logo
Like it or not, Jake Paul is the ultimate American success story

Like it or not, Jake Paul is the ultimate American success story

Yahoo5 hours ago

Jake Paul looks to continue his confounding boxing success in Saturday's bout at Honda Center on June 26, 2025 in Anaheim, California.
When Jake Paul lived in Los Angeles, he threw furniture into his drained pool and set it on fire. The flames reportedly stretched as high as his mansion.
When he hosted an 'outrageous' party for a music video shoot during the early months of the 2020 pandemic, the Calabasas mayor ripped into him for 'acting like Covid does not exist.'
Advertisement
He turned the West Hollywood community into a 'war zone,' according to his neighbors, who said they endured a 'living hell' at the time.
Paul has come a long way since being fired from The Disney Channel, a company he was 'causing problems' for due to multiple incidents from his time in Southern California.
He made $10,000 an episode, "working like six days a week for 12 hours a day," he once said. But his dismissal from Disney didn't seem to affect his career at all. Really, he was just getting started.
Paul parlayed his popularity from Vine, where he posted silly but funny six-second clips to a growing audience, to YouTube, a platform where he has one of the most-disliked videos in history, and where he also got married in a publicity stunt and filmed a riot in Scottsdale, Arizona.
Advertisement
With 20 million subscribers, Paul has been an internet sensation for so long it's hard to believe he's still only 28 years old and set to return to his third career — boxing — this weekend.
On Saturday, Paul fights Julio Cesar Chavez Jr., a former world champion fighter who is far removed from his physical prime.
Their fight headlines a Most Valuable Promotions (MVP) and Golden Boy Promotions show at the Honda Center in Anaheim, which is just a few miles from Disneyland. It's a full-circle moment for Paul, ahead of the 13th fight of his pro career. The event airs on DAZN.
Long regarded as a bad boy — or, as his nickname declares, "The Problem Child" — Paul has always attracted criticism. Piers Morgan nodded toward the obvious in an interview that Paul rage-quit this week after Morgan suggested that Paul had only recently started fighting actual boxers and hasn't always fared well at it. He lost to Tommy Fury, the closest thing to a real boxer in his actual prime that Paul has encountered. And in Chavez, he fights a guy whose last meaningful bout was a bizarre loss to Danny Jacobs six years ago.
Advertisement
None of this really matters, though.
Paul isn't a typical boxer so nobody should expect typical boxing moves from him. He didn't come through the amateur system. He generates fandom from some and inspires animosity in others. Regardless, he's on the cusp of a world title shot.
If Paul pisses you off, it may be a case of not hating the player, but, rather, the game.
It's organizations like the WBC that have emboldened Paul, elevating his standing in the sport by rewarding him with a cruiserweight ranking should he defeat Chavez.
A fight against the winner of the bout between Gilberto "Zurdo" Ramirez and Yuniel Dorticos, which takes place on the same night Paul fights Chavez, could follow if the American hasn't lured someone like Gervonta "Tank" Davis or Anthony Joshua into the ring for an exhibition by then.
Advertisement
Even if he loses, Paul is already a winner.
He's a winner because he's playing by his own rules, making bank, and creating his next career path.
American-made, American-born, and American-raised, Paul has seized every opportunity in a land where there can be plenty.
Paul's bout with Mike Tyson was a live sports sensation for Netflix in November, even if the action didn't necessarily thrill.
(Anadolu via Getty Images)
Some say that if Paul is a star in boxing, then it speaks badly of the sport. But boxing is not bereft of star power when it has Manny Pacquiao returning in July, "Tank" Davis linked with an August comeback, and Saul "Canelo" Alvarez fighting Terence Crawford in September.
It's hardly an indictment of the sport that someone like Paul can enter the fight game and become such a noteworthy player in a matter of years. That overlooks the fact that he's an internet sensation. He's someone who appeals to youth culture. And, for years, he was effectively a one-man version of the HBO series "Entourage." In an attention economy, few reign supreme the way Paul has.
Advertisement
UFC heavyweight champion Tom Aspinall told me Thursday that one of the differences between combat sports and, say, tennis, is that athletes in the latter can only really prosper if they are bank-rolled by well-off parents to begin with.
In a sport like boxing, all you need is two fists and dedication to the craft. Skill level then determines how far one can go. The sport is renowned for having an open door. Don't blame Paul for storming through it.
Paul is never going to dominate pound-for-pound lists. But he doesn't even need to. That's not the end-game here. The end-game is a world championship shot, or a high-profile fight against someone like "Tank" or Joshua. Hell, it already nearly happened with "Canelo."
After that, there's a clear gap in the market for someone with as much brand and name value as Paul, who can lean on Nikisa Bidarian, the UFC's former chief financial officer who helped mastermind the rapid growth of MVP.
Advertisement
Once this weekend's event is in the books, MVP turns its attention to an all-women July 12 show in New York, which Paul and Bidarian placed on Netflix. The third installment of Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano's all-time great trilogy tops the card, and features Ellie Scotney, Alycia Baumgardner, and Savannah Marshall in separate fights. It's legitimately a wonderful event.
Now consider this: Top Rank's Bob Arum is 93 years old, and Premier Boxing Champions boss Al Haymon is 70. Even promoters once considered young blood like Oscar de la Hoya and Eddie Hearn are 52 and 46, respectively.
There's a gap in the market for the next big thing in boxing promotion. And for better or worse, that next big thing is Paul, who has already built the best stable in women's boxing.
He's shown for years that he has a gift for being a frontman who can generate attention with ease. And if he eventually makes the transition from fighter to full-time promoter, it would mark his fourth career move in addition to his other various products and business interests.
It would be yet another opportunity he'd have seized, to punctuate his status as one of America's ultimate success stories.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Oprah Makes Bold Declaration About Barbara Walters
Oprah Makes Bold Declaration About Barbara Walters

