Why was I invited to Beast Studios?
Folding Ideas
0:02 It is 4:20 a.m.
0:07 and I am up because I am flying to North Carolina to go tour Mr.
0:16 Beast's studio.
0:19 For some reason, strange things happen to YouTubers all the time.
0:23 In a sense, it's part of the job to put yourself in the path of weird things.
0:28 You need an open mind to catch the diamonds in the rough.
0:30 But it does mean that sorting through my email is
0:33 often something resembling a trip to an alien petting zoo.
0:36 A parade of barely identifiable nonsense and many
0:40 a thing that you very obviously should not touch.
0:43 Back in late October, I got an intriguing email.
0:46 Do you want a most expenses paid trip to tour Mr.
0:49 Beast Studio and preview Beast Games season 2 in December?
0:53 Yes.
0:54 I mean, yes.
0:57 Yeah, I do.
0:58 But why would team beast be reaching out to me of all people?
1:03 How would I have ever wound up on their radar?
1:07 Critically, do they know who I am?
1:10 I needed answers.
1:31 So, this was the question hanging over my head.
1:34 Why was Team Beast reaching out to me?
1:37 What was all this?
1:39 What's actually going on?
1:41 Actually, even before that, the question was more like,
1:44 "Is this even Team Beast?
1:46 And if there's some scammers impersonating Team Beast,
1:49 do they know who I am?" Wait, no.
1:51 Even before even before that, we've got to introduce our cast of characters.
1:56 It may feel to many of you that Mr.
1:58 Beast needs no introduction, but surprisingly he does.
2:02 A lot of adults, especially those who don't
2:04 interact much with boys aged 9 to 14,
2:06 are maybe aware of the name, but have no real concept beyond that.
2:11 Mr.
2:12 Beast is the online alias of Jimmy Donaldson,
2:15 who heads the atpresent most subscribed single YouTube channel ever,
2:19 aonomously named Mr.
2:21 Beast.
2:22 The channel and its many,
2:23 many gaming philanthropy and multilingual spin-offs are run by Team
2:27 Beast as the largest single organ within Beast Industries,
2:31 the conglomerate company that handles all the various Mr.
2:34 Beast things from a defunct cell phone company to a cartoon.
2:39 And they were asking me if I wanted to come to Greenville,
2:42 North Carolina, and peek around inside their stuff.
2:46 This process was kind of hallucinatory.
2:48 Team Beast is understandably secretive.
2:50 So, details in all our communication was pretty bare bones.
2:53 And while I can understand why that was the case,
2:56 it left a lot of room for my imagination to run wild with potential answers.
3:01 For your viewing pleasure, I've taken these theories and compiled
3:05 them into an internet friendly numbered list.
3:17 The first and most obvious theory, of course, was that this was all a scam.
3:21 Not because they were doing anything scammy,
3:23 but just because none of it made any sense.
3:27 You want me, Dan Olsen, the line goes up guy,
3:30 to fly out to North Carolina to watch a couple episodes
3:33 of a TV show that I'm almost certainly going to be overtly hostile towards.
3:38 Surely that was just the initial hook for a pig butchering operation.
3:43 But since there wasn't an open scam,
3:45 we decided it was fine to just keep talking to them until they asked for money.
3:49 After all, that would also be a pretty funny video.
3:52 Eventually, they did ask for personal information,
3:54 but only the stuff that would actually be needed to get onto a plane,
3:58 and they never asked for money.
4:00 So, I went ahead and got on the plane.
4:02 Of course, we did try and do some due diligence here.
4:05 The domain the emails came from was Mr.
4:08 beastyoutube.com which is a real domain but the domain just forwards to the Mr.
4:13 Beast YouTube channel.
4:14 So on one hand that didn't really tell us anything about the people sending
4:19 the email but also it was at least something of an indicator of legitimacy.
4:24 Like Mr.
4:25 Beast's core audience is really young.
4:28 So I'd imagine that Mr.
4:29 beastyoutube.com is a very common typo
4:32 that Team Beast would lock down pretty quickly,
4:35 specifically to avoid impersonation or scammers.
4:39 And of course, the big thing that debunked
4:41 this theory is that the the trip was actually real.
4:44 In fact, I already told you I went,
4:46 so really there's not much suspense in this theory.
4:51 I arrived in Greenville without any drama and met up
4:53 with the 11 other YouTubers who were part of this little tour group.
4:57 The funny thing in this theory though is that everyone
5:00 else on the tour had the exact same first assumption.
5:04 It was literally the first point of conversation we had.
5:07 And one group even insisted that Team Beast do a video
5:10 call with them to verify that they were at least real people,
5:15 which uh you know I I wish I'd thought of that.
5:21 I I suddenly feel like I'm at a higher
5:24 risk of getting taken than I would like to believe.
5:29 I should I should just a sec.
5:37 So, a print out of our somewhat insane itinerary.
5:43 So, I So, 7:30 I need to be down in the hotel for dinner.
5:50 Um, what is on the back?
5:52 Nothing.
5:52 Okay.
5:53 Even up until the last minute, my professional intuition of what this tour
5:56 would look like kept getting upended.
5:58 I had assumed much earlier that the tour
6:00 itself would be little more than a walk-in
6:02 talk followed by a vertical slice screening
6:05 of big moments from the first few episodes.
6:08 So, the warning to be prepared for a full day was a little shocking.
6:13 Theory number two was that this was all
6:15 a stealth way of getting us into a content.
6:17 Like I'd show up and suddenly Jimmy would
6:19 jump out of a helicopter screaming something like,
6:22 "I tricked 10 video essayas into giving me their passports.
6:25 Now we're going to find out how many shirts they can sew in a week."
6:29 The email said that we were allowed to make our own content if we wanted.
6:33 No pressure, but they had no plans to make Mr.
6:35 Beast content of the trip at this time.
6:38 So, you know, maybe they were leaving the door open for a surprise like that.
6:43 But in the sober light of day, realistically,
6:45 that's just not how Team Beast does surprises.
6:48 They're more on the speed of not telling participants the exact
6:52 details of their solitary isolation challenge rather than like hidden cameras.
6:57 Still, the human brain isn't nearly as logical as we'd like to imagine.
7:02 So, as we toured the main compound and got a glimpse
7:04 of a bunch of sets in various stages of construction and disassembly,
7:08 then drove out to stand in a field and watched
7:10 the core team work on a main channel beast video.
7:13 This possibility was still always in the back of our minds.
7:20 Isn't that one of Bill Py's fake awards?
7:25 Theory number three, which is the first one to really have some meat to it,
7:28 is that this was all a wine and dine for Beast Games season 2.
7:32 A wine and dine is pretty straightforward in concept.
7:35 A video game studio or movie studio or car company
7:38 or Silicon Valley tech dingus or whoever gets a bunch of reviewers,
7:42 flies them out somewhere, puts them up in a nice hotel,
7:44 gets them to do cool stuff, feeds them,
7:47 shows them the product in an ideal context,
7:50 and then tosses them some branded swag on the way out.
7:53 If it's a video game,
7:54 they're playing it on a computer that costs as much as a car.
7:57 If it's a car, it's a trim loaded with features that aren't even for sale.
8:01 If it's a robot, it's a dude in a suit.
8:06 The days of the Dante Inferno guys sending
8:08 reviewers 200 bucks for positive coverage are mostly over.
8:12 Companies have gotten marginally more tasteful with it, which is a shame.
8:17 Bring back promotional Halo 2 branded condoms.
8:20 The whole idea is really just to take the reviewer out of their normal element,
8:24 tailor their headsp space, control the experience, and you know,
8:29 maybe persuade them to give you a better review.
8:32 So, in my case, even if this wasn't a wine and dine,
8:35 even if team beast literally did not care one wit if
8:39 any of us made a video about Beast Game season 2,
8:42 what was set up for us was still literally every component part of one.
8:48 So, let's talk numbers.
8:50 Hotel room itself is a hotel room,
8:53 but we do have a uh swag bag uh positioned under a light.
9:02 So, let's see what we've got.
9:05 In terms of swag, we each got a hoodie, two t-shirts, and a hat,
9:09 a Beast Labs toy, a bag of meat snacks, and some other candy.
9:13 Then at the end of the day, after watching three episodes of the show,
9:16 they let us just go hog on a standy of candy bars before presenting us each
9:20 with a customized Beast Games season 2 Strong V
9:23 Smart team jersey in front of the signature Mr.
9:26 Beast massive pile of prop money.
9:28 All in all, the value of the swag came out to $220 to $230 US.
9:33 Add in flights, hotel, luxury car service from Raleigh to Greenville,
9:37 a restaurant dinner Tuesday evening, and then two catered meals on Wednesday.
9:41 It averages out somewhere around 2100 to 2,200 US per head.
9:46 And the vast majority of that is travel and hotel.
9:49 That's not a crazy number by any means, but let's acknowledge the context here.
9:54 If I spent that on a oneperson, one day, twoight vacation,
9:58 I'd say I got a bad deal unless I saw a really sick concert as part of it.
10:02 But also, on the other hand,
10:04 it's not even the most expensive business trip I've been sent on.
10:08 And that's the gap that a lot of outlets take advantage of.
10:11 There's a lot of smaller YouTubers out there who are full-time but just barely.
10:15 They're young, they're hungry, and they're taking a swing at a dream,
10:18 but they're also inexperienced and easily impressed.
10:22 That means that a corporation can spend
10:23 a very normal business trip amount of money flying
10:26 a 21-year-old YouTuber out to LA and get
10:29 a really disproportionate emotional reaction out of it.
10:32 That's the math underpinning a wine and dine.
