A 21-year-old woman living alone with her pet snake in a van聽traveling around the state of California聽might not sound like a recipe for viral fame, but since she uploaded her first video barely two months ago, has become a YouTube sensation.
Eliana is the closest anyone has come to becoming an overnight star on YouTube. She garnered聽more than 1.3 million subscribers in her first three weeks and is projected to hit 2 million in the coming month. Though she鈥檇聽posted just three videos聽by the end of July, hers was the most subscribed-to YouTube channel in America that month. 鈥淚f you haven鈥檛 heard of Jennelle Eliana, you might want to open your ears, because she鈥檚 just about everywhere right now,鈥澛燚an Courrier, host of Creator Fundamentals, a YouTube channel that provides tips on audience聽growth, .
Part of what makes Eliana鈥檚 success so fascinating is that she essentially came out of nowhere. It takes most YouTube vloggers years to gain an audience, but Eliana, a seemingly average girl living in a beat-up van, did it in a matter of weeks. Other YouTubers have produced videos on the phenomenon, and have devised elaborate (and false) But in reality, there鈥檚 nothing nefarious about Eliana鈥檚 meteoric rise.
Eliana never even started out looking for fame. As a teenager growing up in Sacramento, California, she became interested in sustainable living and spent hours watching other vanlife YouTubers. After graduating high school in the summer of 2016, she got a job working for a sporting goods company in Silicon Valley (she prefers not to name the company over ) and enrolled in community college part-time to study marine biology. She moved into an apartment with a roommate, and was stuck paying $900 per month for a home she really only used for sleep. After seeing others live out of their vans, she was interested in living more sustainably herself.
So, in July 2017, she pulled together $2,500 and purchased a 1995 GMC Vandura Explorer. She spent a month refurbishing it, borrowing tools from her former employer to get the job done. She , including a hammock to sleep in while she was finishing the conversion. By January 2018, she鈥檇聽constructed a proper bed. The transformation from van to home included ripping out the van鈥檚 original carpet and adding three types of insulation (Great Stuff home spray, a layer of Reflectix, and Polyiso foam board), a steel bar sink, and storage. Because Eliana only uses her sink for brushing her teeth and washing her face, the Valterra manual hand pump attached to her faucet is connected to a 64-ounce聽Hydroflask, as opposed to a bigger water tank. For the majority of her water needs she relies on a seven-gallon plastic tank that she fills up with purified drinking water.
Eliana forwent a stove buildout in favor of a Dometic CFX 28-inch compressor fridge refrigerator, where she keeps snacks. For 99 percent聽of her meals, she eats out. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a luxury I can afford now that I don鈥檛 pay rent,鈥澛爏he . She added Velcro dots around her front windows to attach felt-covered pads to keep out the sun and stay warm while she鈥檚 sleeping. She keeps her shoes in a basket, her clothes in trunks, and a pop-up 鈥渄ining room table鈥 in a pouch behind the van鈥檚 passenger seat.
The most unique thing about Eliana鈥檚 van build, though, is her custom snake terrarium. She added sliding glass doors to a kitchen shelving unit, and uses an eraser wedge to keep them closed. Because her pet snake, a ball python named Alfredo, needs to keep warm, Eliana installed a heating pad below the makeshift tank connected to a thermostat that runs off the main car battery.
For two years after Eliana moved into her van, she remained in Silicon Valley and still worked her 9-to-5 hourly聽job at the sporting goods company. She documented some of her local travels around California on Instagram, but it wasn鈥檛 until June 26 of this year that she finally launched a YouTube channel.
鈥淪up dudes and dudettes, this is my crib,鈥澛爏he at the time. 鈥淚鈥檓 20 years old and I鈥檝e been living in this self-converted 1995 GMC Vandura Explorer for sometime now. I鈥檓 so stoked to finally be here on YouTube. Stay tuned for some wild and not so wild adventures.鈥澛燞er , 鈥淰AN TOUR | SOLO FEMALE TRAVELER lives VANLIFE with PET SNAKE!鈥 took off almost immediately.
Within her first month she had crossed one million followers and has since uploaded four more videos, mostly answering common questions about how 聽(she eats out), (at a local gym), and (she didn鈥檛 want to spend half her income on rent). Eliana explains that she does, in fact, live in the van and has for a while, despite the conspiracies calling her a fake. 鈥淚 have been through a lot to make this my reality and I find it so ridiculous that people are accusing me of not living in my van because I鈥檓 too pretty or my van is too clean,鈥澛爏he says in . 鈥淭hank you! I work really hard to keep myself and my van clean and I鈥檓 glad someone noticed.鈥澛燱ith every upload, Eliana鈥檚 fan base grows.
