‘Beast Games’ Is the Biggest Competition Show Ever. Crew Claim Behind the Scenes Was Chaos

December 26, 2024

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. 

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 world’s 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. 

The critical reception to Beast Games has not been positive —  IGNcalled it “largely dull and without much of anything to get invested in” and The Guardianwrote that it “exists solely to show us the worst of the human condition, as obnoxiously as possible.” 

Before its premiere, Donaldson had been boasting about his show’s sheer scope and size. He tweeted that it broke 40 Guinness World Records, including the “largest cash prize, most contestants, and most cameras ever.” (According to the Guinness website, some records like “Most Money Given Away in a First Episode” did not have previous winners.) Donaldson has also bragged about Beast Games being “ranked #1” in almost 90 countries, though Amazon doesn’t release viewership data so it’s impossible to know how many views that is. 

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. 

 

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