count above 20K too. KickBot also showed the same general range, which made the follower proof pretty straightforward.

Streams Charts lists jandro as an English-language Kick Partner connected to the USA. The same public profile showed a recent 30-day window with hundreds of hours streamed, a 7K-plus peak, and more than 100K hours watched. The exact live page can move around depending on when you check it, but the overall picture is clear: this is not a tiny channel sitting on an old follower count.

Viewers love jandro because his stream feels built for people who already understand Kick IRL. The channel is direct, loose, sometimes 18-plus, and not trying to be a clean creator portfolio. You open it expecting chat noise, live reactions, TTS, media, random titles, and a creator who is fine letting the room get weird.

Kick is the main room

Everything around jandro points back to Kick first. The channel page, about page, subscribe page, Kick clips, KickBot profile, and Streams Charts profile all point to the same handle. Twitch or Instagram search results can get noisy around similar names, so the cleanest way to follow him is the Kick page under `jandro`.

That page is also where the channel's personality is clearest. The profile marks the content for mature viewers, puts Just Chatting and Counter-Strike 2 near recent live context, and shows a bio that reads more like something typed into chat than something written for a media kit.

The about page also shows public TTS and media pricing text. That matters because it tells you what kind of stream room jandro is running. Chat is not just watching quietly. Viewers are meant to poke the broadcast, send messages, buy attention, and add to the mess of the stream.

That setup fits Kick IRL well. The live room is not only about what jandro is doing on camera. It is also about how chat interrupts, what gets clipped, what title he chooses, and how fast a normal stream can turn into something people want to send around later.

The numbers show a heavy live schedule

The biggest thing in jandro's public stats is the amount of time live. Streams Charts showed 268 hours and 40 minutes streamed in the last 30 days, which is basically a full-time broadcast schedule. It also listed 122,371 hours watched, 456 average viewers, and a 7,265 peak in that same recent window.

Those are the kind of numbers that change how a channel feels. A streamer who goes live once a week needs every stream to have a clear event. A streamer who is live this much can build a room around repetition, inside jokes, regular viewers, and long stretches where people drop in just to see what is happening.

Streams Charts also listed jandro's all-time Kick peak at 84,280 viewers on December 16, 2025. That kind of peak does not mean every normal stream looks like that, but it does show that the channel has had at least one huge moment in its history.

For fans, the regular 30-day stats matter more than the big peak. A large peak can come from one event. Hundreds of hours live, a few hundred average viewers, and steady clips tell you there is an actual live habit around the channel.

The stream is loose on purpose

jandro's stream does not come across like a neat show with careful segments. Public Kick and Streams Charts pages show a mix of IRL, Just Chatting, and gaming context, with titles that feel half like stream plans and half like inside jokes. That is normal for his side of Kick.

The channel bio does a lot of work here. Calling himself the best IRL streamer on Kick is not a neutral description. It is a bit. It gives the channel a loud first impression and lets viewers know that jandro is not trying to come off humble or corporate.

That does not mean every stream is only IRL walking around. Recent public pages also showed Counter-Strike 2 and Just Chatting context. The useful way to read the channel is personality first, category second. The category tells you what is on screen, but jandro is still the reason people are there.

Fans who like that style usually want a room that feels live in the messy sense. They want a creator who reacts quickly, lets chat pull the stream sideways, and does not sand down every part of the broadcast until it feels fake.

Clips are part of the channel

Kick's clips page and KickBot both show how jandro's stream gets chopped into smaller pieces. Some clips are tiny, some barely have views, and some titles look like they were made seconds after the thing happened. That is honestly what a lot of live clip culture looks like.

Recent Kick clip titles around the channel included `MOMENTS BEFORE DISASTER`, `release the nick white files`, `42`, and `GG`. Older clip pages and KickBot entries show the same idea: short snapshots pulled out of long streams, not polished uploads with a full YouTube setup.

That clip shape fits the long-hour stats. If someone is live for hundreds of hours in a month, most of the broadcast is not going to become a perfect highlight. Viewers can grab the odd part, the funny part, the strange title, or whatever chat keeps repeating.

That also keeps the channel discoverable for people who were not in the room live. They might see one clip, click through to the Kick page, and realize jandro is already live again.

Why viewers keep showing up

Viewers keep showing up for jandro because the channel feels like it could turn at any point. Some streamers are good because you know exactly what you are getting. jandro is more about checking in and seeing what the room has turned into.

The self-description helps too. A lot of creators write bios that sound like they were copied from a sponsorship deck. jandro's bio is short, loud, and kind of ridiculous. That is better for his audience because it gives people the exact energy before they even press play.

The long hours also build familiarity. When someone is live that often, viewers start to know the jokes, the donors, the random titles, the chat habits, and the way the creator reacts when the room starts pushing him. You do not need every stream to be a giant event because the channel itself becomes the place people check.

That is the difference between a follower count and a live audience. Public pages show both for jandro: the 20K-plus follower base and enough recent watch time to suggest people are actually spending time there.

Where to follow jandro

The main page is Kick under `jandro`. That is where the follower count, live player, about page, clips, categories, mature-viewer flag, and subscription page all sit together.

Streams Charts is the easiest public stats page if you want follower count, hours watched, average viewers, peak viewers, and recent activity in one place. KickBot is useful for clip browsing and another public check on the channel's profile and follower range.

If you are trying to understand the channel quickly, start with the Kick about page, then check the Streams Charts overview, then look at the clip pages. That gives you the bio, the scale, and the actual flavor of the stream without needing to sit through a full multi-hour broadcast first.

The quick version

jandro is a Kick-first IRL and Just Chatting streamer with a 20K-plus follower channel, a self-aware bio, mature-viewer context, public TTS/media callouts, and a live room that leans into chat-driven noise.

Public pages checked on July 5, 2026 showed jandro above 20K Kick followers, with Streams Charts listing heavy recent airtime, hundreds of average viewers, and an all-time Kick peak above 80K.

Fans watch jandro because the channel feels genuinely live: long hours, loose titles, Kick clips, chat interruptions, and a creator who does not try to make the room feel cleaner than it is.

Streamable is happy to support jandro'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 jandro, the Kick IRL and Just Chatting streamer with long live hours, 20K-plus followers, clips, TTS, and a self-aware Kick bio.

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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