Connect with us

Published

on

A YouTube sensationknown for giving away large sums of money hasrevealed just how much he believes his viral videocompany isworth.

YouTube star JimmyDonaldson, better known by his creator name "MrBeast" runs one of the most popular channels on Alphabet Inc's GOOG YouTube platform.

Famous for giving awaymoney and high-value prizesto unsuspecting subscribers, Donaldson is one of YouTube's biggest earners and biggest givers.Many of hisfollowers have long made guesses as tojust how much money his online video businessand related companies areworthand he'sfinally revealed exactly how much that might be.

What To Know: According to an Insider report from late September, Donaldson unveiled that he once turned down a $1 billion offer for the MrBeast brand.

During an interview on the Flagrant podcast, heprovided an estimated future valuation for hisYouTube company turned creativeempire,whichincludes a Beast branded mobile game, a restaurant,chocolate bars and more.

"It's so crazy, I don't even want to say it …it would probably be like $10 billion, $20 billion," Donaldson said on the show.

Although MrBeast has created a mobile app to stage one of his crazy stunts(ittracked who could keep their finger pressed on the app for the longest), the app he'sreferring to is a mobile strategy game thathe hasplanned for sometime down the road.

That's just one of several viral videos that have been featured on MrBeast's channel. He's given away millions in cash, several Teslavehicles, an island, and in his most recent video, the gift of sight.

Two weeks ago, Donaldson paid for1,000 blind people to havecataract surgery.The video features several clips of thepatients across the worldremoving bandages and experiencing clear vision, some for the first time.

Check This Out:MrBeast's 1,001 Acts Of Charity: The Gift Of Sight, And A New Tesla For 1 Teenager

MrBeast crossed the 100 million subscriber mark on YouTube in July 2022 and that number has already climbed to133 million at the time of writing.

Just like his estimated $10 to $20 billion valuation for the umbrella of MrBeast-branded companies, Donaldson expects the price tag on his empire to continue to skyrocket.

"In the future I think it could be worth way more," Donaldson told the "Flagrant" podcast hosts.

One of the hostsnoted that he was shockedWalt Disney Co DIS had notoffered him the"craziest check in history." Another host noted that MrBeast is worth more thanMeta PlatformsInc's META WhatsApp.

Meta acquired the messaging appin October 2014 forapproximately$16 billion, including$4 billionin cash and approximately$12 billionworth ofFacebookshares. It's worth significantly more today.

He could see MrBeast being worth more than WhatsApp in five years, maybe 10, hesaid,noting, however,that that's not hismain goal. The 24-year-old YouTuberhas pledged to give away all of his money before he dies: "every single penny," he saidin a tweet last month.

See Also:Mr. Beast Bemoans Unfair 'Bad' Label From Twitter Users Dogecoin Creator Has This Advice

Photo:wikimedia.org

Continue Reading

Entertainment

Dayle Haddon: Former Sports Illustrated model dies of suspected carbon monoxide poisoning

Published

on

By

Dayle Haddon: Former Sports Illustrated model dies of suspected carbon monoxide poisoning

Dayle Haddon – the actor, activist and former Sports Illustrated model – has died from what authorities believe was carbon monoxide poisoning.

Authorities found the 76-year-old dead in a second-floor bedroom on Friday morning after emergency dispatchers were notified about a person unconscious at the house in Solebury Township, Pennsylvania.

A 76-year-old man, later identified as Walter J Blucas, of Erie, is in a critical condition.

Responders detected a high level of carbon monoxide in the property.

Investigators believe the leak was caused by “a faulty flue and exhaust pipe on a gas heating system”.

As a model, Haddon appeared on the covers of Vogue, Cosmopolitan, Elle and Esquire in the 1970s and 1980s, as well as the 1973 Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

She also appeared in about two dozen films from the 1970s to 1990s, including 1994’s Bullets Over Broadway, starring John Cusack.

Haddon (Left) with Angela Merkel and Christine Lagarde (Right) during a meeting of the Gender Equality Advisory Council. Pic: Michael Kappeler/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
Image:
Haddon (left) with Angela Merkel and Christine Lagarde (right) during a meeting of the Gender Equality Advisory Council. Pic: AP

Haddon left modelling after giving birth to her daughter, Ryan, in the mid-1970s, but then had to re-enter the workforce after her husband’s 1991 death.

This time, she found the modelling industry far less friendly: “They said to me, ‘At 38, you’re not viable’,” Haddon told The New York Times in 2003.

Read more on Sky News:
Olivia Hussey, star of 1968 film Romeo and Juliet, dies at 73

Working for an advertising agency, she began reaching out to cosmetic companies, telling them there was a growing market to sell beauty products to aging baby boomers.

She eventually landed a contract with Clairol, followed by Estee Lauder and then L’Oreal, for which she promoted the company’s anti-aging products for more than a decade.

She also hosted beauty segments for CBS’s The Early Show.

In 2008, Haddon founded WomenOne, an organisation aimed at advancing educational opportunities for girls and women in marginalised communities, including in Rwanda, Haiti and Jordan.