10:35 And this is a business model
10:36 that has proven really effective for certain brands.
10:40 But that didn't really line up with the reality of our tour group.
10:44 No one in the group was exceptionally young.
10:46 All of us were full-time producers.
10:48 Most of us had little inclination to make a video out of the trip
10:52 at all and had mostly agreed to come out of raw curiosity.
10:56 I had assumed that I was going to be the odd one out,
10:59 that I was going to be surrounded by a bunch of credulous children.
11:02 But actual attitudes ranged from interested and curious to just kind of lost.
11:09 But carrying this theory to its logical conclusion, what's the goal?
11:14 Well, it would be to get reviews of Beast Games
11:16 season 2 out of us as part of a marketing strategy.
11:20 See, even if someone like me goes home and makes a negative review of the show,
11:24 statistically those criticisms are going to be softened.
11:28 The flaws forgiven as the foibless of mortal
11:31 creators because the viewing experience was optimal.
11:34 I was removed from my normal environment, pampered a little bit,
11:38 given free stuff, shown the behind the scenes spectacle,
11:42 made to feel special, and also given a face to attach to all of it.
11:47 As a mandatory part of this is that the video
11:50 you're watching needs to go through their internal review process.
11:53 And while the thrust of that process is to make
11:55 sure that I haven't accidentally included production schedules, phone numbers,
12:00 or details on unreleased content in the background,
12:03 it still definitionally creates a surface of interaction that's
12:07 going to influence the way that arguments are framed.
12:11 It is for most people a lot
12:13 harder to call something an existentially depressing exercise.
12:17 A glimpse through the veil into a realm of undiluted
12:21 capitalism where the concept of creative expression simply doesn't exist.
12:26 Is excluded from the process in the same way that my process
12:29 doesn't account for the possibility of being besieged by the armies of Sauron,
12:34 the shadow in the east,
12:36 if they have a name and face to attach to that statement.
12:39 So, the secret sixth ingredient in a wine and dine is a human face.
12:44 I will say they've been like extremely accommodating,
12:47 but I mean it does make like this process nice and frictionless.
12:51 So, like I'm not going to I'm not really going to complain.
12:54 That's a pretty cool set.
12:56 On the subject of obligations, an obligation that isn't present is
13:00 the obligation to make content about the trip.
13:04 That was actually quite explicit.
13:06 quote, "There are no expectations surrounding content creation." Now,
13:10 while that sounds like reviews aren't the thing that they're after,
13:14 that phrase tripped a specific fuse in my brain.
13:18 A variant of this that you might be
13:20 familiar with is the camera equipment review genre,
13:23 where companies would send out free lenses and stuff kit
13:25 that costs a,000, $2,000 at retail and they say, "Oh, no obligation.
13:31 Just do whatever you want with it." And then these smaller channels,
13:34 often younger influencers, just go, "Oh,
13:37 okay." and make a video about the thing.
13:39 And since there wasn't any money exchanged, there was no deal made.
13:43 They just leave out the part where they got the thing for free.
13:47 Technically, everyone's in the clear.
13:50 It's not sponsored content,
13:52 but it's a backdoor to sponsored content that exploits
13:55 the good faith and naivity of inexperienced creators
13:58 that don't have the institutional support structure that would
14:02 teach them to watch out for stuff like that.
14:04 That specific example is slightly outdated at this point,
14:08 but only because other gear reviewers who know better and saw what was
14:12 happening started pushing for making full
14:15 disclosure an expected element of any review.
14:18 I should provide some disclosure.
14:19 Sony did lend me this camera to make this review.
14:21 I don't get to keep it.
14:22 No money changed hands.
14:23 Sony doesn't get any input on this video's production,
14:24 nor do they get to see it before it's posted.
14:26 So, that's in the back of my head here, right?
14:28 And so, this was the kind of brier patch of trying
14:31 to figure out what was going on with this trip.
14:34 What did they actually want?
14:36 And why and how did my name end up on their list?
14:42 Even if the trip itself wasn't shady,
14:45 everything Team Beast did was also something a shady team would do.
14:51 Doug Walker was actually one of the creators Team Beast invited,
14:54 and he put out a video that is really illustrative of the kind
14:56 of thing you'd expect to come out of a wine and dine.
14:59 I have to admit, even though these types of shows aren't my thing,
15:02 I was genuinely invested through most of it.
15:05 Truthfully, the whole attitude of the place seemed upbeat.
15:08 I can definitely say it was pretty nice.
15:10 Everyone from my standpoint seemed very honest, kind, and direct.
15:14 A big thanks for having us out there when honestly you didn't need to.
15:18 I can certainly say I had a lot of fun
15:19 and it was cool seeing how a media giant like this functions.
15:23 It was a surprising and surreal experience,
15:25 but it was a positive one I'm thankful I'll never forget.
15:28 In a word, the video is polite, cordial,
15:30 trying to give team beast what he thinks they want.
15:33 There's nothing particularly offensive about it.
15:36 The vlog is just the inevitable output of the process Doug had just experienced.
15:42 This is what that machine is designed to make.
15:45 But notably, Doug caught some flak in the comments
15:48 because he forgot to mention that it wasn't sponsored content.
15:52 So his compliment sandwiches came across to some as just shilling for Mr.
15:56 Beast.
15:57 If there's a flaw in this theory, it's in the return on investment.
16:00 The whole affair cost Team Beast somewhere in the neighborhood of 28 to $30,000.
16:06 And while that's peanuts in the scope of Beast Games marketing budget,
16:09 the return is also kind of peanuts.
16:13 This isn't so much a question of can
16:15 they get 30,000 worth of coverage out of us,
16:18 which I don't think they can, but more of a question of why even bother.
16:24 At the point of writing,
16:26 only three other participants had made literally anything about the trip.
16:30 Doug made a video, as already mentioned,
16:32 and had it ready to go for when the embargo lifted.
16:34 Tik Tok creator Kate Reachio did a podcast
16:37 episode on her side YouTube channel in early February.
16:40 Ben at How to Beat posted a vlog about the trip in midFebruary.
16:43 And then I finally rolled out this sucker in whenever this comes out,
16:48 long after every video and show I got a sneak peek at had aired and wafted away.
16:53 I don't know how to say this without sounding like I'm
16:55 throwing my fellow content creators under the bus, but I toured Mr.
17:00 Beast Studio isn't an instant hack to a hit video.
17:04 In fact, they tend to underperform.
17:07 There's just not $30,000 worth of exposure there.
17:11 So, this just can't be the primary reason.
17:15 I refuse to believe that Team Beast, the optimization lords of YouTube,
17:20 foresaw Doug's video as the primary intended outcome of this exercise.
17:27 We're out on their back lot.
17:29 So, prison set, uh, the different set, uh, some other set.
17:35 Um, I mean, it's a backlock.
17:37 We also have a lovely sunset.
17:40 Theory four is that this was all an elaborate scheme
17:43 to lure us into the woods and have us killed.
17:46 They did not.
17:47 As a more serious theory,
17:49 there's the possibility that my involvement was in fact basically random.
17:53 That someone at Team Beast scraped a bunch of possible channels based
17:56 on target audience and favorable metrics and folding ideas was on that list.
18:02 That idea isn't entirely mutually exclusive with the rest of these theories,
18:06 but it only explains why I was in Greenville,
18:10 not necessarily why I was in Greenville.
18:14 So, in that small amount of time we got to hang out with him one-on-one,
18:17 we basically let him know that we appreciated the stakes that he raised.
18:20 And at least 11 out of the 12 of us really appreciated the show.
18:24 You know what I mean?
18:25 It's me.
18:25 I'll self-report.
18:27 He's talking about me.
18:28 The fifth theory, which didn't really crystallize
18:30 until we were in the thick of things,
18:32 is that this was all a roundabout version of a focus group.
18:35 One of the things that plagued the whole process was a deliberate vagueness.
18:40 Now, Team Beast has reasons to be secretive.
18:43 They are a large operation with a lot of moving parts.
18:46 They're very high-profile.
18:48 Some competitors are definitely obsessed
18:50 with scooping them on upcoming video concepts,
18:53 and there are security concerns with random
18:56 fans showing up at filming locations.
18:59 But rather than the forthright admission
19:01 that details were being withheld for operational reasons,
19:04 all of this was couched in really peppy corporate wording,
19:08 the kind that sounds inherently insincere and made it difficult to parse.
19:14 For example, I do believe they were telling the truth
19:16 about there not being any expectations around content creation.
19:20 From their perspective,
19:21 anything that we made to indirectly promote Beast Games was a bonus.
19:25 In fact, I suspect the main reason why they even left content
19:28 creation on the table was as a way of convincing us to come
19:32 in case any of the people they were reaching out to would feel
19:35 like they couldn't justify taking 3 days
19:38 away from their normal content creation schedule.
19:41 less of an issue for me,
19:42 but definitely an issue for people making daily or weekly content.
19:46 So, I think when they said,
19:48 "We want your thoughts," that wasn't just hollow platitudes,
19:51 the kind of thing that corporate stooges say as a reflex.
19:54 There were a few things wrapped up in that, but the obvious
19:57 one was feedback on season 2 of Beast Games.
20:00 Not for season 2 itself, but for season 3,
20:03 which they are in the process of starting.
20:05 They were only going to show us the first two episodes,
20:08 but then Jimmy rang up an Amazon guy and convinced them to show us a third.
20:12 And even though these episodes were visibly incomplete,
20:15 nothing that we were going to say was about to alter the trajectory of season 2.
20:20 What was interesting was that basically nothing
20:23 we brought up ever caught them offguard.
