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Inside Jake Paul’s Reported $92M Pay Day

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Jake Paul faces off against Anthony Joshua

Jake Paul lost the fight, but financially, the Paul vs. Anthony Joshua Netflix event may have been one of the biggest paydays in modern boxing.

Multiple reports ahead of and after the bout pegged the total fight package around $184 million, with roughly $92 million per fighter if split evenly — though neither side has publicly confirmed an official final number.

Paul himself added fuel to the chatter with a post claiming “$267 million,” a figure that would imply a much larger overall pool — but again, there’s no public confirmation of that number as an official payout.

Why the number is hard to pin down

Unlike traditional pay-per-view events where revenue flows through a visible PPV model, this fight was distributed on Netflix — where the business goal is typically subscriber acquisition and retention, not PPV buys. That makes the economics more opaque. As one breakdown noted, even credible reports vary, and combat media figures suggested the historic figures being thrown around may still be lower than the hype.

Jake Paul punches Anthony Joshua.

What likely made up the money stack

While exact terms aren’t public, the reported “total purse” chatter typically bundles multiple components:

  1. Guaranteed purses (base pay)
    The simplest: each fighter receives a contracted guarantee.
  2. Netflix rights/licensing fee
    Instead of PPV, the event’s main distribution value is the global streaming rights package.
  3. Sponsorship + brand integrations
    This includes anything from ring canvas / corner branding to broadcast segments and promotional tie-ins.
  4. Live gate + event revenue
    The fight took place at Miami’s Kaseya Center in front of a capacity crowd (reported at 19,600). Live ticket revenue can be meaningful even in a streaming era.

Jake Paul’s extra leverage: promotion upside

Paul isn’t just a fighter — he’s also a promoter/operator in this lane. Depending on how the event was structured, he could benefit from the upside of promotion, branding, and distribution beyond a flat purse (even if the exact split isn’t public).

The real takeaway

Whether the final number is closer to the widely reported $184 million or something else, the important signal is this: creator-driven boxing is now a mainstream entertainment product — and streaming platforms are willing to pay for spectacle if it moves culture.

Parasocial will update this story if official payout documentation or contractual reporting becomes public.

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Paul Frazier
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Breaking Down the Numbers Behind Kai Cenat’s Mafiathon 2

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In November 2024, Twitch streamer Kai Cenat launched one of the most ambitious livestream projects in the platform’s history. “Mafiathon 2” was a subathon that ran continuously for an entire month, the whole of November. With a trailer loosely inspired by the Sopranos and featuring Kim Kardashian, the month of streaming was quite the spectacle. Cenat streamed around the clock, encouraging users to subscribe to his channel, promising that twenty percent of revenues would go towards a pledge to build a school in Lagos, Nigeria. The results shattered previous benchmarks on Twitch for subscriptions, viewership, and engagement, giving the livestreaming industry a rare and measurable case study in audience intensity.

Cenat’s total subscriber count at the end of the stream was over 725,000, according to the BBC. This more than doubled the previous record of roughly 326,252 subscribers set by VTuber Ironmouse during her own marathon event earlier in 2024. To sustain a subathon, each new subscription typically adds more time to a countdown clock that would otherwise run down and end the broadcast, creating an incentive to subscribe. Cenat kept the broadcast going for the full 30 days of November, and the subathon format was at the heart of that extended schedule.

https://www.twitch.tv/videos/2298835383

A closer look at the numbers reveals the scale of the event. According to data mentioned by Time Magazine in their profile of Cenat for their 2025 Top 100 Creators list, the stream accumulated tens of millions of unique viewers over its run, with estimates as high as 50 million. According to Time, revenue from the subscriptions alone was calculated at “more than $3.6 million” for Cenat after accounting for typical platform fees and regional pricing. Concurrent viewership numbers were equally staggering, with peaks consistently in the hundreds of thousands. On one notable day in the marathon, peak viewership approached 643,000 concurrent viewers, placing the broadcast among the most watched on Twitch in 2024.

