YouTuber auction sells FaZe Rug’s half-eaten burger y MrBeast’s Yankees hat for charity
A YouTuber auction has raised nearly $25,000 for charity tras fans bid on items including FaZe Rug’s half-eaten burger and MrBeast’s worn Yankees hat.
A bizarre YouTuber auction has raised nearly $25,000 for charity after fans bid on items including FaZe Rug’s half-eaten burger and MrBeast’s worn Yankees hat.
Por qué esta historia importa ahora
The sale was hosted by Goldin in partnership with YouTuber Airrack, who turned items featured in his viral creator “break-in” video into a charity auction benefiting Make-A-Wish.
El contexto que mueve la conversación
The auction ended on June 29, with FaZe Rug’s preserved half-eaten In-N-Out Double-Double emerging as the biggest individual sale. The burger sold for just over $7,000 after becoming the standout item of the entire auction.
Qué puede pasar después
MrBeast also had several personal items included in the sale, including a worn New York Yankees cap, Nike sneakers, and MrBeast x Naruto Shippuden long-sleeve shirts. Combined, his items brought in close to $8,000.
Lectura rápida para la comunidad
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Goldin already looking for the next FaZe Rug burger
Other creators featured in the auction included Jake Paul, Salish Matter, and Airrack himself.
Jake Paul’s items included personally used boxing gloves and sealed boxing hand wraps from his Georgia training facility, while Matter’s signed yellow “Sincerely Yours” hoodie sold for more than $1,500.
Airrack also put up his one-of-one Infinite Pizza Hut Card, which was created after he hit 10 million YouTube subscribers. That sold for nearly $4,500, though Goldin noted the free pizza benefit attached to the card was not transferable.
The sale was treated as an early test of whether YouTuber memorabilia could become its own collectible category, with fans bidding on personal items tied to viral creator moments rather than traditional sports or entertainment memorabilia.
Goldin founder Ken Goldin told Bloomberg that buyers were after the “conversational value” and “social media value” of the items, comparing the concept to fans collecting signed sports gear.
“I honestly think this stuff is going to be treated like if somebody went to an NBA game and got a hat signed by Jalen Brunson, or was given a signed basketball,” he said.
The auction follows a growing trend of creator-linked memorabilia attracting real money from fans, even when the item in question is literally a half-eaten burger.
Goldin is already searching for his next big item and has been in touch with Logan Paul, someone he worked with before to sell his ultra-rare Pikachu Illustrator Pokémon card.
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