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Oprah Makes Bold Declaration About Barbara Walters

Oprah Makes Bold Declaration About Barbara Walters originally appeared on Parade. Oprah Winfrey is opening up about her decades-long friendship with Barbara Walters in the new documentaryBarbara Walters Tell Me Everything. Both women have long been celebrated as trailblazers in their respective fields, with Oprah sharing that she's learned a great deal from her friend, both professionally and personally The former talk show host also explained that Walters helped her make a very important decision about her family life, adding that her experience helped with her decision not to have children.'I remember her telling me once that there's nothing more fulfilling than having children and 'You should really think about it. And I was like, 'OK, but I'm looking at you, so, no,' The Oprah Winfrey Show host expressed, per Daily Beast. Walters had what Oprah described as a "complex" relationship with her only child, Jacqueline Dena Guber, whom she adopted with her ex-husband, Lee Guber. The strained relationship is addressed in Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything. 'You are a pioneer in your field, and you are trying to break the mold, for yourself and for women who are going to follow you. Something's going to have to give for that. And that is why I did not have children. I knew I could not do both well. Both are sacrifices. Sacrifice to do the work, and it's also sacrifice to be the mother and to say, 'No, let somebody else have that,' Oprah futher explained. Even though she has been in a relationship with Stedman Graham since 1986, the couple has never married or had children. Now, fans understand Walters' impact on Oprah's decision on the latter, and it's something Oprah doesn't regret. 'I have not had one regret about that,' she told People magazine as she looked back on the moments that changed her life. Walters passed away at the age of 93 in 2022. Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything premieres Monday, June 23, on Hulu. Oprah Makes Bold Declaration About Barbara Walters first appeared on Parade on Jun 14, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Jun 14, 2025, where it first appeared.

