2025 had some of the lowest points in my life, which is saying something.
It also had some of the best moments of my life as a new mom.
It was a lot.
“Thankfully, I have a great therapist who helped me with the ups and the downs.”
Our sponsor Rula helps match everyone with a great therapist, while keeping therapy affordable. Rula partners with therapists and psychiatrists nationwide enabling you to find your personalized solution and the right therapist for you, based on your needs, preferences, and state requirements.
And Rula isn't just affordable, the experience is tailored around you. Because they know that finding the right therapist can make all the difference. Rula makes it easy to find a mental health provider who is accepting new patients and appointments are available as soon as tomorrow. Thousands of people are already using Rula to get affordable, high-quality therapy that's
actually covered by insurance. Visit Rula.com/mn to get started. That's RULAA.com/mn-n-n. You deserve mental health care that works with you, not against your budget. Here's my tip to feel safer in this crazy world.
Start building an emergency fund.
“Just knowing it's there will cut your stress so much.”
Here's a pro tip, though. Don't let that money just sit there. Make sure you're getting the highest APY possible. Put your fund to work. With CHIME, you can earn up to 3% APY on savings.
CHIME is changing the way people bank. Fee-free and smarter banking built for you. Not like old school banks that charge you overdraft and monthly fees, CHIME recently launched the new CHIME card. It unlocks safer credit building and cash back with every day's spending.
Imagine cash back and credit building with your own money,
finally on the same card.
No annual fees, no interest, and no strings attached. CHIME is not just smarter banking, it is the most rewarding way to bank. Join the millions who are already banking fee-free today. It just takes a few minutes to sign up. Head to CHIME.com/eminentN.
That is CHIME.com/eminentN.
“CHIME is a financial technology company, not a bank.”
Banking services, a secured CHIME visa credit card, and my pay line of credit provided by the bank or bank N.A. Or strike bank N.A. My pay eligibility requirements apply. And credit limit ranges $20 to $500. Optional services and products may have fees or charges.
See CHIME.com/fee-sinfo, advertised annual percentage yield with CHIME+ status only. Otherwise, 1.0% APY applies, no man balanced required. CHIME card on time payment history may have a positive impact on your credit score. Results may vary, see CHIME.com for details in applicable terms.
I'm a March baby. Yes, a Pisces. For my birthday week, my bestie came to town. I was so happy to see her. I love celebrating with close friends, but there was one cloud over the trip planning.
She was worried about the cost. So I shared my favorite tip for making travel more affordable. While you're away, you can list your space on Airbnb and make some extra cash. If your place is just sitting there empty, that's a missed opportunity. And with Airbnb's co-host network hosting is now easier than ever.
You can hire a vetted local co-host who has hosting experience to take care of your home and guests. A co-host can handle all the details so the stay runs smoothly. They can do everything from creating your listing, handling guest communication, to offering onsite support while you're away. So if you're ready to host, but need a little help,
find a co-host at Airbnb.com/host. I'm Nicole Lappin. The only financial expert you don't need a dictionary to understand. It's time for somebody around. Here's the number I want you to sit with for just a second.
2.6 billion. That is the estimated net worth of a 27-year-old kid from Greenville, North Carolina, who dropped out of college after two weeks because he wanted to make YouTube videos. That kid is Jimmy Donaldson. You know him as Mr. Peace.
If you're thinking that you don't have anything to learn from the monetization strategy of an influencer who lights cars on fire, I just want you to stop there for a minute. Because more than 30% of Jen Alva and 57% of Jen Z want to be creators. And even though a lot of people were sort of dubious about the whole space at the beginning, it is undeniable that the creator landscape is big business.
The creator economy is now worth $250 billion worldwide,
which is larger than the GDP of more than 100 countries.
Goldman Sachs predicts that the creator economy could reach $480 billion by 2...
By 2032, projections put it anywhere between $700 billion and nearly a trillion dollars. Creators are driving our purchase decisions when it comes to what we watch, what we wear, what we eat, what we drink, and what medicines we even take. It's completely disrupting the way companies advertise. Here's the proof.
“For decades, the Super Bowl has been the largest stage for advertisers to compete, right?”
