Skip to main content
Russell Harvard avatar

Russell Harvard

@russellharvard1

0

Subscribers

Advertisement
PostWhatsAppReddit
Advertisement

Views

0

Videos

0

API Count

0

To 10

10
Advertisement

Live Subscriber Growth Chart

Loading Advanced Analytics...

Advertisement

About Russell Harvard

Russell Harvard fell in love with music when his mother bought him cassette tapes for his 8th birthday-Madonna & INXS. He got smitten with acting around the same time. Born in Texas and is third-generation deaf, Russell enjoyed acting & music growing up and pursued theater arts at Gallaudet University. He started his acting career with a bang, playing Daniel Day-Lewis’s son in PT Anderson’s epic “There Will Be Blood.” From there, Russell guest starred on TV: CSI:NY, Fringe, Switched at Birth and played the popular hit man Mr. Wrench in FX's Fargo. He has been applauded for his stage work in shows like “Tribes,” “I Was Almost Alive With You,” "King Lear" and "To Kill a Mockingbird,” making historic strides for deaf actors. Russell’s talent and charisma shines in all of his roles. It can be seen here, where his skill for translating and performing songs in American Sign Language (ASL) is on display-you can view his beautiful and poetic signing from Pink and Madonna to Broadway faves.

Advertisement

Embed on Your Website

Do you want to put Russell Harvard's realtime subscriber count on your website? Use the embed code below or add the direct URL as a browser source in OBS.

Latest Video

IRONIC

by Russell Harvard

Click to load YouTube player

IRONIC

Uploaded

1,092

Views

39

Likes

5

Comments

Advertisement

About RealtimeSubCount.com

RealtimeSubCount.com tracks live YouTube subscriber activity with a faster page shell, local caching, and analytics modules that do not block the main counter from loading. This page is designed to keep the count visible first while the deeper charts and supporting widgets stream in behind it.

FAQ

The page combines cached API data and fast refresh polling to stay responsive while still tracking changes closely. Exact public YouTube counts can lag, but the page updates far more frequently than the default channel view.

The chart appends new subscriber readings every few seconds. That gives you a rolling growth trace instead of a static count snapshot.

Yes. The embed panel on this page includes both the iframe snippet for websites and the direct URL for OBS or other browser-source tools.