YouTube鈥檚 recommendation algorithm is powerful, and Eliana has grown so fast mainly聽because her videos are a confluence of everything YouTube viewers seem to be loving right now, which almost guarantees her a certain level of distribution. As more people watch and respond positively with likes and comments, YouTube spreads her content even further.
One of Eliana鈥檚 biggest draws is that she鈥檚 a solo female traveler, a category that is exploding on YouTube this year. Since 2016, uploads with 鈥渟olo travel鈥 in the title have risen 80 percent, year over year, with 2019 being the largest year yet, according to YouTube. And of the top 100 most viewed videos with 鈥渟olo travel鈥 in the title, over聽70 percent were uploaded by women. There鈥檚 a growing interest from YouTube鈥檚 wide community in not just what it鈥檚 like to travel alone as a woman, but also as a woman of color. Black women are creating travel guides and聽trip diaries, and providing helpful information for those seeking to replicate their lifestyle. The majority of the top solo female travel content on YouTube is from the vanlife community, with videos related to vanlife having increased聽more than 4.5 times since 2017.
Eliana鈥檚 videos are lighthearted, lo-fi, and, though they fall into the broader vanlife and travel vlogger categories, they鈥檙e also a reaction against the content many travel influencers trade in. Eliana doesn鈥檛 own any fancy equipment; she . Because her van doesn鈥檛 have Wi-Fi, she is often slow to upload. Her content is relatable to hoards of her Generation Z peers. 鈥淚f you look at other videos of vanlife they鈥檙e all very similar, cinemagraphic shots of places they鈥檝e traveled. They have expensive build outs and vans, the destinations they go to are luxurious,鈥澛燛liana says. 鈥淚 try to be as realistic as I can be and very candid about my life. I don鈥檛 travel to all these amazing crazy destinations….聽I have a cheap, beat-up van that I tried to make as cozy as possible.鈥 Her pet snake also sets her apart. 鈥淓veryone else has dogs,鈥澛爏he says.
Eliana stressed that she鈥檚 a huge fan of the vanlife community, but many of the channels she grew up watching featured millennial couples who had burned out of the corporate world and wanted to uproot their lives to travel. Eliana says that for her, the lifestyle isn鈥檛 as much about travel as it is just not having to pay rent or buy into some corporate hierarchy right out of school. Eighty percent of Eliana鈥檚 subscribers are women aged 18 to 24, and her channel provides them with an alternative path that鈥檚 more realistic to what they might be able to achieve.
Her interest in sustainability has also helped her grow. Eliana thrifts much of her clothing and resells it on , a popular clothing resale app, under the handle @ElianasGasMoney. 鈥淚 try my hardest to cut down on waste and single-use products,鈥澛爏he says. 鈥淚 use reusable bags and cups.鈥 These interests play well into YouTube鈥檚 algorithm. Videos on sustainable living have doubled this year, according to YouTube. 鈥淚 feel like now, we鈥檙e starting to be exposed to more content about what our world is going through with pollution, climate change,鈥澛燛liana says. 鈥淚 feel like the younger generation is putting a foot down and making changes to their lifestyle so that we can all collectively make the world a better place, which is awesome.鈥
Last month, Eliana finally quit her day job at the sporting goods company and decided to go all in on YouTube. According to , a YouTube analytics platform, she could be making as much as $27,700 per month on ads. Eliana says she鈥檇 also love to partner with like-minded brands on sponsored content in the future. She never anticipated becoming a YouTube star, but now sees it as a huge opportunity. She is on an indefinite break from school and already planning her first big trip to several national parks this fall, all the while adjusting to her newfound fame. 鈥淚 honestly have no words, I still don鈥檛 think I understand how crazy this is,鈥澛爏he says. 鈥淧eople recognize me in every city I鈥檝e been going to.鈥
As her fan base grows, she鈥檚 also managed to win over many old-timers in the vanlife and travel community on YouTube. They see Eliana鈥檚 videos as further validation that their alternative way of living is gaining mass appeal. Jordan and Kaylee, a YouTuber vlogger couple who run a vanlife channel called , commented on Eliana鈥檚 success in a . 鈥淜nowing that one of her videos has more views than our entire channel, we want to tell you how that makes us feel,鈥澛燡ordan said. 鈥淭o be honest guys, it鈥檚 freaking awesome.鈥