A resurfacing MrBeast clip jokes that whoever wins a hand-on-the-tombstone challenge inherits his channel.
Behind the bit sits a real question every digital business faces: who owns the assets if the founder is gone.
For agencies and creators, documented ownership and a continuity plan beat a hand on a headstone.

A MrBeast clip is circulating again, and it is a good excuse to talk about something most digital businesses ignore. In it, the YouTube star says that when he dies, his closest collaborators will place their hands on his tombstone, and the last one holding on inherits his entire channel. It is funny. It is also a window into a problem that affects agencies, creators, and any brand built around a single person.
The clip behind the buzz
To be clear on the facts, this is not a 2026 announcement. MrBeast said it on the Flagrant podcast in 2022, when his channel had just passed 100 million subscribers. He named Karl, Chandler, and Chris, and floated adding Nolan and cameraman Tareq later.
The clip resurfaces every so often, which is why it keeps feeling new. Since then he has crossed 500 million subscribers and built a full business under Beast Industries, so the channel is just one piece of a much larger digital empire.
Why this matters beyond the joke
Strip away the comedy and you get the core question of digital succession: if the person at the center disappears, who legally owns the audience, the accounts, and the revenue. A YouTube channel, a domain, an ad account, and a social following are real business assets, but they are often tied to one individual’s login and goodwill. A hand on a tombstone is a bit. A clear ownership structure is the actual answer.
The real risk for creator-led brands
Most creator and founder-led brands carry single-person dependency. If one person controls the Google account, the Search Console access, the registrar login, and the brand voice, the business has a single point of failure.
The same is true for small agencies where one founder holds every client relationship and every admin credential. When that person steps away, the value can evaporate, not because the work was bad, but because no one else can access or run it.
What a digital business should actually do
Treat continuity as part of the strategy, not an afterthought. Document who owns each asset on paper. Set up shared admin access and recovery options for every critical account, from analytics to the domain registrar.
Keep brand systems written down so the voice survives a handover. Build value into the business and the audience relationship, not just one personality. Diversify beyond a single platform so one account lockout cannot end the company.
MrBeast’s plan is a joke, and you should not copy it. The lesson under it is serious. The brands that last are the ones that can survive the loss of any single person, including the founder.
Watch the original clip:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/_f10FYovEqs
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