On Dec. 19, Amazon Prime Video released the first two episodes of the Beast Games, one of the largest and most ambitious reality shows to date. Created by Jimmy Donaldson, better known as MrBeast, the 10-episode show takes the formula from his 330 million-subscriber YouTube empire and amplifies it with 1,000 contestants competing for a $5 million prize.Â
Donaldson had his first taste of virality in 2017 when he was just an edgy teenager counting to 100,000 and giving away money to pizza delivery drivers. Since then, his content has skyrocketed in both popularity and production value, pulling off massive challenges like having people ages one to 100 compete for $500,000 or having one subscriber beat football legend Cristiano⏠Ronaldo in a game to see who can hit the most targets for $1 million. Now the worldâs largest YouTuber, Donaldson has his own line of chocolate bars, restaurant partnerships, brand deals, and lunch snack collaborations that earn him a reported $700 million a year.Â
The critical reception to Beast Games has not been positive â IGN called it âlargely dull and without much of anything to get invested inâ and The Guardian wrote that it âexists solely to show us the worst of the human condition, as obnoxiously as possible.âÂ
Before its premiere, Donaldson had been boasting about his showâs sheer scope and size. He tweeted that it broke 40 Guinness World Records, including the âlargest cash prize, most contestants, and most cameras ever.â (According to the Guinness website, some records like âMost Money Given Away in a First Episodeâ did not have previous winners.) Donaldson has also bragged about Beast Games being âranked #1â in almost 90 countries, though Amazon doesnât release viewership data so itâs impossible to know how many views that is.Â
Yet Beast Games production did not go smoothly, with multiple outlets reporting on the difficult conditions those competing and working on the event had to endure. Rolling Stone spoke with a dozen crew members and contestants in September and since then, three more contestants have come forward to share their stories, documents, and pictures, revealing just how much chaos there was in the making of this record-breaking show.Â
Beast Games originsÂ
Amazon first announced the series in March 2024. âWhen MrBeast first told us about his concept for the show, we were blown away by his ambition to make Beast Games the biggest reality competition series ever,â Vernon Sanders, Amazon Studiosâ co-head of television, said in a press release. Donaldson, for his part, was psyched with the freedom they let him have:Â âAmazon gave me the creative control I need to try and make it happen,â he said. By May, production company Mystic Art Pictures had put out a call for contestants, who were asked questions like, âAre you willing to be buried alive?â and, âAre you more of a hero or a villain?â
The show cost âway more than $100 millionâ to produce, Donaldson said on Logan Paulâs Impaulsive podcast, noting that he âmanaged to lose tens of millions of dollars filming this show,â though he didnât specify if the money came from him or Amazon. (Amazon and a spokesperson for MrBeast declined to comment). He also claimed that $20 million was spent on just prizes, with other costs like a $14 million set in Toronto, â1,400 cameras running simultaneously,â and âover 100 people editing.â According to a behind-the-scenes video by YouTuber Mrwhosetheboss, the Vegas shoot cost $14 million to produce.Â
Things begin to go wrong in Las Vegas
In July, Beast Games flew 2,000 contestants to Las Vegas for a three-day competition at Allegiant Stadium, to film a promotional video for the MrBeast YouTube channel. According to Vital Vegas, contestants were heralded into the stadium wearing garbage bags over their clothes, to hide their jerseys, and were expected to stay there for the entirety of the shoot. Scott Leopold, an Austin-based actor who competed in the Vegas round of Beast Games, told Rolling Stone that part of the reason they competed was to get a TV credit, and was disappointed to learn that the first leg of the production was only going on YouTube.Â
Things began to go wrong almost immediately. According to an investigation by Las Vegas 3 News, the shoot was disorganized and conditions became unsanitary â one contestant said she saw a person in a sleeping bag âcovered in excrementâ after apparently positioning themselves too close to an overflowing portable toilet. Others struggled to obtain their needed medications, like insulin, after they were told they couldnât bring anything into the stadium but that they would be given their medicine back once inside. According to the New York Times, contestants competed in grueling physical challenges, yet some âhad not received adequate food or medical care.â A spokesperson for MrBeast declined to comment on these claims. According to a source close to production, the Las Vegas shoot had six hospitalizations. A MrBeast spokesperson previously told Rolling Stone the shoot was âunfortunately complicated by the CrowdStrike incidentâ â a widespread IT outage due to a faulty system update â âextreme weather, and other unexpected logistical and communications issues.âÂ
After the showâs premiere, contestants started to share their experiences appearing on the show, both positive and negative. In TikTok videos, one contestant said they went âall day without any meal,â and another showed off the piles of sleeping bags that were handed out at the stadium. âAnyone could have walked out at any time, nobody was prevented from leaving,â one contestant shared on their YouTube channel. âIf anyone says they were trapped for real, they werenât, but I guess we were trapped because we wanted the $5 million.âÂ
