首页 500强 活动 榜单 商业 科技 商潮 专题 品牌中心
杂志订阅

年收入高达八位数,知名博主却称自己“身无分文”

Emma Burleigh
2026-01-16

他声称尽管经营着价值达到50亿美元的娱乐帝国,自己却和普通人一样身无分文。

文本设置
小号
默认
大号
Plus(0条)

吉米·唐纳德森是全球最受欢迎的YouTube博主,也是市值达到50亿美元的Beast Industries公司创始人,他声称自己“严格来讲”早上连买一份麦当劳的钱都拿不出来。图片来源:Gilbert Flores / Contributor / Getty Images

部分执掌数十亿美元企业的成功企业家坦言,尽管其账面看起来富有,但细看其银行账户会发现他们捉襟见肘。社交媒体巨头吉米·唐纳德森(野兽先生)在YouTube上拥有4.6亿名粉丝,他声称尽管经营着价值达到50亿美元的娱乐帝国,自己却和普通人一样身无分文。

“我正在借钱度日,手头拮据到了这种地步。”唐纳德森在本月初告诉《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal),“严格来讲,扣除公司股权价值后,每位观看这个视频的人银行账户里的余额恐怕都比我多,毕竟我账户里剩下的钱都不够买一份麦当劳早餐。”

这位27岁的企业家坦言,尽管身为亿万富翁,且持有市值达到50亿美元的Beast Industries公司逾半数股权,但他的流动资金不足百万美元。除了与亚马逊(Amazon)达成九位数合作协议、运营着累计播放量达到1070亿次的热门YouTube频道外,唐纳德森还凭借一系列成功的商业项目跻身富豪行列——至少账面上是这样。他创立的企业包括:价值数百万美元的巧克力品牌Feastables、类似Lunchables的包装食品品牌Lunchly、仅支持自提和配送的虚拟餐厅MrBeast Burger,以及助力其打造病毒式视频的制片公司MrBeast LLC。

据名下各类资产估算,唐纳德森的身家至少达到26亿美元,不过他强调,这并非躺在口袋里、可以随意支配的巨额现金。《福布斯》(Forbes)还估算,在2024年4月至2025年4月期间,他的年收入达到8,500万美元,远超美国人年均62,088美元的收入水平。但这并不意味着他会大肆挥霍,购买奢侈品或只乘坐私人飞机。他称自己实际上入不敷出。

“聊起我的个人财务状况总是很滑稽,因为我说什么都没有人信。”唐纳德森解释道,“大家都会说:‘你可是亿万富翁啊!’我只能回答:‘那是净资产。’我现在负债压身。”

“我每天醒来就投入工作……忙得根本无暇顾及个人银行账户。”唐纳德森接着说道,“我专注于制作最精彩的视频,将事业做大做强。”

野兽先生为何自称入不敷出

唐纳德森的年收入高达八位数,经营着市值达到50亿美元的企业,却仍然称自己身无分文。那么,他的钱究竟都花到哪里去了?这位YouTube博主表示,所有资金都重新投入商业项目。

“我手头没有什么钱,因为赚来的每一分钱都被我重新投入公司(今年内容制作预算预计将达到2.5亿美元)。说来讽刺,就连我即将到来的婚礼开销,都得向我妈借。”唐纳德森在X平台回应某篇称其为“唯一一位30岁以下白手起家的亿万富翁”的帖文时写道。

他接着补充道:“当然,我名下这些公司的估值,确实称得上价值不菲。”

自称身无分文的亿万富豪们

其他亿万富豪创始人也纷纷表示,他们并不像净资产所显示的那样富有。市值达到15亿美元的运动服饰品牌Gymshark创始人及首席执行官本·弗朗西斯坚称自己高达13亿美元的净资产“不过是账面数字”,并表示财富并非衡量成功的“真实”标准。

2023年,弗朗西斯在《The SuperPower Podcast》节目中称:“人们总以为我名下某个银行账户里躺着数十亿美元,但这完全是无稽之谈。这些财富都是账面数字。”

毕竟,一份亏损的财报或行业新晋强敌,就足以让他的净资产大幅缩水。由于弗朗西斯持有公司的70%股权,其个人财富与公司资产表现深度绑定,其资产价值随时都可能出现波动。

“净资产可能翻倍,也可能腰斩。”这位Gymshark的创始人补充道。“正因如此,我认为任何人都不应该把自我价值与财富、净资产这类财务指标挂钩。”

即便是那些手握大量可支配现金的亿万富豪,也会选择节俭的生活方式。估值达到2900万美元的Scale AI联合创始人郭露西,就从不轻易动用自己持有的价值13亿美元的股份。这位全球最年轻的白手起家女亿万富翁,向来反感“浪费”金钱,出行选择乘坐经济舱,日常代步开的是一辆老旧的本田思域(Honda Civic),身着从Shein购买的衣服,吃饭也会精打细算,专挑优惠套餐。事实上,她认为,炫富和挥霍金钱购买奢侈品是内心缺乏安全感的表现;而她根本无需用这些方式证明自己是人生赢家。