20:26 More or less, every point was met by someone from Team Beast or someone
20:29 from Amazon and a couple times even Jimmy
20:32 himself kind of nodding their head and going,
20:35 "Yeah, we've talked about that." in a really kind of resigned tone.
20:40 Now, that's not a bad thing.
20:42 Really, all it means is that they're professionals
20:44 who are aware of the thing that they're making.
20:47 But it did lead to a newish theory, theory 5.5.
20:52 We were there to settle an argument.
20:55 Through this lens, everything snaps into focus.
20:58 Why this group of people who don't really overlap with Mr.
21:01 Beast in any conventional way?
21:03 Why a highly critical middle-aged kermagin like me?
21:06 Why so cagey about the purpose of all of this?
21:10 This is a specialist test audience.
21:12 You know, there's problems, but there's a bunch of them,
21:15 and no one can agree on which ones need to be fixed first.
21:18 The idea here is that you actively avoid poisoning the well.
21:22 You don't mention your own anxieties about the thing.
21:24 You try not to call attention to anything.
21:27 You just show the thing to a bunch of critics
21:30 and you see what they bring up all on their own.
21:33 Now, of course, that's all going to be
21:35 built on a foundation of criticisms of season 1, which aren't hard to find.
21:40 Everything on the show is exaggerated.
21:43 Everything is hyperbole.
21:45 And that's why shows like Survivor are like
21:47 the number one reality shows of all time.
21:49 you really get connected with every single character that is on the show.
21:54 I don't know how you can do that with a thousand contestants.
21:57 A show with so little to offer its audience that at the very
22:01 end its host feels the need to look at us and say, "Wow, wasn't that something?
22:06 Wasn't that important and deep?
22:07 Wasn't that quite an adventure?
22:09 Look at all the choices people made.
22:11 Don't you guys love that?
22:12 Don't you guys love the abstract concept of choices?" And it's like, "No,
22:17 I don't." So, when Doug says it's better than season 1,
22:21 that's some pretty important context.
22:24 We're not exactly talking about the killing of a sacred deer here.
22:27 Is that is that is that too much?
22:30 Is that the most joke I've ever told?
22:33 The the Yorgos lanthamos joke?
22:36 Anyway, we were shown the first three episodes of season 2,
22:39 and we had a few notes.
22:42 At least 11 out of the 12 of us really appreciated the show.
22:45 You know what I mean?
22:47 Okay.
22:47 And then I had a few more notes.
22:49 There was an improvement on characters.
22:51 People actually have names now.
22:52 Amazing.
22:53 Cutting the cast down to 200 is still too many,
22:56 but it gets the pool down to a manageable number much faster.
22:59 There was less of the boys, Jimmy's gormous friends from his YouTube channel,
23:03 and fewer instances of contestants being eliminated by pure random chance.
23:08 But the games were still bad.
23:09 It was still tacky and go.
23:11 They still have been unable to shake the ties to Squid Game.
23:14 And there's still too much of the goddamn boys.
23:17 All right, my script here says clip of one
23:19 of the boys just lingering and being useless.
23:22 Not hard to find.
23:24 All right, so let's just scrub through an episode here.
23:30 And yeah, there we go.
23:34 But yeah, overall our group's criticisms were fairly standard.
23:37 We probably gave them a conventional mainstream adults perspective.
23:42 Though it has been interesting to watch the audience's
23:44 perspective diverge from our own opinion of the first
23:47 three episodes because a bunch of things we
23:50 consider to be an improvement, they do not agree.
23:53 You know, it's sort of interesting to consider that maybe they brought us
23:57 in because they want to pivot Beast Games into really being a mainstream thing,
24:01 not just a superersized Mr.
24:03 Beast episode, but now they're kind of trapped because they already have
24:07 a core audience that's here for the tacky
24:10 spectacle and excess and Jimmy screaming,
24:13 "Think about the money in someone's ear." ARE YOU GUYS NUMB TO MONEY?
24:17 THIS IS REAL MONEY.
24:18 REAL MONEY.
24:21 None of you want a million.
24:23 So, that was the fifth theory.
24:25 But even here, like I'm I'm way more confident in this idea than the others.
24:30 But the problem is that all of the things
24:32 that make a wine and dine work undermine this one.
24:36 You're just not going to get the kind of incisive feedback you need if
24:40 everyone giving the feedback is riding the high of an all expenses paid trip.
24:45 The criticisms will be dulled, the harshness downplayed,
24:48 everything's going to be a compliment sandwich
24:51 around it was better than season 1.
24:54 So even now there's a lot of questions I just do not have answers for.
25:02 This is this was a glimpse
25:04 into a completely diametrically opposite production mentality.
25:15 If you watch the other vlogs of the tour,
25:17 this is the point where they start to wrap up.
25:19 They say that we raided Jimmy supply of candy bars,
25:22 were given custom Beast Games jerseys with our channel names,
25:25 took some photos in front of the big pile of fake money, and all went home.
25:29 But earlier in the day, before the screening,
25:31 actually even before most of the tour,
25:34 we were sat down for an interesting conversation.
25:37 And while most of it was softball questions,
25:40 there was one that really stood out.
25:42 And I wish they'd given us time to prepare beforehand because boy,
25:47 I could have given a much better answer.
25:50 How do you create fandom?
26:03 And to answer that question, I've got a huge surprise for you.
26:06 This backdrop isn't a real backdrop.
26:09 It's actually just a curtain.
26:15 Today, this becomes the first video essay ever recorded in a bouncy castle.
26:21 Isn't that right, certification dude?
26:25 I mean, we weren't going for a Guinness World Record, but we got one.
26:29 Let's go.
26:43 One of the first things that people notice about
26:45 the Beast franchise is the profound inauthenticity of it all,
26:49 which is something we'll definitely be unpacking.
26:52 But something that has come to really stand out
26:54 to me is a less visible but equally profound proud inefficiency.
26:59 In order to explain this efficiently, I need to get you more up to speed
27:03 with the details of what Beast Games is actually like.
27:07 And to do that, we're going to jump right
27:10 into the deep end and then work our way back from there.
27:13 The word I'm going to repeat a bunch here is intent.
27:16 There's no intentionality to it.
27:19 Episode 7 to 8 of Beast Games season 2 are delirious in their structure,
27:24 seemingly assembled by someone who doesn't know what the word episode means.
27:28 Episode 7 begins with the resolution of the previous episode,
27:31 a three and a half minute segment where Katie is eliminated with a sledgehammer,
27:36 narrowing the contestants down to the final 10.
27:38 The next 17 minutes are a last supper where Team Beast brings
27:42 in the contestants families and they get to have a big meal together,
27:45 including all the kids getting just
27:47 absolute fistfuls of Feastables chocolate bars.
27:50 After that, the next 23 minutes,
27:51 fully half the run time of the actual episode once
27:54 you chop off the 3 and 1/2 minutes of credits,
27:57 is set up for the next challenge, Buried Alive.
28:00 This setup involves first the contestants strategizing amongst
28:04 themselves about who they should vote for as captain.
28:06 Then the introduction of the graveyard set,
28:08 then the vote for captain, which Nick wins, then the burying,
28:11 which is really just a formal sprinkling
28:13 of dirt over the windows of the plexiglass coffins.
28:16 Then an explanation of the rules of the game,
28:18 followed by a full 5 minutes of Nick
28:21 agonizing over how much money he should take,
28:23 with the episode ending on Nick seemingly committing to taking all the money.
28:28 Are you going to take it?
28:36 Yeah.
28:36 But episode 8, Rug pulls that ending,
28:38 tossing the final line into the memory hole.
28:40 What's your number?
28:46 I'm going to take $250,000.
28:50 Then they spend 31 minutes resolving the actual game,
28:53 14 minutes with contestants discussing the fallout of the game,
28:56 insert a 5-minute tourism ad for Saudi Arabia,
28:59 finishing on the setup for the next game,
29:02 including an introduction to the set and explanation of the rules,
29:05 and then a cut at the first decision a player makes.
29:08 At some point in the production of Beast Games,
29:10 the decision was made for every episode to end on the very
29:13 specific cliffhanger of a player decision within the context of a game.
29:18 And while this works tolerably well in the first few episodes,
29:21 by the end of the season, the whole show is completely out of sync.
29:26 Rather than cliffhanging on a deciding moment
29:28 that will determine the outcome of a game,
29:30 like episode 2 implying that Johnny has any hope of making this 9- ft jump,
29:36 these episodes are ending at the moment their games actually get started.
29:40 One side effect of this is that the back half all just bleeds together.
29:44 The show becoming a structurless parade of segments.
29:47 But more to our purpose,
29:48 it indicates a bizarre creative process where they knew they needed to make 10
29:53 episodes and had at least broadly planned what games would be in which episodes,
29:58 indicated by Jimmy literally saying,
30:01 "Welcome to the second last episode at one point.
30:04 Welcome to the second to last episode."
30:06 But this also indicates that they hadn't considered what
30:10 an episode would actually look like and where they would end.
30:15 Our second point of reference here is Katie's elimination.
30:19 Like all these other cliffhers, it is smeared across two episodes,
30:22 being resolved in episode 7, but set up at the end of episode 6.
30:27 And this setup is something else.
30:30 The entire sequence is cut together
30:32 from these truly horrendous crops of the footage.
30:35 A post hawk attempt to veil the identity of the final elimine.
30:40 Meaning that the structure of this ending, the buildup to a cliffhanger,
30:43 was thought up later and wasn't actually produced that way with intent.
30:48 This is the outward manifestation of profound inefficiency.
30:53 The Mr.
30:54 strategy, and by extension, the beast game strategy,
30:57 is to point two dozen cameras at everything and sort it out later.