Amanda Rose, a competitor in Las Vegas, appeared in a video with YouTuber Rosanna Pansino, who often posts videos questioning Donaldsonâs practices, claiming that she received a traumatic brain injury after being kicked in the head during a game. Rose tells Rolling Stone that she filed an incident report with local authorities when she returned home to California, but when she reported the incident to the Las Vegas police department, they declined to file a report. âI would have never attended these games or been in any way associated with a brand that appears to place views and clicks over human well-being,â Rose says. (LVPD did not return a request for comment, and a spokesperson for MrBeast declined to comment.)Â
In September, five unnamed participants filed a lawsuit against Amazon and Donaldson for âchronic mistreatment,â âsexual harassmentâ and âfailure to pay minimum wages.â A spokesperson for the contestantâs law firm declined to comment because of the âactive ongoing legal investigation.â According to the summary online, the case status is âpendingâ with the next hearing set for March. A spokesperson for MrBeast MrBeast told Rolling Stone that the lawsuit had still not been served to Donaldson or Amazon. Â
In Toronto, conditions improved for participants â but the crew had complaints
In late August, a miniature village appeared in downtown Toronto with cabins, tables, a basketball court, and a large tower. Six contestants tell Rolling Stone that their conditions improved from the previous shoot and that they were given ample food and comfortable lodging. âThey were better at [making] sure everybody was cool and had ample food, more than enough around,â one contestant tells Rolling Stone. âThey made sure we were super good, because of the backlash.âÂ
Some of the crew claim they had a much more difficult time, with seven people who worked on the show telling Rolling Stone that production was âwildâ and âdisorganized.â During a record rainstorm in August, one production assistant tells Rolling Stone workers were âtold to keep working with piles of electrical equipment literally submerged under water.â In a behind-the-scenes video from YouTubers Colin and Samir, you can see members of production working while the storm leaks inside the set.Â
Another two crew members tell Rolling Stone that during a 90-degree heat wave, the warehouse they were working in turned off âair conditioning and fans during certain challenges because they didnât want to interfere with the âatmosphereââ of filming and conditions âwere not ideal.â
The crew members who spoke with Rolling Stone describe an environment that was fast-paced but loose with safety to keep up with the production demands. Days regularly went past 12 hours, and employees were often tasked with working more than seven days in a row. According to a pay stub reviewed by Rolling Stone, in September, one crew member worked over 80 hours a week.Â
Crew members also suffered injuries on set. According to multiple crew members who spoke with Rolling Stone who had heard about the incident from those present, including one who was on set when it happened, on Sept. 11, a six-foot by six-foot piece of the exterior of the tower fell on a crew member while the set was being packed away. The crew member was injured and rushed off to the hospital. âHe was on the ground until the ambulance showed up,â one PA says. âIt just fucking nailed the dude as he was just walking by underneath and not under a part of the tower that they were actively working on at the time.â Rolling Stone was unable to contact with the crew member. A MrBeast spokesperson declined to comment on the incident.Â
Some participants felt âcheatedâ Â
According to the Beast Games trailer, â41 unique challengesâ were created to test the competitorsâ mettle. These challenges, according to contestants, ranged from simple trivia to physical feats like pulling a truck. Testers were brought in to try the challenges before contestants, according to posts on employee messaging boards and social media seen by Rolling Stone. A source close to production says there was âa very robust, experienced safety team, which included coordinators for stunts, medication, medical, and pharmacists who had to adhere to all sorts of safety guidelines.â
However, one of these challenges in Toronto led to a controversy amongst competitors, three of whom we spoke with who felt they were âcheatedâ by the game.Â
Labeled âSacrifice Rowâ by an internal email seen by Rolling Stone, 900 players were broken up into 12 rows and placed on pedestals five feet apart. These players were given instructions to press a button to eliminate themselves and their row would be safe, while the last three rows to pick were eliminated. This was the second challenge in the first episode of Beast Games, eliminating 252 players. According to contestants who spoke with Rolling Stone, the rules for the game appeared âhoursâ beforehand on a monitor on the set giving those who saw a perceived advantage in the competition and the time to strategize with teammates. The game was expected to go for 10 minutes but only lasted 12 seconds.Â
Two eyewitness competitors tell Rolling Stone that members of the group refused to leave Toronto for multiple days, having numerous meetings with production staff and their lawyers in an attempt to roll back the results. This could also be attributed to the frustration of having spent all of that time and energy to be eliminated by what they felt was a technicality.
