Andrew Michael Baron (born 1970) is the founder of Rocketboom, video aggregator Magma, the non-profit Humanwire, and the co-founder of Know Your Meme. Baron has taught undergraduate and graduate classes at Parsons School of Design and was teaching IDTech at M.I.T. when he came up with the idea for Rocketboom.
Baron holds a BA in Philosophy from Bates College and a master of Fine Arts in Design and Technology from Parsons School of Design.
In 1999, Baron was the owner of a visual and performing arts gallery, Movements Gallery on 6th Street in Austin, Texas which the Austin Chronicle named 'Best New Multi-Disciplinary Space in Austin' in the 'Best of Austin's Critics Poll'.
An active music composer throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Baron scored numerous scores for Austin-area artists, including "Mad About Harry", a film by AMFILMS awarded as a Hollywood Film Festival, 2000 finalist. He was appointed by the City of Austin Arts Commission to serve as a Mixed Arts Advisory Panelist, 2001.
After releasing Rocketboom in late 2004, Baron established himself as one of the first vloggers and arguably one of the most influential. With Rocketboom, Baron built one of the first large audiences around a video show, and went on to generate the first large-scale advertising deals.
On August 19, 2005, Baron was interviewed on CBS Evening News. In an "Eye on America", segment CBS veteran Jim Axelrod commented on the effort at daily news coverage on a limited budget and Baron's early grasp of the next Internet wave. "You know what they call that? Vision."
Baron directed a portion of "Killer", an episode of ' which aired February 2, 2006.
Steve Jobs featured Baron's Rocketboom on stage when releasing the video iPod and again when releasing the Apple TV.
In March 2006, Baron commented on the sale of a week of advertising for $40,000 on eBay in Brandweek:
In 2008, Baron created the first version of the Know Your Meme database, to accompany a spin-off show he created and produced for Rocketboom.
In 2011, Baron sold Know Your Meme to Cheezburger in a reported "low seven-figure deal".
In 2015, Baron founded Humanwire, a humanitarian platform based in Boulder, Colorado, designed to connect individual donors directly with refugee families from regions including Syria, Turkey, Lebanon, Greece, and Jordan. Media coverage described the organization as enabling donors to support housing, education, medical care, and other essential needs while maintaining direct communication with recipient families.
The platformâÂÂs model emphasized direct, one-to-one relationships between donors and families, distinguishing it from traditional humanitarian aid organizations. Coverage from regional and national outlets highlighted HumanwireâÂÂs grassroots approach and its use of digital tools combined with on-the-ground workers to facilitate real-time support and communication.
Activities also included in-person educational efforts, such as the establishment of the Butterfly Effect Center, a brick-and-mortar school in Lebanon for displaced Syrian children.
In 2017, reporting by The Denver Post raised allegations of financial mismanagement, including delayed aid distributions, which led to criminal charges against Baron.
Baron disputed the charges and the reporting. Though the Denver Post coverage ended in 2017, a 2020 review by âÂÂâÂÂThe Principal PostâÂÂâ reported that it found no evidence that donor funds had been misappropriated and stated that âÂÂthe facts do not supportâ earlier allegations, also noting that the criminal case had been dismissed
BaronâÂÂs case in Boulder was dismissed and sealed in January 2020 and his arrest records were removed in March, 2020.
In 2026, Baron developed and began touring Meme Talks, a lecture series examining the history and cultural evolution of memes, tracing their development from early forms of communication to the modern internet era.
Baron's work had been recognized by the Webbys, the Vloggies and Streamys.
Andrew Baron is the son of trial lawyer Fred Baron. Andrew Baron made international news again in 2008, when he used his blog to plead with a drug company to help save his father's life.