31:00 A strategy usually summarized as spray and prey,
31:03 a hallmark style of low-budget, trashy reality TV.
31:07 Beast Games season 2 is a 9 figure production.
31:10 That's the vague estimate I was told,
31:12 which makes it four to five times more expensive than a season of Survivor,
31:18 which comes in around 2 million per episode, times 13 episodes,
31:22 plus prizes rounded up to 30 million per season.
31:25 Even if my research is woefully out of date,
31:29 and a modern season of Survivor costs twice
31:31 that, that's still half a season of Beast Games.
31:35 But does Beast Game season 2 actually look
31:38 and feel like it's twice as expensive as Survivor,
31:42 let alone five times?
31:45 Feel is hard to quantify,
31:47 but Beast Game season 2 provides a really strong
31:49 contrast as a result of their crossover episode with Survivor,
31:53 which was by and large assembled by the Survivor crew.
31:57 Not only does the episode look better,
31:58 but it features a better challenge well balanced to make good TV.
32:02 And it's also the only episode that ends with an ending.
32:06 What's going on in your mind?
32:12 Leverage.
32:15 In contrast, episode 2 features a now notorious game nebulously
32:19 named Bluff that just absolutely disintegrated on contact with the players.
32:24 Players each had a colored dot placed on the back
32:26 of their head and had to stand in the corresponding color circle.
32:30 The idea being that players had to rely on someone else to tell
32:33 them what color they had and they'd be vulnerable to a lie.
32:37 The issue was there was no incentive whatsoever to lie.
32:42 One, people valued their own integrity
32:44 and their own reputation above eliminating any single individual.
32:48 Two, everyone basically split into pairs.
32:51 So eliminating your partner one round just leaves
32:54 you with no one you trust the next round.
32:57 So you're basically gambling that enough other
33:00 people will also betray their safety buddy
33:03 at the exact same time and end the game
33:06 or else all you've done is eliminate yourself.
33:09 So people simply refuse to lie round after round.
33:12 Of the people who were even eliminated by the game's rules,
33:16 most were due to a process error where
33:18 they waited too long or broke some other rule.
33:20 And one villain got eliminated through the power of social ostracization.
33:24 Hey, what am I?
33:25 What am I?
33:25 Tyler.
33:26 Tyler.
33:26 Tyler.
33:29 Tyler.
33:29 But no one even bluffed him.
33:30 They just refused to talk to him.
33:32 At the end of the day, absolutely no one lied.
33:35 And Jimmy had to eliminate people by drawing names from a box.
33:38 Is this absolute face plant failure of a game really what
33:42 anyone should expect from something five times as expensive as Survivor?
33:47 This isn't just me being a snobby Normies are noticing this.
33:51 Everyone is saying it.
33:53 What do you think of Beast Game season 2?
33:56 It isn't very good.
33:58 Jimmy's shots and only Jimmy's shots were shot
34:01 on an Alexa 265 which is a rental only
34:04 camera so limited and expensive that you can
34:07 only learn the price of it by breaking one.
34:09 It's an awesome camera and so Beastame's decision to rent one would have
34:13 been a great idea if Jimmy was the one running the damned obstacle courses.
34:19 There's a pivotal moment in the finale where a contestant is eliminated
34:22 by being dropped into a pit and the whole thing is huge and melodramatic,
34:26 but then the actual hero shots of him going
34:28 out look like a phone recording of a computer monitor.
34:31 It looks so bad.
34:32 God, if only there were a rigged Alexa 265 somewhere in this room right now.
34:39 We already talked about a few,
34:40 but all of the challenges in games are just so slipshot and poorly thought out.
34:44 They all look like this and they all play like this.
34:47 The opening episode strong challenge came off
34:49 head and shoulders above the corresponding smarts challenge.
34:52 It seems clever and deliberate, but that's movie magic.
34:56 Due to a critical flaw in the game design,
34:58 the strong challenge was just too hard.
35:00 The majority of the strongs fell off their ropes
35:02 and the remainder was decided by an impromptu push-ups tiebreaker.
35:06 The smart challenge, though, was also a creature of the edit.
35:09 We are shown the smart contestants playing three rounds of Simon.
35:13 already an incredibly lame challenge, but in reality,
35:15 they were playing Simon all night.
35:19 We'll be doing this over and over again,
35:21 adding more and more blocks until 50 of you are eliminated.
35:26 The sun rose and the crew had to tape garbage bags to the walls to keep light
35:29 from leaking into the temporary structure they had built
35:32 in Nevada in lie of renting a sound stage.
35:34 People simply weren't failing this incredibly easy game,
35:38 and it was taking way too long
35:40 to verify 100 individual stacks of blocks between takes.
35:44 So, at one point, Jimmy got bored, doubled the block count, and haved the time.
35:49 WE'RE CUTTING THE TIME IN HALF and adding four extra blocks.
35:53 Immediately, eliminating 82 of his 100 contestants.
35:57 I don't know why we did it.
35:58 That eliminated more people than we needed.
36:00 Like, it was a disaster.
36:01 Jimmy might have gone a little overboard.
36:03 Somewhere in the endless flopping about
36:05 that was the filming of the Smarts Challenge,
36:07 the thing meant to decide whom among the smartest people
36:10 in the world was fit and worthy to enter Beast City.
36:14 What became the final round was simply the same red,
36:17 blue, green, yellow pattern, repeated four times.
36:20 These aren't isolated catastrophes.
36:23 All the games have some fundamental flaw,
36:25 and repeatedly contestants simply refuse to engage with the game
36:29 as Jimmy and his poker buddies conceptualized them.
36:33 The lion's share of the entertainment value
36:35 really comes from spotting those flaws in advance,
36:37 like icebergs on the horizon.
36:40 We could go on ranting about all the little
36:42 foibless of beast games, and so we did.
36:44 There's a whole other video.
36:46 Everything in the beast sphere is simultaneously
36:49 absurdly expensive and cobbled together from scraps.
36:52 One of the lies the team beast tells itself
36:54 is that when they go into a new field,
36:55 they gather a bunch of experts and really pick their brains,
36:58 learn everything they can about this new venture, absorb all their knowledge.
37:02 But like, no, I mean, hell,
37:07 they told us that that's what we were there for on the tour, right?
37:11 That that was the purpose of it all.
37:13 But if that's true, if we were brought in as subject matter experts,
37:17 why did we waste 20 minutes standing in the hall looking at fan art?
37:22 Why did everyone we talked to pitch us on spectacle?
37:26 Why did someone tell me with a seriousness like he was trying to seduce me
37:32 that the ATV we were riding in was
37:34 the exact same one Jimmy drives in the videos?
37:38 Did you bring me here to pick my brain
37:41 or are you trying to sell me a time share?
37:43 That boy can fit so many words in it.
37:46 This is already a recordbreaking video essay and we actually
37:51 broke two more that we didn't even tell you about.
37:54 But that's not enough.
37:56 We're taking it up another notch.
38:00 That's right.
38:01 This is the first video essay ever recorded
38:04 in a bouncy castle while wearing a tuxedo.
38:08 Isn't that right, certification dude?
38:11 Let's go.
38:31 The deeper underlying issue here is cultural.
38:34 Beast Industries is an organization obsessed with metrics.
38:38 Jimmy is famously a metrics guy.
38:40 So, it's not really a mystery where that culture
38:43 came from, but Team Beast is so obsessed with numbers, metrics, milestones,
38:47 and spectacle that it has leapt from being
38:50 something you put in front of the camera
38:52 to something that has seeped into the very
38:54 bones of the operation and metastasized.
38:57 This is a major contributor to the fact that Beast Industries is kind
39:01 of famously running the tank on empty
39:04 with revenue barely keeping up with expenses.
39:07 The entryway of Beast Industries is dominated by a massive digital
39:11 counter that displays the main channels realtime subscriber count and it
39:15 is surrounded by YouTube creator milestone awards for the various
39:18 Beast channels flanked by dozens and dozens of Guinness World Records.
39:23 The root issue that arises is a tremendous amount of inefficiency can be
39:27 sold internally as long as it can be tied to some metric of spectacle.
39:32 The biggest, the longest, the most.
39:35 As an example of all of this in action,
39:37 I was told at one point that Beast Game season 2 had the largest BTS crew.
39:41 You know, the people who run around filming the people doing the filming,
39:45 the largest BTS crew ever for a reality TV competition show at 16 people.
39:52 Now, that's funny for three reasons.
39:55 One, there is absolutely nothing in the BTS
39:58 footage that says this required 16 people running around.
40:02 you used four times as many people as normal
40:05 but absolutely did not get four times the results.
40:08 Two, that's a lot of caveats and it's really easy
40:12 to invent a record if you just keep narrowing the scope.
40:16 Three is that like 16 people is not that many people and even if it's true,
40:23 there's no competition for that record.
40:26 You invented a race and then awarded yourself the victor
40:29 while everyone else was too busy doing their jobs to care.
40:33 No one else is keeping score here.
40:36 So why are you trying to impress me?
40:38 I'm sorry.
40:39 The fact that you even thought to think about it is a sickness.
40:44 The obsession with metrics is such a deeprooted
40:46 value that it has become a gilded cage where
40:49 Team Beast must be wary at all times
40:51 of even the perception that they're losing the juice,
40:54 that they've plateaued, that it is even physically possible for Mr.
40:58 Beast to stop being the most watched single thing on planet Earth.
41:03 Speaking of the behindthe-scenes stuff,
41:05 I keep thinking about this bit where Jimmy
41:07 brags about using more equipment than the Olympics.
41:11 People might not even realize it,
41:12 but we use more gear for this season of Beast Games than the Olympics used.
