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Leaked MrBeast docs reveal contestant terms for 'Beast Games' — including a $500K penalty for divulging info

19 December 2024 at 00:45
MrBeast "Beast Games"
Jimmy Donaldson, known online as MrBeast, has a new competition show on Amazon Prime Video.

AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

  • YouTube star MrBeast has a new competition show that will debut Thursday on Amazon Prime Video.
  • BI viewed a copy of a contestant release form and other documents for the preliminary "Beast Games" round.
  • An entertainment attorney said the documents were fairly standard but expansive in their terms.

Documents obtained by Business Insider reveal the terms that contestants of MrBeast's competition show, "Beast Games," were asked to agree to during a preliminary round.

The terms prohibit contestants from disclosing information about the show, which debuts Thursday on Amazon Prime Video. Contestants who break the agreement prior to the last episode airing must pay the producer and network $500,000 for each breach. After the last episode airs, each breach would cost contestants $100,000, the documents said.

The documents also ask contestants to agree that their portrayal in the program may be "disparaging, defamatory, embarrassing, or of an otherwise unfavorable nature," and may expose them to "public ridicule, humiliation, or condemnation."

Daniel J. Ain, an entertainment attorney at RPJ Law, said the terms are largely standard for a competition show, but some β€” like the threat of a $500,000 charge for each breach β€” are particularly expansive.

"The producers use every available tool to give them ultimate flexibility to make the show and protect themselves from liability," Ain told BI, calling the documents a "contestant agreement on steroids."

"Beast Games" is a 10-episode physical competition show in which contestants compete for a $5 million prize. YouTube's top star β€” whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson β€” is the host.

The show has attracted some controversy ahead of its release. A New York Times report in August cited "over a dozen" participants who said they didn't receive enough food or medical care during the preliminary round of competition in Las Vegas.

The documents obtained by Business Insider relate to the Las Vegas taping, where over 2,000 contestants participated in physical challenges designed to see who would make the show's official production round in Toronto.

The documents include information about the show, a contestant questionnaire form, and an outline of the show's official rules and protocols. By signing the form, contestants gave full consent to the use of hidden cameras and recording devices, gave producers full discretion to edit footage, and agreed to participate for no money. Potential prizes were the only form of compensation.

A person close to the production characterized the Las Vegas production as a "promo shoot" for the show and said Amazon wasn't involved. Amazon did not respond to a request for comment from BI.

Read 24 pages of the documents below:

Note: BI omitted some pages from the document that included the contestant's personal information and a few pages with minimal or repeated information.

Read the original article on Business Insider

An ex-YouTuber with 6.5M subscribers is now an entrepreneur and investor. Here's how he stays fit whilst running his businesses.

3 December 2024 at 02:24
Caspar Lee smiling and holding his phone to talk into it.
Caspar Lee is an ex-YouTuber and entrepreneur who uses AI to help him plan his exercise each week.

David Parry for Google Pixel

  • Caspar Lee is an ex-YouTuber turned entrepreneur and venture capital fund owner.
  • He shared his tactics for staying fit while running his own businesses and traveling often.
  • These include using AI tools, walking as much as possible, and combining exercise with socializing.

Caspar Lee may no longer be a YouTuber, but he's still involved in the influencer world behind the scenes.

Lee, 30, is based in London and co-founded three companies: the marketing agency Influencer, the talent management company MVE, and the venture capital fund Creator Ventures.

With so many projects on the go, his schedule looks very different from week to week, and it can be hard to maintain a consistent fitness routine.

"I don't need to be able to run for over two hours, but I don't want to struggle if I go for a run," he told Business Insider as part of his campaign to promote Google's AI, Gemini Live. "I also do it for the mental health benefits, to be able to enjoy life, and I want to have some sort of muscle because it will be great as I get older."

Lee shared how he keeps fit to achieve these goals while running his own businesses.

Different types of exercise

Lee builds a few different types of exercise into his schedule. When he's traveling, he goes to the gym or goes on runs because it helps him manage jetlag and anxiety.

"If I'm struggling to stay awake, I'll go to the gym. Or if the next morning I'm struggling to wake up, I'll go for a run," he said. "I get a little bit anxious when I travel, and the endorphins help."

When he's not traveling, he likes to exercise at home after he gets back from work. He particularly enjoys the 20-minute workout videos by Joe Wicks on YouTube.

While he's at work, he tries to offset long periods of sitting down by doing stretches and building walking into his day.

Caspar Lee sat in his office, holding his phone.
Lee tries not to be sedentary for long periods, so he adds walks into his workday.

David Parry for Google Pixel

"If I need to grab some food, I'll walk to fetch it. And instead of jumping on the Tube to get to a meeting 20 minutes away, I'll try to walk. I even try to take calls while walking. I just think walking is one of the best forms of exercise you can do and it's really underrated, so I do as much of it as I can," he said.

Making exercise social

"I'm not just someone who hangs out at the pub drinking pints. I'd rather be doing something fun," Lee said. "I love exercising with my friends."

His favorite workouts to do with friends are runs and playing golf

"I love to play golf. It's a nice 4-hour walk," he said. "And it's such a great way to make new friends and to spend time quality time with existing friends. Most weekends when I'm in England, I'll try to play golf one of the days."

He structures his workouts around playing golf, too, doing strength training early in the week and cardio later in the week so that his muscles aren't stiff for weekend golf rounds.

Lee also works out with his fiancΓ©e, the influencer Ambar Driscoll, "quite a lot," doing bodyweight exercises and walking.

AI-driven workouts

Because of all the traveling Lee does, he struggles to keep to a strict workout schedule or work with a personal trainer consistently. He said the Gemini AI structures and plans his workouts for the week.

He spends 45 minutes in the gym, doing three sets of six exercises for a particular muscle group, which he lets the AI decide.

"Yesterday I was using Gemini Live to help me because I wanted to do a fun push-up routine. It just came up with a bunch of things I could do," he said. "I probably don't put exercises together correctly, which is why I then ask Gemini 'What am I doing wrong?' and it helps."

Simple diet rules

"Generally my rules are: eat as little sugar as possible, drink as much water as possible, and get in protein," he said. "But I do love a dessert, so when I want to have sugar β€” like a tiramisu β€” I'll have it."

He makes a lot of chopped salads, he said, including tomatoes, carrots, cucumbers, mangoes, dates, and walnuts.

"I'll ask Gemini Live for help with food as well. I'll say 'Look, I just came back from traveling. I'm tired. I'm jetlagged. Can you help me come up with something that's going to help with that?' And it has the most incredible recipes," he said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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