Audience engagement was not limited to subscriptions and raw viewership numbers. Mafiathon 2 also generated a massive amount of total watch time on Twitch. According to analytics from tracking platform Dexerto, Cenat’s marathon accounted for a large share of total hours watched on Twitch for November 2024. One report indicated that the stream alone was responsible for over 80 million hours watched, more than five percent of all hours streamed on Twitch that month.

Twitch typically takes a revenue share of around 30 percent for subscriptions. With an estimated 728,000 subscribers paying at least the base subscription rate, and after Twitch’s cut, Cenat had estimated earnings of around $3.6 million from sub revenue alone. This excludes additional income from donations, ad revenue, and higher tier subscriptions, all of which would add to the total earnings. 

The involvement of celebrities also amplified viewership. During the marathon Cenat hosted guests such as Snoop Dogg, Lil Uzi Vert, and Serena Williams, among others. These appearances created breakpoints in the schedule that attracted even more attention from both his existing community and outside viewers. In addition to raw metrics, the impact of Mafiathon 2 on Twitch’s narrative for 2024 was significant. The streamer was highlighted in Twitch’s own year end reviews, and Cenat’s channel was named among top performers on the platform. These mentions reflect the numerical dominance of the broadcast in a year that saw many other high profile events and livestreams across gaming and entertainment categories.

Overall, the numbers behind Mafiathon 2 make it one of the most noteworthy experiments in livestreaming history. It set new subscription standards, pushed viewership into previously unseen territory, and provided a measurable example of what sustained viewer engagement can look like in live broadcast environments. The scale of the marathon, the retention of audience attention, and the monetary results together illustrate a new benchmark for content creators on Twitch and similar platforms.

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James Lewis
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Addison Rae’s Expanding Empire: From TikTok Fame to Founder

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Addison Rae’s career now draws revenue from beauty, fragrance, fashion collaborations and a growing music business, beyond her TikTok origins. She has turned early online momentum into owned assets and co-created products, positioning herself as an entertainment and consumer goods powerhouse. Here’s how she turned her social media presence into a fully-fledged entertainment career, a makeup company, and multiple partnerships.

Beauty and Fragrance Foundations

Starting off on TikTok in 2019, Rae rocketed to fame and briefly joined the Hype House TikTok collective. Her first major step outside social content arrived in 2020 with Item Beauty, a clean makeup and skincare line she co-founded with Madeby Collective, a beauty brand incubator. The vegan, cruelty-free brand launched at Sephora stores in 2021, proving that Rae’s audience would buy into categories where she held credibility. Though Item Beauty ended in 2023 amid shifting Gen Z beauty trends, the move highlighted the value of brand ownership over sponsorships alone. Rae applied the same approach to fragrance in 2021 through a partnership with Hampton Beauty, releasing Addison Rae Fragrance, a line of alcohol-free, mood-based scents built on green chemistry and upcycled materials.

Music as Core Business

Music now ranks as one of Rae’s steadiest growth areas, shifting her image from TikTok personality to artist with a real catalog. Early efforts like the 2021 single “Obsessed” missed the mark, but leaked tracks and the 2023 EP AR refined her sound for pop and club trends. By 2024 and 2025, releases such as “Aquamarine,” “High Fashion” and “Headphones On” came with professional videos and teams, building to a full album framed as a pop milestone rather than a side project. This setup supports touring, merchandise and licensing, creating lasting commercial value from a once-viral platform.

A Podcast, Hollywood Roles and Brand Partnerships

Rae and her mother, Sheri Nicole partnered with Spotify in 2020 for Mama Knows Best, a mother-daughter podcast that touched on Rae’s upbringing. Although the show didn’t last, it helped further her entertainment career. Rae’s acting credits and partnerships form a parallel portfolio, delivering fees and mainstream credibility. She led Netflix’s He’s All That in 2021, followed by roles in Thanksgiving and its sequel, plus upcoming projects like Animal Friends. These build her presence in entertainment pipelines. Brand work has evolved from TikTok sponsorships to campaigns with Adidas, Fashion Nova and Pandora, plus appearances for Saint Laurent and Ssense labels. Such deals keep her in fashion and lifestyle circles, fueling tie-ins with music tours or product launches.