41:16 Okay, assuming that that is even true,
41:18 that's the kind of brag that exists for its own sake.
41:21 Beast Games is, for all intents and purposes,
41:23 a sporting event where a single thing of interest
41:26 is happening at any given time in a single venue.
41:29 The Olympics is a sporting event where two
41:32 to four events are happening simultaneously across seven different venues.
41:36 And for a visual comparison, Beast Games looks like this.
41:40 And the Olympics looks like this.
41:43 There couldn't be a starker example of it's not about what's in your kit,
41:47 it's how you use it.
41:49 If you're hauling out more gear than the Olympics,
41:51 it's not because you need more gear than the Olympics.
41:54 It's because you want to be able to say, "We have as much gear,
41:58 if not a little bit more than the Olympics uses."
42:00 It's a really cheap, tacky way of thinking.
42:03 And honestly, the product starts tripping over the process.
42:06 There's so many cameras that they
42:08 are simultaneously capturing everything and nothing.
42:11 Tied up in the more gear than the Olympics
42:13 is bragging about how many GoPros they use.
42:15 I don't remember the exact number,
42:17 but B city and basically every game is plastered with GoPros.
42:20 Something like 600 of them.
42:22 But to what end?
42:24 The actual volume of GoPro shots that make
42:26 it into the final cut are few and fleeting.
42:28 Mostly confessional stuff.
42:29 And they don't really add that much here.
42:32 Like, I believe that a show like Beast Games has use for tiny
42:35 action cams and even has use for a very large number of them.
42:38 You want to be able to stick one wherever you need one up in high,
42:42 hard-to-reach places and not worry about getting it back down anytime soon.
42:46 But the math just doesn't math.
42:48 Unless you're literally firing them into the sun, how do you get to 600?
42:53 One of the running story lines in season
42:55 2 revolves around the loveirds, Monica and Jim.
42:58 The two of them say they met at the games, but that meeting isn't in the show.
43:02 And given their profile within the show and the fact
43:04 that they got married in Beast City during production,
43:07 there's no way the producers would leave that moment out if they had it.
43:11 So, a beast zillion cameras pointed at everything
43:14 and you still didn't get the shot.
43:15 And you know what?
43:17 It's fine.
43:19 Not having that moment is fine.
43:21 No one who noticed you didn't have the shot actually cared.
43:26 I fear that Beast Industries is going to learn the wrong lesson from all this.
43:30 That culturally they are inclined towards deciding that they need even more
43:35 cameras next time rather than learning they need to move forward with intents.
43:40 We have some of the largest sets
43:42 in history where breaking dust at the world records,
43:44 giving away millions of dollars.
43:46 Ultimately, Beast Industries lies to the outside
43:48 world and in turn it lies to itself.
43:51 They've pumped out so much BS about their world
43:53 records and status that they've bought in themselves.
43:57 They believe in their performance and believe
43:58 that performing it is the same as doing it.
44:01 Like we mentioned earlier,
44:03 Team B says that they love to bring in experts and purport to pick their brains,
44:06 absorb their knowledge.
44:08 This seems to be an internal cultural belief derived from Jimmy's explicit
44:12 belief that complex subjects can be absorbed in 20 minutes or less.
44:17 What's something that annoys me?
44:18 Um, education.
44:21 Why is it that your parents got taught the same
44:23 way in school that your kids are getting taught?
44:25 Look at Mark Robber's videos.
44:26 Look at all this amazing educational content
44:28 where you learn such great or like such
44:32 complex topics in like 20 minutes and it's
44:34 really engaging and fun and you retain it
44:36 and like no, there's too much there.
44:38 Let's not get distracted.
44:39 Just no.
44:41 This oddly recasts the entire visit
44:43 into something between the performance of research,
44:45 a ritualistic exposure to expertise, or straight up delusion,
44:49 like they legitimately believe that listening to a dozen YouTubers
44:53 freestyle their thoughts about fandom confers cumulative decades of experience.
44:58 They told us how intentional and deliberate
45:00 they are before moving into a new space,
45:03 but sorry, that's demonstrably untrue.
45:06 Hell, while we were putting the finishing touches on this video,
45:10 Defend One released a video called Mr.
45:12 Beast is Boring Now.
45:13 And Jimmy turned up in the comments agreeing with the guy and suggesting
45:16 that they hop on a Zoom call to hash some ideas out,
45:19 which is an absolutely insane thing for the face
45:23 of a media empire to admit out loud, intentional, and deliberate.
45:28 But Jimmy's out there just doing whatever this is visibly, demonstrably.
45:33 Beast Industries is being piloted by just some dudes
45:37 who actually well and truly do not have a plan.
45:40 Christ, I'm recording this line right now because we have
45:43 to keep going back to revise chunks of the script
45:46 because Jimmy just can't stop releasing embarrassing documentaries all
45:50 about how bad they are at making a game show.
45:53 I was kinder to the awful Smart Challenge originally where they played Simon.
45:57 I was willing to blow right past it.
45:59 But then we learned it wasn't just a bad game.
46:02 It was also profoundly miserable to shoot because it took all night.
46:06 My source for that is Jimmy Beast.
46:09 James himself is the one who told me in a video HE PUBLISHED.
46:13 HE'S DOING my job for me.
46:15 When we were doing the blocks game, I'm living in that moment right now.
46:18 Like sweating bullets.
46:20 Like guys, we've spent twice what we
46:22 were budgeted to today and we're still going.
46:25 How much longer do you think we'll go tonight?
46:26 I don't know what's going on.
46:28 Mr.
46:28 Mr.
46:28 Beast has a brand of chocolate bars, Feastables,
46:30 that he would tell you is one of his passion projects.
46:33 I've poured thousands of hours,
46:35 more than you could ever imagine, into perfecting this product.
46:38 But Jimmy says that in the same video
46:39 where he announces version 3.0 of his candy bars,
46:43 because the first version featured multiple critical design flaws.
46:46 There's a reason why like chocolate bars have
46:48 these like break points here where they like break easily.
46:50 I didn't know that.
46:51 Um, and so mine was just one solid sheet of chocolate,
46:54 but that's almost like a piece of glass,
46:57 whereas if you drop it, it just shatters into like a bunch of little pieces.
47:00 And um, and I also didn't know that there's a thing called a a package engineer.
47:04 If this was sitting on a shelf, when you grab this one,
47:07 these would all slide forward and then they would
47:09 fall out of the box and or the box
47:12 would fall off the shelf because of the weight
47:13 and so they would fall out like that.
47:15 Um, and then the bars because we didn't
47:17 have the natural break points would shatter like glass.
47:19 You may have seen Fastable Bars littering the floor
47:22 of your local grocery store, and this was why.
47:24 Jimmy actually got himself in a bit of hot
47:26 water because he put out an ill-considered call
47:29 for viewers to clean up the Fastable displays
47:31 and send him photos in order to enter a giveaway.
47:34 A few people got worked up about that, but it's it's mostly just embarrassing.
47:39 So, while Team Beast did identify the problems in their product,
47:42 they had to see them manifest out in the real world first.
47:45 This example suggests not only that they did
47:48 not consult experts in launching Jimmy's coveted chocolate bar,
47:51 but that no one so much as set up a prototype in a breakroom
47:55 and eat through a box organically in order
47:57 to experience these immediate and universal problems.
48:01 I've poured thousands of hours,
48:03 more than you could ever imagine, into perfecting this product.
48:06 This is all just a means to the ultimate end
48:07 of Beast Industry's ambition of being a 100 billion company.
48:12 This is actually one of the rules of Team Beast
48:14 presented on bold posters in the halls of Beast Studios.
48:17 See the value?
48:19 We are building the next 100 billion dollar company.
48:22 If you don't believe in us, you shouldn't be here.
48:25 Now, that's ambitious.
48:27 That's very ambitious.
48:28 For context, Netflix wants to buy Warner
48:30 Brothers Discovery for a poultry $82.7 billion.
48:35 So, they have to expand.
48:37 The road to 100 billion isn't just paved with candy bars and YouTube videos.
48:40 It's also toys like a whole line of tiny plastic choking hazards called Mr.
48:44 Beast Labs.
48:46 Here's one of them.
48:56 This is the rationale that justifies 600 GoPros.
49:00 Be the biggest at everything at all costs.
49:04 And this whole process is toxic to the production.
49:06 The need to not just be big,
49:08 but to say that you're big ends up dictating the creative process
49:12 at the expense of things like knowing when your episodes are going to end.
49:15 Because everything becomes a measure of clout.
49:18 Saying you have the most cameras,
49:19 saying you bring in experts before making your merch,
49:22 saying you want to be a hundred billion dollar YouTube company.
49:26 It's all just clout.
49:27 It's clout all the way down.
49:30 While this frame might look innocuous,
49:32 it actually represents the most expensive single day
49:37 of recording a video essay in Calgary, Alberta.
49:40 An already impressive feat.
49:43 But that's not all.
49:44 We've got even more firsts for you.
49:46 This is the first video essay ever recorded
49:49 with a bouncy castle in a tuxedo on Super 8mm film.
49:53 Isn't that right, certification dude?
49:57 Let's go.
49:58 HEAT.
50:00 HEAT.
50:26 I find the Mr.
50:27 Beast style creatively repulsive.
50:29 Jimmy is undeniably a savant at algorithmic optimization,
50:33 but he has built a machine that is utterly
50:35 incapable of comprehending its own work as a creative endeavor.
50:40 The standard output of Beast Industries has no narrative structure,
50:43 no buildup, no calm.
50:46 It's just a wall of indistinct visual and auditory noise.
50:50 Open a modern Mr.
