TwitchCon 2024 was a total whirlwind. During the three-day-long convention for the streaming platform, I saw drag performances, fake debates, wild cosplays, and a Chevron installation. I brushed elbows with big Twitch streamers like Hasan Piker, Caroline Kwan, JuiceBoxx, Deere, and moreâall while incredibly jet-lagged.
One of my last interviews was Will Neff, a streamer and actor who is, notably, dating Kwan. Heâs the host of the TwitchCon live show Name Your Price and runs in a close circle with Piker, AustinShow, and QTCinderella. Heâs also an unabashed New York Jets fan, a former G4 host, and a motor-mouthed ham. Neff, who has a masterâs degree in interactive media, wasrecently banned from Twitch for 48 hours after streaming The Shawshank Redemption during his âfilm schoolâ sessions.
I sat down with him before that ban, on the second day of TwitchCon 2024, to have a light-hearted discussion about *checks notes* sucking dicks, being from Long Island, and his friendship with Hasan Piker. Oh, and his undying love for The Binding of Isaac. He also very kindly gave me a bottle of his hot sauce, though TSA took it from meâsorry, Will.
Our conversation, edited for clarity and brevity, is below.
Alyssa Mercante: This is not anything serious. Iâve had enough serious interviews.
Will Neff: You got it.
AM: Wait, did you go to school for game design?
WN: No, well, so I went to school for a major that is known as Interactive Media. Which was kind of very millennial-coded in that it was trying to repurpose traditional forms of media for the web. And so I had a film emphasis and my focus was taking film elements and putting them on the web. And so, my thesis at the end of my masterâs was using a program called Galahad to make a choose-your-own-adventure movie⊠For my masterâs program I went to Cuba and I shot a documentary about their state-funded organic farming program.
AM: Cool.
WN: Um, and how like this, these very small, um, kind of urban farms in Cuba outperform farms in the United States, which is like fascinating âcause they have almost nothing⊠But yeah. I used to be, you know, fun and worldly and now I sit at my desk and make jokes about sucking my own dick. So.
AM: I think thatâs great. I have a masterâs and maybe I should do the same.
WN: Make jokes about sucking your dick?
[Both laugh]
AM: Or at least just, you know, not do smart shit anymore. âcause it doesnât really pay.
WN: Yeah, thatâs, well I was a screenwriter for years and thatâs, thatâs ultimately how I found my way to streaming is it just didnât pay.
AM: Yeah and you did the new version of G4.
WM: I did G4, I was at BuzzFeed. Um, Fullscreen.
AM: Youâve done all the media stuff
WN: Yeah.

AM: Iâm not saying you would condone everyone quitting their jobs and doing something like this, but like, could you have even imagined that this would be where you are, considering what you did before? Or does it feel like a natural sort of progression?
WN: No, I couldnât have imagined it⊠I think a lot of people kind of in our age range, we got saddled with a lot of the ideas of our parents. And one of those, predominantly, is that you have to work for someone.
And especially in entertainment, thatâs such a sticky wicket because itâs a very predatory business. And you are, as a young creative person, youâre so eager to prove whatever demons wrong that you haveâyour family, friends, whoeverâthat you have talent and that you can make a living out of this, that youâre willing to put yourself through levels of discomfort that I donât think any other profession would tolerate.
Especially from what weâre getting paid. Ultimately, I think that comes from the mentality. You know, my dadâs 94 years old. And this mentality thatâs like, âWith a firm handshake and good work ethic, you can have a home,â and itâs just not that anymore.
AM: You guys fucked the economy.
WN: Right. Itâs not what we inherited. So I think I worked for so many people, you know, I created such great work for BuzzFeed and Fullscreen and for so many others, and I would go home with less than $30,000 a year, which in LA is not very livable.
Ultimately, the way I found my way to Twitch was I was about to quit everything and go be a beekeeper with my cousin. âCause we still own a farm in Michigan, and my cousin is my closest family member. And I was literally making plans and Hasan Piker got me drunk one night and was like, âYouâre gonna buy a gaming PC and youâre gonna stream, bitch.â And I was like, âNo, I have $2,000 in my bank account, itâs over.â
But with that $2,000, I bought a Core Power PC from Walmart, Iâm pretty sure. And I started streaming, and it was like a love affair because Iâve always been a performer and Iâve always been an entertainer. And I get so much from, you know, creating happiness or laughter in people. And I was getting that immediate feedback loop, that Twitch feedback loop is so quick. Itâs like the smack of social media where the moment you put content out, youâre getting your comment thread.
And so I was immediately hooked. But it wasnât like, âOh, Iâm gonna be very successful at this one day.â It was like, âI gotta get on and see what people think of this.â
AM: And now look at you.
WN: Years later itâs uh, itâs kind of surreal to be a streamer. But itâs very gratifying and Iâm super lucky.
AM: And you have your core group, you guys all understand what each other does every day, âcause youâre all streamers. Is that kind of weird or is it good because you guys understand that, like, Hasanâs gonna be unavailable for eight hours?
WN: Yeah itâs always interesting and fascinating, things that you can get used to, and ultimately, Hasan was a guy I knew back when he was a fat, sweaty mess.
AM: How did you know him? From school?
WM: So, my best friend growing up was his best friend in college. And so I met him when I would visit my best friend from when I was like 12 years old and he was at Rutgers. Then one day we all went to lunch together in California âcause Hasan was living there. And it was like the third time I ever hung out with him. And my friend brought his girlfriend and they got into a big New Jersey style fight at this lunch and walked out and we were kind of sitting silently, Hasan and I at the table. And, I looked at him and I was like, âDo you want to eat their food and stiff them with the bill?â And he was like, âMore than anything.â
[Both laugh]
And we have been very close friends ever since. Ultimately, Iâm so happy with Hasanâs success and I think heâs a much better rounded person now. But there are days that I miss like the sweaty Backyardigans version of him.