According to an Aug. 31 email sent from the Beast Games account, a third-party review âconcluded that the technical difficulty that occurred during the game âSacrifice Rowâ did not create an unfair advantage to any team, nor did it create an unfair disadvantage to any team.â Representatives for MrBeast declined to comment, but according to a source close to production, Beast Gamesâ insurance advisors âconducted a full and thorough investigation and determined there was no advantage or disadvantage provided to any team.âÂ
The group collectively tried to bargain with those at MrBeast, assembling a Discord server for members of the production and the eliminated players, who dubbed themselves âThe Beastlings.â In a message seen by Rolling Stone from Oct. 15, a leader of the group posted in the chat âCONFIRMED: The Beast Team is actively prioritizing drawing from the Beastling population when casting.â Mike Cruz, the CEO of MrBeast Studio commented, âSorry for the confusion guys, Literally (Casting) asked me how to get peoplesâ⌠height and sizes and pictures and stuff without having to dig through the Mystic spreadsheets.âÂ
According to a Google Form from Nov. 6 reviewed by Rolling Stone, those eliminated were offered the chance âto prioritize your consideration for upcoming rolesâ in MrBeast content in exchange for not âsharing any information about this community or its backstory with any outside parties or participating in a class action lawsuitâ for 45 days after the form was submitted. âWe would give them priority over contestants who advanced further in the competition, but no promises or guarantees made,â a source close to production says.
According to two contestants, Beast Games production paid for the hotel rooms of those who refused to leave. âThe contestants that [felt they] got cheated out of the sacrifice game did not leave the hotel for over five days after and the Beast team was threatening to kick them out,â one competitor says. âSo many contestants want to speak up, but are scared of the NDA.âÂ
Donaldson speaks out
For most of Beast Gamesâ production, Donaldson remained silent about what happened on set, only tweeting in July to announce that his second-in-command, Ava Tyson, was kicked out of the company after allegations she had spoken inappropriately to a minor and had a sexual relationship with her executive assistant. In a statement on X, Tyson said they âapologize for any of my past behavior or commentsâ adding that they ânever groomed anyone.âÂ
It wasnât until November, after a three-month investigation into the company concluded, that Donaldson started talking about some of the accusations â both about Tyson and what happened on the set of Beast Games.
For his first sitdown interview, Donaldson chose YouTuber Caleb Phelps on his 5.6 million-subscriber channel Oompaville. Donaldson said that claims of âdozens of broken bonesâ on set are âcrazy.â (In a July Rosanna Pansino video, the YouTuber read a text they received from a contestant claiming they saw people with âbroken bones.â A source close to production claims that there were no âbroken bones.â) âWe did mess up on little things and there are definitely things we could have done better, but then itâs mixed in with like all these crazy outrageous claims,â Donaldson said.Â
âWe have tons of behind-the-scenes dropping when the show does to show how blown out of proportion these claims were,â Donaldson wrote on Nov. 25 X in response to a commenter asking about âcontestants (that) complained of terrible conditions.â But as the show continues to roll out, contestants are now able to speak about the show, meaning videos are cropping up across YouTube â perhaps giving us a clearer picture of what really went on during the filming of Beast Games.Â
Recently, a crew member working on the set of an Amazon show has come forward to reveal the chaos and disorganization behind the scenes. The crew member, who wishes to remain anonymous, described a work environment that was plagued by miscommunication, long hours, and lack of proper planning.
According to the crew member, there were constant changes to the shooting schedule, resulting in last-minute adjustments and confusion among the cast and crew. In addition, there was a lack of clear direction from the show’s producers, leading to delays and frustration on set.
The crew member also claimed that safety protocols were not always followed, putting everyone on set at risk. Despite raising concerns, the crew member felt ignored and powerless to address the issues.
Overall, the crew member’s account paints a picture of a chaotic and dysfunctional work environment on the set of the Amazon show. It raises important questions about the treatment of crew members in the entertainment industry and the need for better communication and organization behind the scenes.
Tags:
- Crew Claim
- Behind the Scenes
- Amazon Show
- Chaos
- Production
- Set
- Drama
- Filming
- Behind the Camera
- Amazon Prime
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