50:51 Beast video and Jimmy is screaming at you in literal milliseconds.
50:55 WE JUST GOT DROPPED OFF ON THIS 2,000-YEAR-OLD ANCIENT TEMPLE.
50:59 That much is clear from the outside,
51:01 but perhaps the biggest revelation of the whole
51:04 tour is how uncontroversial this status quo is.
51:08 Mr.
51:08 Beast videos begin as a title and thumbnail.
51:11 That is the measure by which concepts are pitched and green lit.
51:15 This practice isn't a cardinal sin in isolation.
51:18 It's a pragmatic reality of YouTube.
51:21 Professional YouTubers need to put a lot of thought
51:23 into the title and thumbnail because we want to eat.
51:27 And yeah, sometimes the creative impetus behind a video
51:30 really is that it'd make for a killer thumbnail.
51:32 But it's rare that any of us will admit
51:34 that because we know that it's a bit naughty,
51:36 a bit tacky because it's starting with the marketing
51:39 and working backwards to create the product.
51:42 It's cynical.
51:43 Dare I say it's anti-art.
51:46 It wasn't shocking to learn that Mr.
51:48 Beast videos typically begin as thumbnails,
51:50 but it was shocking how open the team was to that admission.
51:54 They were cy about so so many things,
51:57 but this was said without a hint of concern.
52:00 It's not a dirty secret,
52:01 nor is it an open secret because it's not a secret at all.
52:05 It's public knowledge.
52:06 He goes, "We obsess." He's like, "We build 20,
52:09 30, 40 thumbnails, and once we like a thumbnail,
52:11 we go build the video and the idea around it." They had a poster on a wall,
52:15 one that I tragically didn't get any footage
52:17 of, that laid bare the mandate of the writer room.
52:20 Is this a 100 million view idea?
52:24 In his mind, it has to cost 100 million, right?
52:26 Oh, it's like two is it 200?
52:28 It's like two 300 now.
52:30 This mindset where ideas are conceptualized as views and no idea
52:35 can be more complex than a 10-word title is nakedly anti-art.
52:41 Again though, creativity will always exist in some sort
52:43 of tension with commerce because we need to eat.
52:47 Now, you might counter by pointing out that Team Beast
52:50 is just emulating the cold calculus you find in Hollywood,
52:54 AAA gaming, and pop music.
52:56 What I'd say to that is, sure,
52:58 Hollywood executives have their equivalent to the 100 million view idea,
53:02 and large-scale art, the equivalent of Mr.
53:05 Beast, is absolutely dominated by commercial interests.
53:09 But you will always find some sort
53:11 of delineation between the suits and the creatives.
53:15 If you want sinners, the only way to get it is to humor Ryan
53:18 Cougler when he insists on shooting on Ultra Panovision 70.
53:22 The smart business decision is to eventually step back and let Ryan cook.
53:27 But on the other end of the spectrum,
53:28 even the most corporate schllock fences off the artist from the commercial.
53:32 Call of Duty does not want its writers or animators
53:35 making business decisions because business decisions are for the businessmen.
53:39 The core difference between all these ghouls
53:42 and Beast Industries is that the business
53:44 people and the creative people at Beast Industries are the same people.
53:50 Separation is not only physically impossible, it's a crime.
53:54 When a member of the content team has an idea,
53:57 they turn their head and see this sign
53:59 and are immediately challenged to make a business decision.
54:03 They then begin workshopping the title and thumbnail, another business decision.
54:07 And if the idea gets approval,
54:09 it's handed off to the feasibility team whose job is
54:11 to make business decisions on whether the concept is viable.
54:15 It's a process that is incapable of producing
54:18 anything other than the hollow shell of art.
54:20 The outward form devoid of substance,
54:23 pure content birthed into the world by the raw pursuit of metrics.
54:28 The way that Jimmy and by extension the rest of team beast use the phrase
54:32 passion project simply can't escape the gravity well
54:35 of their mercenary commitment to metrics above all.
54:38 It becomes a shadow over everything.
54:41 Most Beast stuff from Beast Games to Fastables gets
54:44 called a passion project at one point or another.
54:47 Maybe this isn't even lying.
54:48 Maybe Jimmy is legitimately passionate for cheap
54:51 plastic toys and mediocre candy bars.
54:54 But even the philanthropy projects catch strays here.
54:58 Beast Philanthropy is one of the many
55:00 spin-off channels under the umbrella of Team Beast.
55:02 Though the separation is hazy at best since Beast Philanthropy videos all
55:07 still hinge on the same ostentatious spectacle that defines the main channel.
55:12 It's something of a boy who cried wolf situation.
55:14 Jimmy may truly believe in beast philanthropy and may genuinely
55:18 see Beast Industries as a vehicle to ultimately end world hunger.
55:22 But these ideals sit directly alongside answering the question
55:26 of if an octogenarian can win a foot race against
55:28 a 12-year-old or how much money is needed to convince
55:32 two randos to spend a month living chained to their ex.
55:35 The philanthropy stuff is weird.
55:37 I don't want to get caught up in the weeds here.
55:39 Beast philanthropy has its share of scandals.
55:42 But no matter how tacky and naive Jimmy may
55:44 be while he points a camera at his altruism,
55:47 it's hard for me to get worked up about
55:50 this in a world beset by billionaires behaving like literal vampires.
55:55 I suppose the oddness is rooted in how the philanthropy
55:58 side of things emerged from the swamp of Jimmy's early career.
56:02 The earliest stuff involved several different channels where
56:05 he attempted a dizzying array of styles and formats.
56:09 But his first success on YouTube came on a video titled I counted
56:13 to 100,000 where Jimmy counted from 1 to 100,000 in a single 48 hour session.
56:21 89,000 89,000 699 89,000.
56:24 Just recently, Jimmy Beast went on Jimmy Fallon
56:27 and admitted that the impetus behind the video
56:30 came from wanting to find a way to make money while watching Game of Thrones.
56:35 I really I thought about this.
56:36 I'm not even joking.
56:37 How can I make money while watching shows I like?
56:40 And I was like, well, what if I while I watch it?
56:41 I just record myself counting.
56:43 And it worked out.
56:44 And so Mr.
56:45 Beast's first viral hit was the purest possible business decision.
56:49 It was trash.
56:50 An utterly lifeless creative work with nothing
56:52 to say beyond its title and thumbnail.
56:55 Simply a vehicle for making money.
56:57 Beast Industries is the pure embodiment of that philosophy.
57:01 In that sense, Jimmy never stopped counting.
57:06 971 8902 973 8 974 A 975 8 976 8 97 898 979
57:15 Beast Games is transparently a derivative of Squid Game.
57:18 It's another open secret that could benefit from being
57:21 at least a little bit of a secret.
57:23 When Squid Game first came out on Netflix, the Mr.
57:25 Beast brand was all over it.
57:27 The premise of the show is that contestants have to do very simplistic,
57:31 childish challenges under highstakes circumstances.
57:34 So, the dovetail with the Mr.
57:35 Beast brand was basically baked in.
57:38 Initially, they just recreated the show in Minecraft for the Mr.
57:41 Beast gaming channel while they assembled, shot, cut,
57:43 and released $456,000 Squid Game in real life for the main
57:49 channel in less than two and a half months.
57:51 That video is to this day Mr.
57:54 Beast's most viewed video and not by a small margin.
57:57 Hence, we got Beast Games, the nonIP infringing Amazon Prime counterpart.
58:02 What I find fascinating, though, is how Jimmy seems both resistant
58:06 to and frustrated by comparisons to Squid Game.
58:10 First off, we didn't kill people.
58:12 During our preview of Beast Games,
58:13 Jimmy snuck into the theater and was present for the following debrief.
58:17 When I raised the subject of Squid Game, he became quite worked up.
58:21 In his mind, Squid Game kills people and Beast Games makes millionaires.
58:25 So, they're not remotely similar in the comparison is offensive.
58:29 And that is strictly true.
58:31 Amazon hasn't given Jimmy clearance to murder his participants.
58:35 Maybe that's a season 4 thing, but come on, man.
58:38 Beast Games is a Squid Game ripoff that would have been
58:42 impossible to deny even if you hadn't actually made Squid Game IRL.
58:48 This isn't a purely semantic argument.
58:51 It has a tangible effect on the end product.
58:54 When you make a sincere adaptation of the satirical
58:57 fictional murder game show from the anti- capitalist classic,
59:01 Do Not Build the Murder Game Show, you're going to import the bad stuff.
59:06 I don't need to belabor this point.
59:08 Beast Games has taken a satire of reality game shows as humiliation
59:12 rituals for the desperate and taken that as their starting position.
59:17 Regardless of how altruistic the show's spirit may or may not be,
59:21 the vibes were doomed to be gross from the start.
59:24 But fine, Jimmy thinks the Squid Game comparison is unfair.
59:28 Fine, whatever.
59:30 First off, we didn't kill people.
59:31 The remark I found more upsetting came from one
59:34 of the tour guides earlier in the day.
59:35 We were told repeatedly that the philosophy of Beast Games wasn't
59:39 to shape cast into stories or make them characters in editing,
59:43 but to put them into scenarios that would expose who they really were.
59:49 These games, in its purest form, its existence is a simulation.
59:54 This simulated world can be cold, brutal, and is entirely controlled by choices.
1:00:01 This echoes the sentiment that Beast Games
1:00:03 is some kind of grand social experiment.
1:00:06 A social experiment centered overwhelmingly around two things.
1:00:11 Money and lying for money.
1:00:13 I'm getting more money for you, JC.
1:00:15 I'm getting you MORE MONEY, MAN.
1:00:17 MORE MONEY.