“那些在设计师服装、豪车等奢侈品上挥霍金钱的人,往往属于百万富翁阶层。”郭露西在2025年接受《财富》杂志采访时表示,“装穷才能守富。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

部分执掌数十亿美元企业的成功企业家坦言,尽管其账面看起来富有,但细看其银行账户会发现他们捉襟见肘。社交媒体巨头吉米·唐纳德森(野兽先生)在YouTube上拥有4.6亿名粉丝,他声称尽管经营着价值达到50亿美元的娱乐帝国,自己却和普通人一样身无分文。

“我正在借钱度日,手头拮据到了这种地步。”唐纳德森在本月初告诉《华尔街日报》(Wall Street Journal),“严格来讲,扣除公司股权价值后,每位观看这个视频的人银行账户里的余额恐怕都比我多,毕竟我账户里剩下的钱都不够买一份麦当劳早餐。”

这位27岁的企业家坦言,尽管身为亿万富翁,且持有市值达到50亿美元的Beast Industries公司逾半数股权,但他的流动资金不足百万美元。除了与亚马逊(Amazon)达成九位数合作协议、运营着累计播放量达到1070亿次的热门YouTube频道外,唐纳德森还凭借一系列成功的商业项目跻身富豪行列——至少账面上是这样。他创立的企业包括:价值数百万美元的巧克力品牌Feastables、类似Lunchables的包装食品品牌Lunchly、仅支持自提和配送的虚拟餐厅MrBeast Burger,以及助力其打造病毒式视频的制片公司MrBeast LLC。

据名下各类资产估算,唐纳德森的身家至少达到26亿美元,不过他强调,这并非躺在口袋里、可以随意支配的巨额现金。《福布斯》(Forbes)还估算,在2024年4月至2025年4月期间,他的年收入达到8,500万美元,远超美国人年均62,088美元的收入水平。但这并不意味着他会大肆挥霍,购买奢侈品或只乘坐私人飞机。他称自己实际上入不敷出。

“聊起我的个人财务状况总是很滑稽,因为我说什么都没有人信。”唐纳德森解释道,“大家都会说:‘你可是亿万富翁啊!’我只能回答:‘那是净资产。’我现在负债压身。”

“我每天醒来就投入工作……忙得根本无暇顾及个人银行账户。”唐纳德森接着说道,“我专注于制作最精彩的视频,将事业做大做强。”

野兽先生为何自称入不敷出

唐纳德森的年收入高达八位数,经营着市值达到50亿美元的企业,却仍然称自己身无分文。那么,他的钱究竟都花到哪里去了?这位YouTube博主表示,所有资金都重新投入商业项目。

“我手头没有什么钱,因为赚来的每一分钱都被我重新投入公司(今年内容制作预算预计将达到2.5亿美元)。说来讽刺,就连我即将到来的婚礼开销,都得向我妈借。”唐纳德森在X平台回应某篇称其为“唯一一位30岁以下白手起家的亿万富翁”的帖文时写道。

他接着补充道:“当然,我名下这些公司的估值,确实称得上价值不菲。”

自称身无分文的亿万富豪们

其他亿万富豪创始人也纷纷表示,他们并不像净资产所显示的那样富有。市值达到15亿美元的运动服饰品牌Gymshark创始人及首席执行官本·弗朗西斯坚称自己高达13亿美元的净资产“不过是账面数字”,并表示财富并非衡量成功的“真实”标准。

2023年,弗朗西斯在《The SuperPower Podcast》节目中称:“人们总以为我名下某个银行账户里躺着数十亿美元,但这完全是无稽之谈。这些财富都是账面数字。”

毕竟,一份亏损的财报或行业新晋强敌,就足以让他的净资产大幅缩水。由于弗朗西斯持有公司的70%股权,其个人财富与公司资产表现深度绑定,其资产价值随时都可能出现波动。

“净资产可能翻倍,也可能腰斩。”这位Gymshark的创始人补充道。“正因如此,我认为任何人都不应该把自我价值与财富、净资产这类财务指标挂钩。”

即便是那些手握大量可支配现金的亿万富豪,也会选择节俭的生活方式。估值达到2900万美元的Scale AI联合创始人郭露西,就从不轻易动用自己持有的价值13亿美元的股份。这位全球最年轻的白手起家女亿万富翁,向来反感“浪费”金钱,出行选择乘坐经济舱,日常代步开的是一辆老旧的本田思域(Honda Civic),身着从Shein购买的衣服,吃饭也会精打细算,专挑优惠套餐。事实上,她认为,炫富和挥霍金钱购买奢侈品是内心缺乏安全感的表现;而她根本无需用这些方式证明自己是人生赢家。

