A new lawsuit filed late last month against popular YouTuber MrBeast’s company, Beast Industries, is putting one of the internet’s most successful and influential creator-led content companies under a level of HR and compliance scrutiny that influencer- and creator-centric companies may not be used to. The suit, filed by former employee Lorrayne Mavromatis—whose first title with the company was “head of Instagram” before two promotions led to a $250,000 salary—alleges in the civil complaint that her former employer violated the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and wrongfully terminated her. She claims to have reported gender discrimination and harassment, as well as retaliation (a demotion to the remote position of “social media manager”), alleging an eventual dismissal tied to maternity leave. According to the lawsuit, Mavromatis alleges she was pressured to work during and after the birth of her child, including “a work conference call while in the labor and delivery room”, work during leave on a 10-hour shift three weeks after the birth, and travel to Brazil for a MrBeast shoot involving the Brazilian soccer star Neymar. The suit states she was ultimately terminated less than three weeks after returning from maternity leave and alleges that the company failed to properly inform her of her FMLA protections. For more on what the lawsuit means for HR, keep reading here.—AD |