NEW YORK — MrBeast plans to turn the success of his Amazon Prime Video reality competition series into millions of dollars for charity.
YouTube's biggest creator is offering an exclusive weekend on the set of Beast Games Season 2 to the first 40 donors who make $100,000 gifts to his registered nonprofit. The earliest contributors and up to two guests each will spend June 27-29 touring MrBeast's North Carolina studio, hearing from the production team in a private Q&A and visiting Beast Philanthropy's food pantry.
The invitation comes as Jimmy Donaldson's reported $5 billion media empire surpasses 400 million subscribers on YouTube, where he had already set the record for the biggest following. But the call raises a question: Who among his following of young people and their parents can make a six-figure donation?
''I have some big charity projects I want to fund so I think it's a win/win,'' MrBeast said in a post on X.
Rallying his fervent fan base to make their own contributions marks a new fundraising strategy for Donaldson. He has long stated that his YouTube pages' featured charitable work is funded with his Beast Philanthropy channel's revenue.
Beast Philanthropy aims to ''alleviate suffering wherever and whenever we are able,'' teaching new generations to care more and ''making kindness viral'' along the way.
The content has drawn a mix of praise from fans for working with local nonprofits to support previously unfunded community-based projects and pushback from critics who accused Donaldson of exploiting vulnerable people for clickbait ''inspiration porn.'' Campaigns have involved treating rheumatic heart disease in Nigeria and protecting endangered animals in Kenya. Other examples include building wells in countries across Africa and covering the cost of cataract surgery for 1,000 people.
The call also signals Donaldson's continued philanthropic presence after comments suggesting he would get ''less hate'' if he stepped away from philanthropy altogether. Responding to allegations that he uses philanthropy as a shield, Donaldson said he thinks ''it paints a negative spotlight on me.''