“那些在设计师服装、豪车等奢侈品上挥霍金钱的人,往往属于百万富翁阶层。”郭露西在2025年接受《财富》杂志采访时表示,“装穷才能守富。”(财富中文网)

译者:中慧言-王芳

Some successful entrepreneurs sitting atop billion-dollar businesses say they may look rich on paper, but take a peek into their bank accounts, and they’re actually cash poor. Social media mogul Jimmy Donaldson, known to his 460 million YouTube followers as MrBeast, claims he’s just as broke as everyone else despite running a $5 billion entertainment empire.

“I’m borrowing money. That’s how little money I have,” Donaldson told the Wall Street Journal earlier this month. “Technically, everyone watching this video has more money than me in their bank account if you subtract the equity value of my company, which doesn’t buy me McDonald’s in the morning.”

The 27-year-old entrepreneur has said that he keeps less than $1 million for himself, despite being a billionaire and owning more than half of his $5 billion company Beast Industries. Aside from his nine-figure Amazon deal and popular YouTube channel with 107 billion lifetime views, Donaldson hit the ultra-rich club—at least on paper—from a slew of successful businesses. He’s launched ventures including multimillion-dollar chocolate brand Feastables; Lunchly, a Lunchables-esque packaged food product; MrBeast Burger, a virtual restaurant that only allows for pickup and drop-off; and production company MrBeast LLC, which helps manufacture his viral videos.

Through his assets, Donaldson is projected to be worth at least $2.6 billion—although he emphasized it’s not a fat wad of cash burning a hole in his pocket. Forbes has also estimated that his annual earnings reached $85 million between April 2024 and April 2025, a far cry from the typical American salary of $62,088 a year. However, that doesn’t mean he’s splurging on luxuries and only flying private. Donaldson claimed he’s actually in the red.

“It’s funny talking about my personal finances, because no one ever believes anything I say,” Donaldson explained. “They’re like, ‘You’re a billionaire!’ I’m like, ‘That’s net worth.’ I have negative money right now.”

“I wake up, I just work…I’m just so busy working I don’t really think about my personal bank account,” Donaldson continued. “I’m just laser-focused on making the greatest videos as possible, and building the business as big as possible.”

Why MrBeast says he’s in the red

Donaldson rakes in eight-figure earnings and runs a $5 billion business, yet still claims to be broke. So where is all of his money going? Right back into his business ventures, the YouTube star says.

“I personally have very little money because I reinvest everything (I think this year we’ll spend around a quarter of a billion on content). Ironically I’m actually borrowing $ from my mom to pay for my upcoming wedding,” Donaldson wrote on X in response to a post heralding him as the only billionaire under 30 who didn’t inherit their wealth.

“But sure, on paper the businesses I own are worth a lot,” he continued.

The billionaire entrepreneurs who say they’re broke—or act like it

Other billionaire founders have echoed that they don’t feel as wealthy as their net worth suggests. Ben Francis, the founder and CEO of $1.5 billion sportswear brand Gymshark, insisted that his $1.3 billion net worth is “all on paper,” and that his wealth isn’t a “real” marker of success.

“People assume there is some bank balance with my name on it that has billions in which is just completely untrue,” Francis said on The SuperPower Podcast in 2023. “None of it is real.”

After all, it only takes one negative earnings report or fierce new industry competitor to jolt his net worth. Since Francis owns 70% of the company, his fortune is wrapped up in the success of his assets—which can fluctuate in value at any given moment.

“It could double, it could [halve],” the Gymshark founder continued. “That’s why I think it’s important that no individual should ever pin their self-worth on things like wealth, net worth, or anything financial.”

Even the billionaires who do have cash to burn are just skirting by, out of choice. Lucy Guo, the cofounder of $29 million company Scale AI, isn’t keen to spend the $1.3 billion stake she has in the business. The youngest self-made billionaire woman in the world doesn’t like to “waste” money, opting to fly commercial, drive an old Honda Civic, wear Shein clothes, and leverage meal deals to get the best price. In fact, she believes flashing wealth and needlessly splurging on life luxuries is a sign of insecurity; Guo doesn’t feel the need to prove she’s successful.

“Who you see typically wasting money on designer clothes, a nice car, et cetera, they’re technically in the millionaire range,” Guo told Fortune last year. “It’s like, act broke, stay rich.”

财富中文网所刊载内容之知识产权为财富媒体知识产权有限公司及/或相关权利人专属所有或持有。未经许可,禁止进行转载、摘编、复制及建立镜像等任何使用。
0条Plus
精彩评论
评论

撰写或查看更多评论

请打开财富Plus APP

前往打开