Ari Emanuel's live events and experiences holding company MARI acquired a majority stake in Bucket Listers, an event-focused marketing firm founded in 2018. Terms remain undisclosed. The transaction positions MARI to integrate Bucket Listers' brand activation capabilities into its broader experiential portfolio, which already includes entertainment and sports properties.
Bucket Listers has built a client roster spanning consumer brands seeking turnkey event execution and sponsorship activation. The firm handles concept development, vendor coordination, and on-site logistics for corporate events, festival activations, and product launches. MARI operates as Emanuel's vehicle for consolidating live-event assets outside Endeavor's core agency and sports representation businesses. The holding company structure allows Emanuel to deploy capital into experiential marketing without immediate pressure to fold acquisitions into Endeavor's public reporting or operational rhythm.
The move reflects two converging trends in the experiential economy. First, brand marketers continue shifting budget from static media into immersive activations, particularly as attribution models improve for in-person engagement. Bucket Listers' six-year operational history suggests it reached sufficient scale to attract institutional backing while remaining small enough to avoid competitive bidding from larger agency networks. Second, holding companies led by entertainment executives are assembling fragmented event-services providers to capture margin across the value chain—production, talent booking, ticketing, and now brand activation. MARI's majority position leaves room for Bucket Listers' founders to retain equity and operational control, a structure that typically preserves client relationships while granting the acquirer access to deal flow and cross-sell opportunities.
Operators should track whether MARI bundles Bucket Listers' services with other portfolio companies in the next twelve to eighteen months, particularly around music festivals or sports tentpoles where brand sponsors require coordinated activation. Allocators with exposure to experiential marketing agencies or event-tech platforms should note the valuation multiples implied by similar deals in the sector; private-equity firms paid eight to twelve times EBITDA for event-services firms in 2023 through 2024, though that range compressed as interest rates climbed. Any follow-on capital raise by MARI would signal whether Emanuel views this as a platform acquisition for further rollups or a standalone bet on Bucket Listers' margin profile.
MARI has not disclosed whether Bucket Listers will remain a standalone brand or merge into existing event units. The timing—mid-February—positions the combined entity to pitch spring and summer activations before CMOs finalize Q3 budgets.