1:00:18 Can you give Nick three more K?
1:00:19 You know what?
1:00:20 I'll give Nick three more.
1:00:21 For what?
1:00:22 I don't know.
1:00:22 He wants more money.
1:00:23 The idea that Beast Games exposes some truth about individuals or collectives is
1:00:28 deeply insulting and shows an ignorance to not just the product they created,
1:00:33 but their chosen career.
1:00:35 The social experiment thesis fails from first principles.
1:00:38 It's a game show.
1:00:39 While we get glimpses into human nature through peer pressure and the like,
1:00:43 what we're seeing is predominantly the rules
1:00:45 of beast games playing out in front of us.
1:00:48 I think most viewers pick up on the game theory in Beast Games just intuitively.
1:00:53 Everyone is here to make money and long odds
1:00:55 are you will never see any of these people again.
1:00:58 Thus, you should always take the money.
1:01:01 Your Beast Games integrity doesn't spend here.
1:01:04 But the show is willfully blind to this idea.
1:01:07 Beast Games loves the thought of people
1:01:09 betraying their friends and allies for money.
1:01:13 If you don't think Cory has it, this is your chance to switch teams.
1:01:16 Are you going to tell her what you told everyone else?
1:01:18 But if you guys once again refuse to lie TO EACH OTHER,
1:01:22 YOU'LL GIVE ME NO CHOICE BUT TO GO TO MY plan B.
1:01:26 And I promise you none of you are going to like plan B.
1:01:29 The only reason that narrative plays at all is that like,
1:01:33 yeah, after a month of living together,
1:01:35 there is a base amount of courtesy between the contestants that makes
1:01:38 them feel bad about playing the game that they're there to play.
1:01:43 Peer pressure is powerful in even small doses.
1:01:47 What Beast Games considers tests of integrity or selfishness or whatever are,
1:01:51 to me at least, better understood simply as exercises in coercion.
1:01:56 A contestant makes a promise to someone else.
1:01:58 And it's about finding a dollar value high enough to compel that contestant
1:02:01 to go back on their word and make a liar out of them.
1:02:05 I didn't hold true to my word.
1:02:07 And I feel bad.
1:02:09 I feel somber.
1:02:11 I don't even want to touch it.
1:02:12 It feels dirty to me.
1:02:15 And sorry, I don't think that process says anything noteworthy
1:02:19 about society or even Nick the Wrestler as an individual.
1:02:24 It's just juicing humans for content.
1:02:26 Due to the magic of editing, it will always be about whatever the producers
1:02:31 decide it will be about after the fact.
1:02:34 When someone steals the money, it becomes a story of greed.
1:02:37 When they hold the line, it becomes a testament to human integrity.
1:02:42 To be really tacky and quote myself,
1:02:44 they will always be able to use the whole bird.
1:02:48 And you'd think that a team working in reality
1:02:50 TV would be awake to this aspect of the genre,
1:02:53 aware that it is literally impossible for them to not
1:02:56 present a constructed story without posting the raw 24/7 footage.
1:03:01 It's also just a bizarre thing to say to a room full of media critics
1:03:05 and fans of reality TV who don't engage with the genre as if it's genuine.
1:03:10 We know it's a show.
1:03:11 We know what the sausage is made of.
1:03:13 It is rude to talk to us like we're their audience
1:03:16 and don't know where mommy goes when she holds up the dish towel.
1:03:20 This is part of a pattern of behavior with Beast Industries where the system
1:03:24 as it is set up is constitutionally incapable
1:03:26 of processing the optics of its own behavior.
1:03:30 It's honestly not even malicious so much as it is supremely credulous.
1:03:35 It's the kind of thoughtlessness that leads to leaving
1:03:38 a Twitter philanthropy award on display from con man
1:03:41 and bed bath and beyond stock grifter Bill Py seen
1:03:44 here on stage with meme stock failson pee pee seeds.
1:03:47 Does every has anybody here heard of Twitter philanthropy?
1:03:55 It's the absent-mindedness that leads to continually releasing behind-the-scenes
1:03:59 clips that make you look bad at your job.
1:04:01 It's a boys being boys attitude running a $5 billion company like you're
1:04:06 still four dudes around with leafblowers
1:04:09 in your backyard that fosters an environment
1:04:11 of passive callousness that leads to the kind of heinous stuff that happened
1:04:15 on Beast Games season 1 that we just don't have time to go into.
1:04:19 Hoots Hootman has a whole chapter dedicated
1:04:21 to this in her video about Beastburgger.
1:04:23 I don't need to retread her work.
1:04:25 Because within this 54-page class action lawsuit,
1:04:28 by far the most heavily redacted pages released to the public are
1:04:31 those that have to do with the sexual harassment of five women working
1:04:34 on the set of a television show produced by the biggest company
1:04:36 in the world and a YouTuber that statistically
1:04:39 your middle school age son is watching.
1:04:41 I think this excerpt is particularly damning.
1:04:45 It's the lack of critical thought that leads to gormlessly flying the entire
1:04:49 remaining cast of Beast Games off
1:04:51 to Saudi Arabia to drive Lamborghinis around Riad,
1:04:54 witlessly participating in the Saudi government's public image reformation
1:04:58 campaign along with star-studded comedy festivals and a chintzy Mr.
1:05:02 Beast theme park.
1:05:04 Like this is just wholly sincere advertisement.
1:05:07 This is product placement.
1:05:09 Bro, this city is incredible.
1:05:10 Better than be city for sure.
1:05:12 This city looks like it's from the future.
1:05:13 This is crazy.
1:05:17 One of the odd contradictions of Mr.
1:05:18 Beast is that he doesn't have
1:05:19 a fandom remotely proportional to his actual viewership.
1:05:23 In theory, with his viewership of almost 4 billion views a month,
1:05:27 he is on par with any major franchise,
1:05:29 up in the same range as professional sports.
1:05:32 He should be utterly inescapable.
1:05:34 But instead, he's just kind of lingering in the quagmire of the culture.
1:05:38 To use Reddit as a very loose proxy for fandom,
1:05:41 Beastgame's dominant subreddit has 19.4,000 members.
1:05:46 Pretty modest.
1:05:48 By comparison, the major subreddit for The Pit has over a 100,000.
1:05:53 Beast Game season 2 is a show that uses more gear than the Olympics,
1:05:56 and The Pit is a show you may only have heard of because
1:05:59 some beardy YouTuber told you it's good and that you should be watching it.
1:06:03 I am that beardy YouTuber.
1:06:05 Go watch it.
1:06:06 We checked the main Mr.
1:06:07 B subreddit.
1:06:08 the day after the Beast Games finale to find two posts in the last 24 hours,
1:06:13 both about Minecraft, with a combined total of six comments and 15 up
1:06:18 votes between them from a sub with 1.4 million followers.
1:06:23 The sub is dead.
1:06:25 And Mr.
1:06:25 Beast's comments on the YouTube channel are just a comment section.
1:06:30 Anecdotally, it feels like Mr.
1:06:31 Beast's most diehard fans today come from the hustle culture side of things.
1:06:35 People invested in Jimmy's bootstrap story and the fantasy
1:06:40 of a small YouTuber building a media empire with his boys.
1:06:44 People who share Jimmy's admiration of Steve Jobs and Elon Musk.
1:06:48 But those people aren't consumers.
1:06:50 They watch Jimmy's podcast appearances.
1:06:53 They don't watch Mr.
1:06:54 Beast.
1:06:55 Sincere Mr.
1:06:55 Beast fans do exist,
1:06:57 but there's nowhere for them to properly congregate and make Mr.
1:07:01 Beast feel like a living cultural entity.
1:07:04 I think the influencer I show speed makes for a really illustrative comparison.
1:07:09 I show Speed has 51 million subscribers at time of writing, a fraction of Mr.
1:07:14 Beast's 468 million at the same point in time.
1:07:19 I show Speed is mobbed wherever he goes.
1:07:21 He can proc a stream in Kenya and it
1:07:23 looks like the second coming of Jesus Christ.
1:07:26 It's actually a little concerning.
1:07:28 Speed reminds us just how big these numbers are.
1:07:32 By contrast, Jimmy's public appearances, even when organized,
1:07:36 pull in a fraction of this number.
1:07:38 And maybe it's a mark in Jimmy's favor that he
1:07:40 isn't out here causing human stampedes on the regular.
1:07:44 But whatever you may think of all of this, it's clear
1:07:46 that I show Speed has juice that Jimmy simply does not.
1:07:51 I AM NOW THE MAYOR OF PERU.
1:07:55 Jimmy Beast can be personable on Jimmy Fallon,
1:07:58 but Jimmy Beast is no Jimmy Jones.
1:08:01 I show Speed's content is even more transient and disposable than Mr.
1:08:06 Beast.
1:08:06 It's a pure embodiment of stream of consciousness noise.
1:08:10 It's not even right to call it creative work.
1:08:12 It's a celebrity walking around and letting
1:08:14 the novelties of the world come to him.
1:08:18 So why does he feel so much bigger?
1:08:21 Well, such is the ephemeral nature of celebrity.
1:08:25 Back at Beast Industries,
1:08:27 right next to the poster proclaiming that employees need to embrace
1:08:30 the vision of being a 100 billion dollar company is a companion rule.
1:08:36 YouTube first.
1:08:37 We are here to make the best YouTube videos on Earth,
1:08:41 not the best produced videos.
1:08:43 If you don't know the difference, ask Jimmy.
1:08:46 There is baked into the company's values
1:08:49 an ideological divide between what they do and art.
1:08:53 Now, some people do in fact just think he's neat.
1:08:57 And Jimmy Donaldson, the man, is indeed very easy to like.
