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Streamable Creator Spotlight: MeesterKeem
A creator profile of MeesterKeem, the Twitch Partner, IRL streamer, producer, cameraman, and former Agent00 tech director bringing a production eye to NYC streams.
Written by Ryan Trark
Who is MeesterKeem?
MeesterKeem is a Twitch Partner, IRL streamer, creator, producer, and cameraman with one of the more interesting paths in live streaming right now. He is not only someone who points a phone at the city and hopes something happens. His whole public profile sits between two sides of the same job: being the person on camera, and being the person who knows how to make the camera side actually run.
His own production site introduces him as a creator, producer, and cameraman who specializes in live streaming and broadcasting. It also lists the kind of production roles he has picked up around the space: technical director, broadcast director, lead camera operator, assistant camera, creative, operations, and personal assistant. That is a very specific resume for a Twitch streamer, and it explains a lot about why people know him.
Viewers love watching MeesterKeem because he feels like someone who understands the stream from every angle. He can be the guy talking to chat in the middle of New York, but he also clearly knows what happens when the bitrate drops, the camera angle is wrong, the audio is weird, or a live plan needs someone calm behind it. That makes his channel feel less random than a lot of IRL streams, even when the day itself is loose.
The production background
Before a lot of viewers knew MeesterKeem as a live IRL name, they saw his work around other creators. His site says he worked with several top Twitch creators and, most notably, worked with AMP creator Agent00 as a full-time tech director. His X bio also says he was previously a tech director and producer for Agent00.
That matters because Agent00 streams are not tiny little bedroom broadcasts. The AMP and basketball/creator crowd moves fast, pulls big attention, and expects the person behind the camera to understand pacing. When someone works in that environment, they are learning more than how to press go live. They are learning how to keep a stream readable when people are moving, talking over each other, changing locations, and doing things that were not in the plan five minutes earlier.
MeesterKeem's site also says he had four years of both IRL and desktop live streaming experience before leaning harder into behind-camera work. That detail makes the whole story make more sense. He was not just a technical hire walking into creator culture from the outside. He had already been live himself. He knew what it feels like to deal with chat, make a boring stretch useful, and keep talking when nothing cinematic is happening yet.
That is probably why fans read him as more than a cameraman who started streaming. His public identity is built around the mix: creator, producer, cameraman. He knows the show side and the setup side. That is rare, and it gives him a real reason to stand out in IRL streaming, where the best streams often look casual only because someone already solved a hundred tiny production problems in the background.
NYC, Pokemon, watch parties, chat
MeesterKeem's current Twitch bio calls him an IRL streamer exploring NYC and beyond, looking for ways to enjoy life and connect with people, even if it means making a fool of himself on the internet. That is a pretty clean description of the channel. The stream is built around movement, small interactions, city energy, and whatever the day gives him.
Recent public stream logs show how wide that can get. TwitchMetrics listed IRL streams around a Pokemon card store, a Trainer Court visit, a FIFA-style Mexico vs Ecuador watch party, and a stream title about helping a New York stranger start a Pokemon collection. Streams Charts also showed a recent Just Chatting title around a New York heat wave, clip queue, reactions, and community games.
That range is the fun part. One MeesterKeem stream can feel like a city walk. Another can become a Pokemon card day. Another can turn into a sports watch party where the chat is half there for the game and half there for Keem's reactions. Then he can go back inside and run clips or community games like a regular desktop streamer. It does not feel like a hard rebrand every time the category changes.
The Pokemon angle is not just a random one-off either. His Linktree had a Pokemon Day Game Show link, and recent stream titles kept pulling card shop and collection ideas into the IRL stream. That gives the channel a little collector-story side: fans are not only watching him walk around, they are watching him pick places, meet people, and turn a normal errand into something the chat can follow.
Why fans keep up
Viewers love watching MeesterKeem because the stream has actual motion without feeling fake. He can go outside, talk to people, change plans, run into something weird, and still keep the broadcast feeling held together. That is a harder skill than it sounds. A lot of IRL streams either feel overplanned or totally lost. Keem usually sits in the middle, where the day can breathe but the stream still has a person steering it.
There is also a very obvious camera-brain thing in the way people talk about him. Fans know he has worked behind the scenes, and that changes how they watch him. If he is doing a live walk, a bit, a watch party, or a collab, there is always a sense that he understands why a shot is funny, why a setup is awkward, and why a tiny production choice can make the whole stream easier to follow.
That is why the Agent00 chapter still matters even when the post is about Keem himself. It is part of his story, but it is not the whole story. Being known as the tech director for a major creator gets people to recognize the name. Going live himself is what lets people see his own personality, his own humor, and his own taste in what a stream can be.
His community also has a name around it. Linktree lists a Discord called The Nation of Wakeemda, which is exactly the kind of inside-name that tells you a channel has regulars. People are not only following the analytics line. They are following the guy, the jokes, the places he goes, and the weird little stream arcs that only make full sense if you have been watching.
The numbers
Public trackers put MeesterKeem comfortably over the 10,000-follower mark that got him into this backfill. TwitchMetrics listed him at 45,210 Twitch followers when checked, with 94 hours streamed in the last 30 days, 48,037 hours watched, 511 average viewers, and a 2,635 peak. It also ranked him around the top 150 IRL channels for the period and around the top 60 English IRL channels.
Streams Charts showed a similar public picture, with 45,210 followers, Partner status, 90 hours and 15 minutes streamed in the last 30 days, a 515 average, a 3,682 recent peak, and an all-time Twitch peak of 10,102 from March 27, 2024. The exact numbers move by source and timing, but the shape is clear: this is not a tiny experiment. Keem has a real live audience.
TwitchTracker listed his account as created on April 11, 2020, Partner status, English language, and a bio centered on IRL streaming around NYC and beyond. It also showed a 30-day performance summary with 90 hours streamed, 513 average viewers, a 3,682 peak, and 1,500 followers gained.
Outside Twitch, the public pages are bigger than a small streamer usually has. Instagram search metadata showed about 77,000 followers and the same creator, producer, cameraman identity. YouTube search metadata showed the official MeesterKeem channel with roughly 26,000 subscribers and hundreds of videos, including IRL streaming gear/review content and clips. X showed a smaller but active page, with the same LA/NYC production identity.
Where to follow MeesterKeem
Twitch is the main place to watch MeesterKeem live, especially for NYC IRL streams, Pokemon card days, watch parties, reactions, and community streams.
YouTube is useful if you want the edited side and the archive around his IRL ideas. His channel has hundreds of uploads, and the public metadata points to both clips and practical IRL streaming content.
Instagram, X, TikTok, Discord, and the production site are all collected through his Linktree. That hub is the easiest way to find the current versions without guessing which account is real.
The quick version
MeesterKeem is a Twitch Partner, IRL streamer, producer, and cameraman based around the LA/NYC live-streaming world.
Fans know him from both sides of the camera: his own streams, his NYC IRL content, his Pokemon and watch-party arcs, and his previous production work with Agent00.
His public stats show a channel with more than 45,000 Twitch followers, regular IRL hours, recent averages around the low 500s, and a community that follows him across Twitch, YouTube, Instagram, X, TikTok, Discord, and his production site.
Streamable is happy to support MeesterKeem'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 MeesterKeem, the Twitch Partner, IRL streamer, producer, cameraman, and former Agent00 tech director bringing a production eye to NYC streams.
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