‘Beast Games’ set issues highlight growing pains in YouTuber-run productions

Allegations of poor working conditions on YouTuber MrBeast’s new Amazon Studios show have pushed some people who work with creators to call for more safety oversight on their sets.

During the filming of “Beast Games,” MrBeast, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, faced public backlash amid claims that he fostered an unsafe working environment. At least five contestants filed a class action lawsuit in September alleging they were “shamelessly exploited” while competing. Representatives for Donaldson have not commented on the lawsuit but previously said the production team has “taken steps to ensure that we learn from this experience.”

The accusations highlight what some in the digital production world — which typically refers to content created for social media platforms  have identified as a growing concern in the industry for years. Online content creators, they say, often fail to ensure the same basic standards for treating cast and crew that more traditional entertainment sets do.

“I’ve worked with some production companies that are just like working on a union shoot, and some of them do operate as union shoots, and others that absolutely do not,” said Mair Mulroney, an actor who previously appeared on the popular channel run by YouTuber Dhar Mann. “It’s the wild, wild west, really and truly.”

The traditional entertainment and digital media industries have not always aligned in their creative visions and methods, which has caused some tension between the two in the past. However, as digital productions grow, those who work with or under creators said some could benefit from the structure seen on traditional Hollywood sets.

Could Hollywood unions help?

Unlike Hollywood sets, most digital productions do not necessarily rely on union workers.

YouTubers are used to calling the shots on most of their projects. Even with “Beast Games,” a reality competition program that Amazon Studios reportedly paid $100 million to acquire, Donaldson said he was granted full creative control by the more traditional studio.

When accusations about working conditions on Donaldson’s show first surfaced, many online speculated whether it was a nonunion production, which isn’t unusual for a reality show. The show was shot in Las Vegas, Toronto and Panama.

In Hollywood, the Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (SAG-AFTRA) and the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE) ensure there are protections in place for members on sets, like enforcing break times, assessing risks and requiring producers to accommodate requests for intimacy or stunt coordination.

Some believe the digital entertainment space — which includes a wide range of productions, including reality and scripted content — would benefit from union oversight.

“The unions have to approach new media and help it grow up,” said Scott Brown, an Emmy-nominated digital producer who previously worked for MrBeast. “Because new [digital] media has got about 15 years, the unions have 100. They’ve got to bring that knowledge.”

Representatives for SAG-AFTRA declined to comment.

An IATSE spokesperson said the union “believes that all production and post-production workers deserve fair wages, health and pension benefits and appropriate workplace protections.”

“We continue to scout for organizing opportunities in our covered work areas in all content channels,” the spokesperson said in an email.

A representative for Donaldson said the “Beast Games” shoot in Toronto worked with union members from the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians (NABET) and the Directors Guild of Canada (DGC). The representative said it also had nonunion crew members.

The DGC confirmed in an email that “Beast Games” was a signatory of its side letter for reality productions and its members were allowed to work on the production, which the guild said had “a mix of non-union and union personnel.” NABET did not respond to a request for comment.

Creators would have to give up some autonomy

Producer Bernie Su said traditional media can sometimes have “asinine bureaucracy” in production that is counterintuitive to the needs of digital sets, which often produce work faster and cheaper.

Su used SAG actors in all of his Emmy-winning digital series, including “The Lizzie Bennet Diaries” and “Emma Approved” on YouTube, as well as the Twitch series “Artificial.”

While he believes not every production needs to employ union-represented workers, if YouTubers ever want to use big stars, they would have to abide by SAG rules and become a union set.

YouTubers would become signatories to SAG “when it provides value to them,” Su argued.

While the entertainment industry has been slowly bouncing back from last year’s SAG-AFTRA and Writers Guild of America strikes, Mulroney said digital productions have been offering more consistent, albeit nonunion, work.

“You just kind of have to kind of go with the consequences of doing that,” she said. “And things may not always be as professional as what you would typically be used to when you work on a union set.”

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