Chester Lee Ridens is ugly, and he's not ashamed to admit it.

"Looking back at family photos, I was always wrecking them by making goofy faces and driving my mom crazy," Ridens told the Daily Dot. "I actually tried to break mirrors as a kid thinking it would be cool to have that type of power."

Much to his dismay, Ridens couldn't shatter glass, but he recently discovered a way to use his image for good.

Almost nine months ago Ridens, 44, starting making YouTube videos that featured only his signature expression — a human rage face that's a disturbing mix of Jenna Marbles's expression to fend off guys, Arnold Schwarzenegger's freakish scream in Total Recall and an earthworm.

Ridens, who is handicapped from a childhood accident, has created more than 70 short clips to date, each as equally bizarre and unprompted as the last and featuring only his signature expression.

But behind Ridens's wrinkled chins lies a singular message: Accept the face you were born with and be kind to others.

"I want to promote that ugly people in general are good productive people who were born with a look they really can't change so we should all treat them with respect and dignity," said Ridens, a quality control worker at a local food plant in Dubuque, Iowa.

"Beauty is only skin deep. I once had a co-worker that was so nasty looking that it made me look beautiful," he said. "But this man was so kind, thoughtful, peaceful and happy that it changed the way I viewed people in general forever."

On YouTube, Ridens's videos have been viewed more than 3.3 million times and have collected comments from people praising him, well, for his face.

"You break the rule of having a face only a mother could love," RapIsDeadly commented.

But despite his enormous YouTube success, Ridens has never accepted any offers from Google to run ads on his channel. And he doesn't plan on doing so anytime soon.

"I will continue being a simple ugly guy who wants others to feel better about themselves even at my expense," he said. However, not everyone has been supportive of Ridens's cause. His brother Herbert told him to "grow up" after seeing his YouTube channel, but Ridens insists he's just jealous.

"My co-workers, neighbors and local high school kids have all been wanting my autograph after they saw me on Fox News," he said. "They say something big will happen to me someday [...] The local high school showed my Ugly Yet Beautiful video during prom and I heard the whole place erupted with laughter and applause. That made me smile."

This article originally published at The Daily Dot here