1:09:00 In actual conversation,
1:09:02 he's personable and laid-back and does seem to show a genuine
1:09:05 interest in listening to other people talk about their expertise.
1:09:09 When he's not actively screaming at you through the magic of the internet,
1:09:12 Jimmy is mostly a frictionless individual.
1:09:15 He isn't going to challenge you.
1:09:18 Okay, he might literally challenge you to climb into a bucket of snakes,
1:09:22 but he's not a challenging figure.
1:09:25 But that's not enough.
1:09:27 If Mr.
1:09:27 Beast wants to realize the aspiration of being a 100 billion dollar company,
1:09:32 there are some extremely nontrivial hurdles to overcome.
1:09:36 One is that there is a plateau to what Mr.
1:09:39 Beast can achieve in its current form.
1:09:41 There are simply a bounded number of 12year-olds in the world.
1:09:44 If Mr.
1:09:44 beast is to exceed that plateau, it will need mass appeal.
1:09:48 It will need to be as mainstream as football.
1:09:52 It might feel like he's kind of already there, but not remotely.
1:09:56 The line that we're trying to navigate
1:09:58 here is the difference between scale and popularity.
1:10:01 Beast Industries is currently valued around 5 billion overall and skating
1:10:06 a little below half a billion per year in revenue, though not profitable.
1:10:12 So, their dream is to eventually 20x in scale.
1:10:16 That simply isn't achievable as a standalone YouTube channel.
1:10:21 So, Team Beast is attempting to leverage Mr.
1:10:24 Beast as a launching point for other commercial
1:10:26 ventures such as the candy bars and toys.
1:10:29 But while Jimmy is a savant at YouTube,
1:10:32 he does not have the mightest touch and has
1:10:34 arguably been racking up a quiet string of failures.
1:10:37 Beastburgger was marred by inconsistent execution, a grading premise,
1:10:42 and bad partnerships, leaving the whole thing mired in litigation.
1:10:46 Beast Labs has been described as so far past shelf warming, it's not even funny.
1:10:51 Lunchley shipped rotten food.
1:10:53 But even if all of these were hits,
1:10:56 you don't get to 100 billion by selling candy bars in the grocery store.
1:11:01 You get there by being the grocery store.
1:11:05 The next hurdle in that journey is that adults broadly don't like Mr.
1:11:09 Beast.
1:11:10 I have a challenge for all of you.
1:11:14 They find the brand actively repellent and associated with lowquality,
1:11:17 thoughtless products.
1:11:19 Things made cheaply and quickly.
1:11:21 Candy bars that need two iterations to have molded break points.
1:11:25 The whole enterprise has a stank about it.
1:11:28 A manic desperation combined with a naked embrace
1:11:31 of everything repulsive in the metricsdriven attention economy.
1:11:36 Mr.
1:11:37 Beast reeks of ambition derogatory.
1:11:40 Maybe Beastburger, Beast Labs, Lunchley,
1:11:43 and even Beast Games have been overcrinized.
1:11:46 Maybe there is an army of haters out there who just want to see Jimmy lose,
1:11:51 and Team Beast must navigate that every day.
1:11:54 But that is a cage of their own construction built one honey ad at a time.
1:11:59 No one wants to see this guy win.
1:12:02 This is villain behavior.
1:12:04 Go to every computer in your house.
1:12:06 Your mom's, your dad's, your sister, your brother's computer, and install honey.
1:12:09 A staple of the channel is rooted
1:12:11 in giveaways and a participatory story of wealth distribution.
1:12:15 In a hodgepodge of videos ranging from daring Chandler to eat a cockroach
1:12:19 for $100 and giving homeless people bags full of cash on hidden
1:12:23 camera emerged a synthesis format where team beast round up x number
1:12:27 of wise and have them compete in juvenile challenges for vast sums of money.
1:12:32 In the earliest days of this version of the channel, proximity to Mr.
1:12:35 Beast was literally the sorting factor that could land you a sack full of bills.
1:12:40 But even as the pool of participants expanded,
1:12:42 the channel has never shaken the perception that one weird trick to getting rid
1:12:47 of your debt is to know someone
1:12:49 who knows someone in Team Beast's casting department.
1:12:53 Of course, that's extra hard to shake
1:12:55 when stuff like this keeps happening in 2025.
1:12:58 Alongside the help of Coach and his best friend, Chandler.
1:13:02 Chandler.
1:13:03 Chandler.
1:13:03 Yo, let's go Chandler.
1:13:05 And the subscriber giveaways are too numerous to count.
1:13:08 They're so impromptu that when he did the whole thing with recruiting kids
1:13:12 to clean up his merchandise in grocery stores for a chance to win something,
1:13:16 it barely even registered until it happened to break
1:13:19 containment and some adults noticed what was going on.
1:13:22 Everything that we've talked about,
1:13:24 the obsession with money, the poorly thoughtout games,
1:13:27 the cheapness of everything surrounding the giant pile of cash,
1:13:32 the thoughtless disposable nature of the end product,
1:13:35 the transactional subscribe for a cookie nature of the channel,
1:13:40 the sheer tackiness of giving a kid a Mr.
1:13:43 Beast branded prosthetic.
1:13:46 People feel that.
1:13:48 Turns out sitting on piles of fake
1:13:50 money to signal wealth is actually very cheap.
1:13:54 Look, they even let us do it.
1:13:56 Whenever someone in a focus group asks you a question,
1:14:00 the question itself betrays an anxiety.
1:14:02 So being flown a couple thousand miles to be asked
1:14:05 by the most subscribed YouTuber in the history of ever, how do you build fandom?
1:14:10 says something very telling about how Tame Beast sees itself,
1:14:13 its place in the culture, and its place in the future.
1:14:17 And you know, I don't have access to the Mr.
1:14:20 Beast dashboard beyond the screenshots Jimmy posts to social media,
1:14:24 but I'm something of a data guy myself.
1:14:27 Out of raw curiosity, I graph the performance of every main channel Mr.
1:14:32 Beast video from his first viral counting video to present.
1:14:35 And well, there's a lot of caveats in these numbers.
1:14:38 And by any objective measure of YouTube success,
1:14:41 these numbers are still incomprehensible.
1:14:44 But there is a very interesting trend in the data.
1:14:55 Now, this is just a single axis of a very complex operation.
1:15:00 But if I were a metrics obsessed business
1:15:02 and I saw this, I might get a little spooked.
1:15:09 I still don't actually know why I was invited to Mr.
1:15:13 Beast Studios, and at this point, I probably never will.
1:15:17 The exercise was supposed to be hype.
1:15:19 Clearly, every interaction with the staff
1:15:21 was infused with a delirious enthusiasm,
1:15:24 but I just left haunted by a profound sense of tragedy.
1:15:28 This glimpse inside a vast industrial machine that exists to produce nothing.
1:15:33 Beast Industries pumps things out in service
1:15:35 of a metric defined by its own existence.
1:15:38 It does philanthropy, but is blind to anything that can't be
1:15:41 encapsulated in a 10-word title and a thumbnail.
1:15:44 They will rescue slaves, then shamelessly fly to Saudi Arabia so
1:15:48 Chandler can drive Jim around in a Lambo.
1:15:52 Yo, let's go, Chandler.
1:15:54 And all of this compounds.
1:15:55 The inefficient operations obsessed with metrics lead to a business
1:15:59 that, as Jimmy keeps saying on talk shows,
1:16:02 isn't making any money because they spend it all.
1:16:04 The gilded cage of the channel's dominance
1:16:06 means they simply cannot stop making stuff.
1:16:09 And the deeply baked corporate culture of artlessness
1:16:12 means there's no room for experimentation or re-evaluation.
1:16:16 Despite the money, the whole thing is cheap and plastic.
1:16:20 Jimmy has in his career published dozens of videos
1:16:22 that any other channel would have simply scrapped in production.
1:16:26 This has been a successful strategy in terms of growth,
1:16:29 but has tainted the image.
1:16:30 The failure of the bluff game is embarrassing from a production standpoint.
1:16:35 Just an absolutely entirely foreseeable own
1:16:38 goal that heads should have rolled over,
1:16:40 but it had to go out the door as it was.
1:16:43 Too much was riding on it.
1:16:44 And it's not even a one-off.
1:16:46 The whole season is littered with moments like that.
1:16:49 It's just the poster child.
1:16:51 The brand is a hodgepodge of ill-considered basically
1:16:54 random ventures from toys to candy to meat snacks
1:16:57 to ghost kitchens to soon financial services with the only
1:17:01 common denominator being that it's directed at children.
1:17:05 How you build fandom is by making
1:17:07 something people want to watch because it's fun
1:17:10 or interesting or profound and not just
1:17:13 because it hacks the attention pathways of 9-year-olds.
1:17:16 The Beast Empire is comically precarious,
1:17:19 suffering from the conditions of its own success.
1:17:22 And for a brief moment, I got to drift past it.
1:17:25 A flailing animal, a great beast of the sea, ill-considered, impulsive,
1:17:30 no real plan, dysfunctional, obsessed with weird stuff,
1:17:33 committed 100% to the immediate term,
1:17:37 hurtling itself forward into anything and everything
1:17:40 out of an existential fear that if
1:17:42 it ever stops swimming for long enough to get its bearings, it will die.
1:17:46 Team Beast spent $30,000 to fly 12 YouTubers
1:17:50 out to North Carolina to show them some fields,
1:17:53 feed them sandwiches, and ask them questions that could have been an email.
1:17:58 Why?
1:17:59 There is no why.
1:18:01 It's just what they do.
1:18:27 down.
1:18:34 Down.