Read more on Sky News:
Andrew Garfield on baking cookies and his mum’s perfume
Disabled musicians demand greater inclusivity

Haddon’s daughter, Ryan, said in a social media post that her mother was “everyone’s greatest champion. An inspiration to many”.

“A pure heart. A rich inner life. Touching so many lives. A life well lived. Rest in Light, Mom,” she said.

Continue Reading

World

Director of one of last functioning hospitals in northern Gaza detained in Israeli military raid

Published

on

By

Director of one of last functioning hospitals in northern Gaza detained in Israeli military raid

The director of one of the last functioning hospitals in northern Gaza was arrested in a raid the Israeli military said was targeting a Hamas command centre.

The Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry said Dr Hussam Abu Safiya, director of Kamal Adwan Hospital, was held by Israeli forces on Friday along with dozens of other staff and taken to an interrogation centre.

Sky News has spoken to patients who say they were forced outside and told to strip in winter weather after troops stormed the hospital.

Israel‘s military said it “conducted and completed a targeted operation” as the hospital was being used as a command centre for Hamas military operations.

Dr Hussam Abu Safiya
Image:
Dr Hussam Abu Safiya. File pic

An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) statement said more than 240 terrorists were detained, some of whom tried to pose as patients or flee using ambulances.

Among those taken for questioning are the hospital’s director, who it said was suspected of being a “Hamas terrorist operative”.

Around 15 people involved in last year’s 7 October attack on southern Israel, in which around 1,200 people were killed and 250 others abducted, were also detained, the IDF said.

More on Israel-hamas War

The Israeli military said hundreds of patients and staff were evacuated to another hospital before and during the operation, and it had provided fuel and medical supplies to both hospitals.

Militants fired on its forces and they were “eliminated”, while weapons, including grenades, guns, munitions, and military equipment, were also seized in the raid, it said.

‘It was humiliation’, says injured patient

After news spread on Friday of Kamal Adwan – one of the last functioning hospitals in northern Gaza – being burnt and raided by Israeli forces, a haunting video emerged, writes Sky News correspondent Yousra Elbagir.

Half-stripped men treading over rubble through a scene of full scale destruction with their arms raised and large tanks on either side.

One of the injured patients made to take the walk was being treated in the hospital with his wife and children by his side.

In the hours after being released he shared his experience from the safety of al Ahli hospital.

“The army came the night before and started firing rockets at the hospital and surrounding buildings,” he says. He looks weak and his clothes are grey with concrete dust.

“Yesterday between 5.30 and six, the army came to the hospital and called out [with a loudspeaker] that the director of the hospital must hand over all the displaced, the sick and wounded.”

The director of Kamal Adwan hospital Dr Hussam Abu Safiya had been sharing videos online sounding the alarm on intensified Israeli attacks on the hospital in a 10-day siege before the full raid. He has been detained in the raid.

“We all started leaving then the army stopped us and told the director, ‘I want them in their underwear without any clothes on and they should leave without clothes on’,” says the patient.

“So, we went out without clothes and walked a long distance to a checkpoint. They made us sit there still without any clothes all day in the freezing cold. Once we entered the checkpoint – it was humiliation, cursing and insults in an unnatural way.”

“When they finished the search they placed a number on the back of our necks and on our chest. After we were done with the search they loaded us on to trucks – still naked without any clothes on.”

He says they waited in the trucks for four hours before they were released and that the injured, sick, the medical staff and visitors all faced the same humiliating treatment.

The Israel-Hamas war has killed more than 45,400 Palestinians, over half of them women and children, and wounded more than 108,000 others, according to the health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

The hospital has been hit multiple times over the past three months by Israeli troops waging an offensive in largely isolated northern Gaza against Hamas fighters it says have regrouped.

The health ministry said a strike on the hospital earlier this week killed five medical personnel.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp
Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

The World Health Organization (WHO) said it was “appalled” by Friday’s raid, which it said put northern Gaza’s last major health facility “out of service”.

“The systematic dismantling of the health system and a siege for over 80 days… puts the lives of the 75,000 Palestinians remaining in the area at risk,” a statement said.

The Israeli military said in a statement: “The IDF will continue to act in accordance with international law regarding medical facilities, including those where Hamas has chosen to embed its military infrastructure and conduct terrorist activities in blatant violation of international law.”

Continue Reading

World

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to undergo surgery to have prostate removed

Published

on

By

Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu to undergo surgery to have prostate removed

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will go into hospital to have his prostate removed, his office has said.

The 75-year-old was diagnosed with a urinary tract infection resulting from a benign prostate enlargement.

Mr Netanyahu is expected to go into hospital on Sunday to undergo the operation.

Earlier this year, he had surgery for a hernia and had a pacemaker fitted last year.

The announcement comes after the Israeli military raided one of the last functioning hospitals in northern Gaza, arresting its director.

Israel has been at war with Hamas for more than 14 months since the 7 October attacks in which around 1,200 people were killed and 250 others abducted.

More than 45,400 Palestinians, over half of them women and children, have been killed and more than 108,000 others wounded, according to the Hamas-run Palestinian health ministry, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.

Continue Reading

Trending