Jana Kramer faces 'a lot of pressure' to provide for her family
Jana Kramer faces 'a lot of pressure' to provide for her family

Yahoo

time19 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jana Kramer faces 'a lot of pressure' to provide for her family

Jana Kramer has accepted jobs that challenge her "moral compass". The 41-year-old star has to pay child support cheques to ex-husband Mike Caussin, and Jana admits that financial pressures have influenced some of her career decisions. Jana - who has Jolie, nine, and Jace, six, with Mike, as well as Roman, 19 months, with current husband Allan Russell - told Fox News Digital: "There's definitely some things, some ads that I'm like, 'Oh, I wish I could have gone back and maybe not done that ad,' but you know, you learn and you go back and you go, 'All right, I'm not gonna do that one again,' you know? "So sometimes when you gotta pay that child support cheque, it's just like, 'Well, this is a good cheque money. I'm gonna take this.'" Asked if she was referring to a commercial in which she promoted a sex toy, Jana replied: "It's OK, honestly it is what it is. "I'm not gonna do it again, like you know what I mean? Like I'm like, OK, I'm good now, like, you know? Like we're good, we're levelling up to a different [place], you know?" Jana has occasionally comprised her values because she needs to provide for her family. She said: "I am a sole provider, where I have a lot of pressure on my shoulders to provide for my kids. And so I think that piece of it sometimes outweighs my moral compass." Jana is best known for playing Alex Dupre on One Tree Hill. And the actress - who starred on the TV show between 2009 and 2012 - previously revealed that she's eager to star in a reboot. She told TooFab in 2024: "I definitely talked to Sophia [Bush, her former co-star] about it and it's one of those things where she's kind of getting a temperature check on who would come back." Jana is a fan of reboots and she's keen to see what the show's characters are up to now. She shared: "I love when shows get rebooted and they bring back old characters because I like to see what they're up to. "I understand if they don't. I understand why some actors don't want to come back to a show that's been done, and they have closed that chapter. But for the viewers and the fans, I want to know what they're up to, what they're doing."

Sam Bennett says he's staying in Florida with hopes Panthers turn into a dynasty
Sam Bennett says he's staying in Florida with hopes Panthers turn into a dynasty

CBS News

time22 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Sam Bennett says he's staying in Florida with hopes Panthers turn into a dynasty

Sam Bennett could have gone to free agency and picked his landing spot, plus probably could have signed for much more money than the Florida Panthers were able to offer. Instead, he chose winning. Bennett, the reigning Conn Smythe Award winner as playoff MVP of Florida's most recent run to the Stanley Cup, spoke out Saturday about his decision to sign an eight-year, $64 million deal with the Panthers. His reasoning was actually quite simple. "I think we have a lot more success in our future," Bennett said. It's not hard to envision that, given how the back-to-back Stanley Cup champions now have eight core players — Bennett, Aleksander Barkov, Matthew Tkachuk, Sam Reinhart, Carter Verhaeghe, Gustav Forsling, Anton Lundell and Seth Jones — under contract through at least 2030. Bennett's status, especially after winning the Conn Smythe following a 15-goal performance in the playoffs, might have seemed to be in some question a couple weeks ago. He announced at a Miami nightclub last week that he was staying — there was no deal at the time, and his agent wasn't happy that he did that — but it was clear that Bennett was hoping something would get done in Florida. Teammates were evidently thrilled when the news broke Friday night. "I got like three FaceTimes right away from the boys," Bennett said. "A couple of them were together and they were so fired up. The group chat was going nuts. I've said it a million times, this group is so tight. So many guys that really care about each other. I was definitely feeling the love last night." Bennett is critical to the Panthers at both ends. He was one of three players in the NHL this season — Ottawa's Brady Tkachuk, Matthew Tkachuk's brother, and Washington's Tom Wilson were the other two — with at least 50 points and 90 penalty minutes. He said his decision came down to not seeing a need to take risks. He loves playing in Florida, loves being part of the Panthers, loves who he goes to work with every day. More money or a new role wasn't going to outweigh all of that. "I think we really have the chance to truly make this team a dynasty," Bennett said. "I'm really just grateful that I get the chance to be a part of it. There are so many pieces in this puzzle that create this team and the success that this team has. And just to be a small piece of that is an honor. Looking forward to growing this legacy for the next eight years, for sure."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store