A sea of teenage girls screamed his name, mascara streaming down their cheeks. Many of them had camped outside the Mall of America the night before to secure a spot at the front of the line.
The cause of their hysteria: Connor Franta, 22-year-old YouTube superstar. As he entered the mall's rotunda on Tuesday evening last week, 1,200 fans wailed in unison, each clutching his new memoir and waiting breathlessly for their chance to meet him.
"The obsession is real right now," said Franta, his smile a mixture of excitement and disbelief. "It's incredible because I can't think of a celebrity who I would do that for."
Franta is a celebrity of the social media age — his fame not tied to movies, music or television. He's just a guy with a camera and an Internet connection, his celeb status championed by a generation of kids with short attention spans who like their stars accessible and relatable.
Franta's home state was the first stop on a national tour to launch "A Work in Progress" — a memoir on his Minnesota childhood and his path to becoming a YouTube sensation with 4.4 million subscribers.
Unlike a lot of viral YouTube stars, Franta doesn't have a gimmick, per se. He doesn't sing and he's not a comedy act like ultra-popular Jenna Marbles (whose most viewed video is a tutorial on how to trick people into thinking you're hot).
Franta's YouTube channel is essentially a weekly video blog about his life — a mini reality-TV show.
"I like the fact that I can upload any video about anything," he said. "I literally made a video about my bookshelf the other week."