To get in front of roughly 125 million people watching the Super Bowl this year,
advertisers spent an average of $8 million for a 30 second commercial.
But Mr. Beast has 470 million followers on YouTube alone. His videos routinely do more than 125 million views, and he posts a lot way more than the annual Super Bowl opportunity. There is a financial opportunity here, of course. But critically, not just for the people who want to be on camera.
There is still money to be made even if you do not want to be an influencer. So make sure to listen all the way to the end because I share three ways to invest in the creator economy right now. But to make the business case, let's use Mr. Beast as an example. And go back to the days before he had 470 million YouTube followers.
“Jimmy Donaldson started posting on YouTube in February of 2012.”
At 13 years old, on a channel called Mr. Beast 6000, which was named after a random xbox gamer tag that the platform generated for him. He started by creating gaming content. But as he was posting, he became fixated on cracking the algorithm. He told Rolling Stone that he spent five years in what he called an unhealthy obsessed state,
where he was constantly analyzing why certain videos worked and why others didn't. He graduated from high school in 2016, enrolled at East Carolina University, and lasted all the two weeks before dropping out. Mr. Beast was out on his own, he had no money yet no safety net, and he had a YouTube channel with fewer than 30,000 subscribers.
But he kept at it.
And his breakthrough came in January of 2017.
I actually didn't know this story until I started doing the research myself for this video, but it is pretty nuts. He posted a video called "I counted to 100,000," where he literally does just that. It took him 40 hours to film, and the final edit is only slightly shorter. It clocks in at 24 hours long.
“The video is still on YouTube if you want to see it.”
I definitely did not watch the entire thing. I skipped around a little bit, but I did find the edit equal parts absurd and compelling. When he posted this video, it went viral almost immediately. He hit 1 million subscribers that same year. The video sounds really silly on paper, for sure, and maybe it is.
But it does show a deep understanding of what the internet wanted in that era. Commitment to a ridiculous bit, and putting serious effort into a very unsurious stunt. From there, Jimmy started reinvesting every single dollar he made back into bigger, more elaborate content. Here's how Mr. Beast's model actually works, because it's not what most people think. YouTube ad revenue is definitely the engine, but it's not the profit center.
His channels, he has over a dozen of them, pulled in roughly 9 billion views in 2024 alone. The main channel now has over 469 million subscribers making it the most subscribed to account on YouTube. It's hard to find legit information on how much brands actually pay for sponsored content on Mr. Beast's channels, but his earnings from content and brand deals in 2024 were estimated at $85 million by Forbes. It sounds like that should have been an amazing year for Mr. Beast's big account.
But he actually spent most of it. Individual YouTube videos cost Mr. Beast between $3 and $5 million each to make. His production company Beast Industries had over $473 million in total revenue in 2024, and still ran out of loss because he poured everything back into the business. So no, the content itself is not how Mr. Beast is getting so rich.
His videos are actually lost leaders for his consumer goods empire, and that is where the realm money is. In 2022, Jimmy launched Feastables, a chocolate and snack brand.
By 2024, Feastables was generating over $215 million in revenue, and it turned its first
meaningful profit. It's now in Walmart, Target, Crocker, and 7/11. It accounts for roughly half of Beast Industries' total value. Think about that. A YouTube channel built a snack brand that now rivals mid-tier legacy consumer goods companies in just a matter of 2 years. The trick was the distribution channel that he already owned. His own audience. Every video is essentially a commercial for his product lines,
but it doesn't feel like one because the videos would exist anyway. Then there's Beast Games. In March of 2024, Jimmy signed a reported $100 million deal with Amazon MGM Studios to produce
A reality competition show.
