
YouTube star MrBeast is stepping up his charm offensive with Madison Avenue as his company ramps up efforts to win a larger share of traditional TV ad dollars.
Beast Industries is hosting a breakfast for top brand and ad executives and creator-economy insiders at Penthouse 45, a sleek Manhattan event venue known for sweeping views of the Hudson River and New York City skyline.
The invite-only gathering will feature Jimmy Donaldson (aka MrBeast) and Beast Industries CEO Jeffrey Housenbold talking up the company’s assets, growth plans, and media partnership goals, three people who saw the invite said.
It promises an “inside look at the world’s most impactful entertainment brand” where the duo will “share their vision for the future and how we are defining the next era of strategic partnerships together.”
The event has symbolic significance in that it coincides with the annual TV upfronts week, when legacy TV companies like NBCUniversal and Disney throw extravaganzas to pitch advertisers for big spending commitments.
The timing underscores how hard creator-led media companies are now competing with entertainment giants for brand budgets. Creator-focused companies like Google’s YouTube and SoftBank-backed Spotter also host their own upfronts-style events.
The MrBeast event comes as his company has been trying to build a scaled media business and Disney-style entertainment enterprise. It’s seeking a VP of agency partnerships to work with big agency holding companies as well as a CMO to round out its executive suite.
Beast Industries has been beefing up its executive team with hires from major media companies, including TikTok and NBCUniversal. The company has also seen some flux — Kelly Calabrese, who was VP of global media and brand partnerships, left in April after six months. Meanwhile, Tina Tran is joining from TikTok as a VP in brand partnerships, Business Insider can exclusively report.
“It’s not surprising the No. 1 creator, and one of the big celebrities in the world, wants to sit down and have an intimate conversation with the biggest advertisers in the world,” said David Freeman, a former CAA exec who recently left to start his own creator-focused company, Kynetic Media Ventures. “Everyone wants to get closer to agencies and brands. I think you’re going to see more and more talent who are building bigger media companies do this.”
Advertisers, for their part, are racing to work with creators as audiences shift from traditional TV to creator-driven platforms like YouTube. US ad spending in the category is estimated to hit $44 billion in 2026, from $37 billion in 2025, according to a report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau.
Advertisers’ spending on creators is limited by the lack of results-based measurement they are used to in other media. That means deals are usually funded from sponsorship budgets rather than from the larger media spending bucket.
The IAB is trying to help close the gap with an event called CreatorFronts in September, which will be accompanied by a report identifying pain points and opportunities. It also plans to make recommendations to tech platforms to adopt common definitions for impressions and other terms.
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