Home Art Mexico Says MrBeast Followed Rules at Mayan Sites but Faked Key Scenes

Mexico Says MrBeast Followed Rules at Mayan Sites but Faked Key Scenes

CHICHEN ITZA, MEXICO - SEPTEMBER 29:  A general view of the El Castillo pyramid on September 30, 2018 in Chichen Itza, Mexico. Chichen Itza was one of the largest Maya cities and it was likely to have been one of the mythical great cities, or Tollans, referred to in later Mesoamerican literature. (Photo by Donald Miralle/Getty Images for Lumix)


On Might 10, YouTube mega-star MrBeast (actual identify James Donaldson) launched a video titled I Survived 100 Hours in an Historic Temple to his channel, which presently counts greater than 394 million subscribers. The video, a part of his globe-trotting endurance collection, has racked up over 55 million views in simply 4 days. However whereas the challenges could also be actual, not all the things proven within the video is—a minimum of in accordance with Mexico’s Nationwide Institute of Anthropology and Historical past (INAH).

In a press release printed Might 12, INAH confirmed that Donaldson’s visits to a number of Mayan archaeological zones—together with Chichén Itzá, Calakmul, and Balamcanché—have been carried out with full permission from the federal Ministry of Tourism and the governments of Campeche and Yucatán. The institute acknowledged that every one shoots occurred in areas open to the general public, with out blocking entry for different guests. In Calakmul, the group additionally visited Constructing II, a construction usually closed to vacationers however often made obtainable by way of advance coordination—one thing INAH stated was organized effectively forward of time.

The assertion, nonetheless, additionally took purpose at a number of inaccuracies within the closing lower. Amongst them: opposite to what’s implied within the video, no drones have been flown inside El Castillo at Chichén Itzá, nobody descended from a helicopter, and nobody spent the night time inside an archaeological web site. INAH emphasised that its workers have been current all through the manufacturing to implement security and preservation protocols.

One of many extra theatrical moments within the video options Donaldson being handed what seems to be a centuries-old funerary masks. “Why is that this not in a museum?” he jokes on digicam. “Why is a YouTuber holding this?” In line with INAH, he wasn’t. “The one offered is clearly a up to date copy,” the company stated, including that no genuine artifacts have been dealt with or eliminated through the shoot.

Nonetheless, regardless of the “false assertions,” INAH struck a conciliatory tone, saying that content material like Donaldson’s could assist spark curiosity amongst youthful viewers in Mexico’s cultural heritage—as long as it’s adopted up with traditionally correct context.

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