logo
#

Latest news with #Campeche

Mexico brings suit against media company over MrBeast pyramids video
Mexico brings suit against media company over MrBeast pyramids video

Reuters

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Reuters

Mexico brings suit against media company over MrBeast pyramids video

May 15 (Reuters) - Mexican authorities have filed a lawsuit against a firm they say worked with popular YouTube creator MrBeast after he produced a video at the nation's ancient pyramids, including Chichen Itza, that violated the terms of government permissions. Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) said in a post late on Wednesday that it had given a firm representing MrBeast, who boasts 395 million subscribers on YouTube, permission to film at the sites but not monetize the video. MrBeast, whose real name is James Donaldson, uploaded a video on May 10 entitled "I Explored 2000 Year Old Temples". In the video's caption, he thanks local authorities, including the INAH, for allowing him to film, while he also touts products. INAH said it was lodging the suit against a firm called Full Circle Media. "The permission granted to Full Circle Media ... did not authorize ... the use of images of the archeological site for for-profit advertisements of private brands," INAH said. Reuters contacted a local production firm with that name but did not immediately receive a response. MrBeast also did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In MrBeast's video, the YouTuber and his team climb on pyramids and explore hidden tunnels in the southern states of Campeche and Yucatan. They are escorted through the pyramids by several guides, including one person identified only as Arthur, who is seen wearing an INAH vest. "I can't believe the government is letting us do this," MrBeast says at one point in the video.

21 killed in road crash in central Mexico
21 killed in road crash in central Mexico

Jordan Times

time15-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Jordan Times

21 killed in road crash in central Mexico

At least 21 people were killed in a multi-vehicle crash involving a trailer truck and a bus in the central Mexican state of Puebla on Wednesday, authorities said (AFP photo) PUEBLA, MEXICO — At least 21 people were killed in a multi-vehicle crash involving a trailer truck and a bus in the central Mexican state of Puebla on Wednesday, authorities said. Eighteen people died at the scene and three more in hospital, Samuel Aguilar, an official with the Puebla state government, told unspecified number of injured were being treated in local hospitals, he accidents in Mexico have multiplied in recent years, often due to poor vehicle maintenance, dangerous driving or motorist fatigue. In one of the deadliest crashes, a collision between a truck and a bus killed 38 people in the southeastern state of Campeche on February 8. Page 2

US YouTuber MrBeast sparks controversy by filming at Mexico's archaeological sites
US YouTuber MrBeast sparks controversy by filming at Mexico's archaeological sites

RNZ News

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

US YouTuber MrBeast sparks controversy by filming at Mexico's archaeological sites

By Uriel Blanco , CNN MrBeast attends Love, Death + Robots - NY Special Screening at the Paris Theatre on 13 May in New York City. MrBeast is at the centre of controversy involving Mexico. Photo:via CNN Newsource Jimmy Donaldson, better known as MrBeast, is at the centre of another controversy, and this time it directly involves Mexico. MrBeast, who is by far the YouTuber with the most subscribers in the world (surpassing the second-place user by almost 100 million), published a video on 10 May in which he visited some of Mexico's most important archaeological sites, including Chichén Itzá in the state of Yucatán, home to the Temple of Kukulkan pyramid, known as El Castillo, one of the seven wonders of the modern world. MrBeast also visited the archaeological sites of Calakmul in the state of Campeche and Balamcanché in Yucatán. The video, which as of Wednesday afternoon (local time) has accumulated more than 55 million views, shows MrBeast and his team in the surroundings of Kukulkan, but also inside other archaeological structures, in cenotes and temples. Some of these sites are not permanently accessible to the public, as the Mexican government has acknowledged. The controversy centres on the fact that the YouTuber was allowed entry to sites considered sacred to Mexico's pre-Hispanic cultures, which in many cases are restricted. In one part of the video, MrBeast himself says: "I can't believe the government is letting us do this. It's truly crazy. Not even archaeologists are allowed in here." In response to the controversy, the National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH) - an agency attached to the Mexican government's Ministry of Culture - declared on Monday that both the visit and the recording were carried out through "formal requests". These requests, however, were not made by MrBeast, but rather by "the federal Ministry of Tourism and the governments of" Yucatán and Campeche, the INAH indicated. In the description of his video, MrBeast claims that the publication is a "collaboration with the Mexican Ministry of Tourism". Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Wednesday that there were permits for the "broadcast," but asked the INAH to report "under what conditions this permit was granted". "And if the permit was violated, then (it must be determined) what sanctions apply," the president added. Other points have also caused controversy, such as a drone shot that appears to be inside the temple at the top of El Castillo in Chichén Itzá. Regarding this, the INAH said that this did not occur and that the shot was in fact recorded outside the structure. There are also scenes where MrBeast appears to descend to the archaeological sites by helicopter or where he holds a pre-Hispanic mask in his hands. All of this, the INAH says, is either false or was edited after the recording: "Clearly, the video involves extensive audiovisual post-production work and alludes to events that did not occur, such as the fact that the producers never descended from a helicopter, spent the night inside the archaeological site, or possessed a pre-Hispanic mask, as the one presented is clearly a contemporary reproduction. All of these are false assertions that reflect the theatricality of the YouTuber in question." Exploring, filming, and broadcasting in Mexican archaeological sites is a restricted activity that few are allowed to do. The INAH stated that, while institute personnel were supervising MrBeast's activities at all times, access was granted to an area that is not permanently accessible to the general public. "The tours were conducted in publicly accessible areas without affecting visitor access. In the case of Calakmul, the substructure of the Structure II was also visited. Although it is not permanently open to the public, it does provide access by arranging a scheduled visit in advance and with justification, as is the case with tours conducted with the communities surrounding the archaeological site," it said in its Monday statement. Sheinbaum asked the INAH to provide information on the nature of the permit for the MrBeast video. Until it is announced, its scope and the points it covers are unknown. However, by law, exploration of Mexico's archaeological sites is permitted for a very small group of institutions. In September 2024, the INAH responded to a request for citizen information requesting the "requirements and steps" necessary to enter the Kukulkan pyramid at Chichén Itzá. In this request, the director of the Chichén Itzá Archaeological Zone, José Francisco Javier Osorio León, mentions that "in accordance" with the provisions of the Federal Law on Archaeological, Artistic, and Historical Monuments and Zones, "all types of material work to discover or explore archaeological monuments will only be carried out by the National Institute of Anthropology and History or by scientific institutions or those of recognized moral standing, with prior authorization." Likewise, Article 31 of this law states that the authorisations granted by the INAH must specify "the terms and conditions to which the work must be subject, as well as the obligations of those who carry it out". While the details of the permits for MrBeast's video are still unknown, the INAH stated that, although the YouTuber's video offers "distorted" information, its dissemination "may motivate interest among young audiences in Mexico and around the world to learn about our ancestral cultures and visit archaeological sites". Meanwhile, Federal Culture Secretary Claudia Curiel de Icaza spoke out against the activities carried out by MrBeast and his team at the archaeological sites. "This isn't the first time this type of incident has happened, and it's been clarified. Of course we don't agree, and of course there will be appropriate sanctions because that's not what these spaces are for," Curiel de Icaza said Tuesday at a decorative and utilitarian art event. CNN has reached out to MrBeast for comment. - CNN

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store