AM: I mean, you guys were all darts off yesterday. I was at Debatelords and I was like, oh, this is a shirtless hour.
WN: Oh yeah.
AM: Was that planned?
WN: No, no, no. Okay. I just think we were all former fat kids now who have muscles and itâs like, any chance I get my tits are coming. Hell yeah. I worked hard for these tits.
AM: Hell yeah. I feel the same way as someone who works out quite a bit. If I have an excuse to take my butt out. Iâm taking it out.
WN: Do it. God, yeah.
AM: Because also I think mooning is funny.
WN: Mooning is very funny.
AM: And I think we as a society lost that. Butts are funny.
WN: Mooning and flashing and is just funny.
AM: Still funny.
WN: Itâs a good time.
AM: And itâs the simplest form of entertainment.
WN: Yeah.
AM: Every time my sister drops me off at the train; Iâm from Long Islandâ
WN: Where?
AM: Why?
WN: [points to himself] Oyster Bay, Greendale.
AM: Wait, what?
WN: Yeah.
AM: Farmingdale.
WN: Oh my God. Are you Jets fan?
AM: Yes.

[Both laugh]
WN: Oh my God. Wait a minute.
AM: Wait what?
WN: Did we just become best friends!?
AM: Wait, what? I didnât know that. Youâre from Long Island.
WN: Oh, I am. I am from Long Island andâ
AM: How long did you live on Long Island? Why donât you have a fucked up accent?
WN: Because I left when I was eight years old.
AM: Oh wow. Yeah. Okay.
WN: And again, my father is 94. So heâs a person with, like, very practiced diction.
AM: So they are they from New York? Your parents?
WN: My dad is from New York and New Jersey and my mom is from Michigan.
AM: Thatâs fucking awesome, dude. Yeah. Have you ever gone back? I mean, why would you?
WN: I go back to Manhattan every once in a while âcause a lot of my friends are still there. And itâs interesting to see like, theyâre so worldly and so fun and then thereâs like moments where theyâre just so depressed.
AM: [laughs] Yeah. Oh yeah. Long Islandâs also crazy âcause like, I didnât realize, I guess âcause I grew up in it, how conservative it can be.
WN: Itâs a very interesting brand of conservative too. It seems strange because theyâre like wild partiers. Theyâre very not into puritanical values. But at the same time theyâre like, âWhoa,â at this. None of that weird shit. [laughs]
AM: Thatâs so funny. Iâm fromâwe call it the Dirty Dale.
WN: Oh really?
AM: Yeah. Like real trash.
WN: Yeah. I got arrested when I was like 15 for underage drinking.
AM: Dude, you have Long Island in your blood. I love making fun of Long Island, but it is a magical place. It made me who I am today.
WN: Itâs magic. Listen, all you need to know is the Jets are the losingest sports franchise in history and yet they have the fourth strongest fanbase.
WE ARE SO FUCKING BACK BABY!
J E T S! JETS JETS JETS pic.twitter.com/Ko2WNz80yv
â Will Neff (@TheWillNeff) March 16, 2024
AM: Long Islanders are loyal to a fault.
WN: And thereâs something really admirable about that.
AM: Maybe thereâs something in the water out there. You know?
WN: The same thing that makes the bagels great.
AM: What about hockey? Are you a hockey person?
WN: I was not an Islanders/Rangers guy growing up. I was a Devilâs fan growing up, unfortunately.
AM: Weâre not best friends anymore. Iâm a Rangers fan. I hate the Islanders.
WN: Really?
AM: I hate the Islanders. I hate them. My dad was like, âI like classic hockey, original six teams.â
[Both laugh]
WN: None of that new shit.
AM: Oh God. Youâre a Jets fan. You know heartbreak more than anybody.
WNL Dude, I was watching on Thursday when we absolutely shellacked the Patriots for the first time at home inâWhat is it? For the first time in 15 games they won a home game against the Patriots.
AM: Thatâs bad. Thatâs pretty bad. I should probably ask you about video gamesâwhatâs your favorite?
WN: I think I have an unfortunate disconnect where ,like, single player games, I really wonât play on stream much. âcause chat is the most obnoxious where if anything isnât done at the speed of like Mensa.
AM: Theyâre like, âYouâre a fucking idiot.â
WN: [laughs] Yeah, more than one attempt⊠But I love the early Metal Gear Solid games. I am absolutely obsessed. They were so pivotal for me. And then recently Iâve just fallen in love with roguelikes. I love the element of like a good run versus a bad run and game IQ kind of enhancing your experience.
So the game that I play just the most often is Binding of Isaac. I got my girlfriend [Caroline Kwan] into it and now like on any flight sheâs like, âLetâs play Binding.â
AM: Hell yeah. What do you play on? Steam Deck?
WN: Yeah.
AM: I have one, and then people on the subway are like, what is that? Whatâs that thing you got?
WN: Theyâre so big.
AM: Itâs so big. You can hurt someone with it. It doubles as a weapon on the subway. Iâm worried about anything happening, I can.just literally crack someone over the head with it.
WN: Yeah. Just crack a masturbator in the headâhappens every day in Brooklyn.
The rest of our conversation descends into jokes and other nonsense, including him promising that he was going to take his shirt off during the Name Your Price segment later.