The largest cash prize in reality television history. The goal was to make a sort of real-life
“squid games, just without all the violence. Season 1 debuted in December of 2024,”
and it hit 50 million views in just 25 days, making it prime videos most watched, unscripted show, ever. It was renewed for two more seasons before Season 1 even finished Erring. Season 2 was out right now, and it is so, coo crazy wild, like, gigantic, floor is lava games, crazy. Here's a lowdown on the Amazon deal, though, because this is where it gets financially very interesting. The $100 million deal sounded massive, but Mr. Beast said on the diary of a CEO podcast that he
spent tens of millions of dollars beyond that on production out of his own pocket. Just the
first two episodes set costs at around 15 million and 14 million respectively, so he lost money
on the deal. He literally said, quote, "I would have had more money if I didn't film it." But he got something he thought was worth the investment. 50 million new eyeballs from a platform that he didn't have to build himself. He used Amazon as distribution infrastructure, which means his brand got deeper penetration globally without building it himself. Whether that trade-off was worth it is debatable. Fast company made a compelling case that
Amazon got the better end of that deal, because even though Mr. Beast got access to the Amazon audience, Amazon got access to Mr. Beast's audience. So it's hard to declare the real winner of
“that deal. But it signals something really important about where Mr. Beast is going. He's not just”
a YouTuber building a snack brand. He's a vertically integrated CPG founder with an owned media channel, and that media channel happens to have started on YouTube. In September
of 2025, Beast Industries raised money out of valuation of $5.2 billion led by Alpha Wave Global.
Jimmy retained majority ownership there. That round is what pushed his paper net worth to approximately $2.6 billion. The company projects $899 million in revenue for 2025 and nearly $5 billion by 2021. So a kid who was kicked out of his mom's house in 2016 is now running a company value like a mid-size media company. Now I'm sure we are all so so happy for him. But let's talk about what this means for the rest of us. Like I said, the creator economy is not niche anymore.
It's one of the fastest growing markets in the world. But the good news is because it's turning into such an established industry, you won't have to be an influencer that spends 40 hours counting to 100,000 in order to get a piece of that grow. Just like you don't have to be an AI engineer to get a piece of the AI industry. That's because institutional money is paying attention.
Creator economy startups raised over $767 million between 2023 and 2024. Traditional media companies,
private equity firms and vendor funds, are all circling. So here are three ways to benefit from the growth of the creator economy. Option one, the infrastructure layer. Full disclosure here,
“this is where I think the risk reward is least understood. Companies like Patreon,”
Substack and other subscription first platforms are enabling an entirely new revenue model for creators, recurring subscription income that doesn't depend on ad algorithms. Most of these companies are private, but as the space matures, IPOs will come and these will be worth watching closely. In the meantime, you can look at publicly traded companies, building creator tools, analytics platforms, production software, content management systems. But many of these
companies are racing to own the market. When it comes to business competition, there's no such thing as a tie. It's not like three competitors get three equal slices of the pie. It's a winner takes most model. So there is more potential for growth if you happen to pick the winning news letter company who will own the creator economy. But there's also more potential for loss if you pick the runner up. There are also new companies popping up every single day in the space. So it's
unclear if the winner even exists yet. Option two, the obvious place. Elfbet which owns YouTube is the clearest proxy for creator economy growth. Every time the creator ecosystem expands, YouTube's ad revenue goes up, and so does Elfbet's bottom line. Same logic applies to meta which owns Instagram and Facebook. Two of the most active creator monetization platforms on the planet. These are large cap publicly traded companies that you can buy today. If you do your
research, of course, with meaningful exposure to creator economy tailwinds. Option three, the less obvious play. Shopify is one of the most underrated creator economy beneficiaries. The creator two consumer goods pipeline runs directly through platforms like Shopify. Similarly, hello beyond YouTube, Apple, and Spotify and other platforms are benefiting from the explosion of podcast content and direct creator monetization. If you believe the creator economy continues
To grow, owning the platforms where creators monetize is one of the most dura...
For today's tip, you can take straight to the bank. Instead of buying creator branded consumer
“products themselves like the chocolates, the energy drinks, the merch, buy stock in the companies”
that manufacture and distribute them. When Mr. Beastables lands on shelves that let's say Walmart,
Walmart definitely captures margin on every unit sold and so did the distribution that
“worked behind it. Creator brands are built on attention, which is so volatile, but the distribution”
infrastructure that they depend on, Walmart, Target, Shopify, Amazon is not. So the next time
you're tempted to spend four bucks on a feastable's bar because you love, love, love the brand.
“Think about spending that four dollars on fractional shares of the actual company that put that”
product on the shelf. You're essentially investing in every creator brand that passes through that same pipeline, not just one.