@addisonre

I’ve always been a lucky girl 🍀🍀🍀❤️❤️ Shop the Addison Ultra Low Flare Jean in Bare & Hidden online now at luckybrand.com 🪄 U.S. only. @Lucky Brand #AddisonxLuckyBrand #partner

♬ High Fashion by Addison Rae – Addison

Fashion Moves and the Future

Rae’s fashion efforts now look like an ongoing pipeline, not one-offs. In August 2025, she teamed with Lucky Brand on a collection of low-rise jeans tied to Y2K aesthetics that match her style. These test her influence in apparel and prepare for repeats, such as tour merchandise or a beauty relaunch shaped by past lessons. Social content still drives reach, but owned IP, products and entertainment assets ensure earnings hold up against platform shifts. Her path shows creators how to funnel attention into diversified businesses, operating as a founder who starts with fame but builds beyond it.

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James Lewis
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Lethal Shooter’s Hidden Media Strategy

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Chris “Lethal Shooter” Matthews over the past several years has solidified himself as one of the most notable sports figures online. He’s branded himself through his attention grabbing 3 point shooting scenarios and his signature “I get it now” catch phrase. Though his skills maybe be shocking, they are legit. His shocking precision turned him into one of the most valuable trainers in the world of basketball.

A few weeks ago, Matthews appeared in a new MrBeast video centered around shooting challenges and elite performance. On the surface, it looks like another viral sports crossover. Underneath, it’s a case study in how one of basketball’s most respected coaches built a premium business by monetizing trust, scarcity, and social media credibility.

What Happened

MrBeast, the most powerful creator on YouTube, invited Lethal Shooter to train him and team him the art of precision shooting . The video immediately exposed Matthews to millions of new viewers and added to his already established credibility. His brand was built through results: training Steph Curry, Kevin Durant, Klay Thompson, Giannis Antetokounmpo, and dozens of other elite players.

Why It Matters

What makes Lethal Shooter’s business model different is what he refuses to monetize.

In past interviews, Matthews has explained that he intentionally limits how many NBA players he trains, often working with only one or two per day. He avoids large group sessions, refuses “two-for-one” workouts, and even turns away players if he feels the relationship could damage his brand.

That scarcity is the foundation of his pricing power.

Instead of scaling through volume, Matthews scales through prestige. Each successful client becomes marketing. Each shooting record, like his viral 23-for-25 three-point streak becomes proof of concept. Each social clip functions as both content and credential.

From there, he built multiple revenue streams:

  • Premium private training with NBA and pro-level athletes
  • Selective youth camps with small group sizes and high ticket prices
  • Brand partnerships with Nike, Jordan Brand, NBA 2K, and Red Bull
  • Media projects, including his documentary and now high-profile creator collaborations

The MrBeast video amplifies all of it. It places Matthews in front of a mainstream audience that doesn’t just follow basketball.

Lethal Shooter recently collaborated with viral fitness influencer, Ashton Hall, for similarly the same reason. These crossovers expands his funnel far beyond gyms and leagues. Ashton’s audience especially is global. One of the things that stands out about Ashton’s content is that there are very few words which allows it be globally consumable. You don’t need to understand english to completely relate to the video which gives it global appeal.

You don’t have to be the star athlete to build a massive business in sports media. You can be a coach. You can be a trainer like Chris Brickley or a technician. If your expertise is rare and your results are visible, social media becomes your growth engine.

This collaboration also reflects a bigger creator-economy trend: top YouTubers are increasingly partnering with domain experts to add credibility and depth to their content. For MrBeast, featuring the world’s most famous shooting coach raises the stakes. For Matthews, it opens the door to more brand deals, speaking opportunities, digital products, and future media formats.

What’s Next

Matthews has already teased upcoming projects with new influencers. With the MrBeast appearance now part of his portfolio, his positioning shifts from “elite trainer” to “sports creator entrepreneur.”

For trainers, coaches, and niche experts watching from the sidelines, the lesson is clear: in today’s economy, mastery plus media beats scale alone.

Lethal Shooter built his empire through picking his spots right.
He built it by training the right people, and letting the internet do the rest.

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Ahmad Muhammad - Editor
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