Ari Emanuel's MARI Holdings acquired a majority stake in Bucket Listers, the event-focused marketing firm founded in 2018. Terms were not disclosed. The transaction adds experiential-activation infrastructure to MARI's portfolio of live-event properties at a moment when brand-side allocators are rotating budget toward measurable, in-person engagement.
Bucket Listers specializes in turnkey event production for consumer brands seeking festival presence, pop-up activations, and experiential campaigns. The firm has executed programs for Fortune 500 clients and emerging direct-to-consumer labels, typically charging $150,000 to $1.2 million per activation depending on scale and duration. MARI now controls board composition and operational oversight while Bucket Listers' founding team remains in place to run day-to-day execution.
The acquisition fits Emanuel's pattern of aggregating live-experience businesses under a single roof. MARI already holds stakes in multiple festival properties, ticketing platforms, and venue-operations companies. Bucket Listers brings client relationships and production workflows that can cross-sell into MARI's existing inventory. A brand buying a Coachella sponsorship can now route the on-ground activation through the same holding structure, reducing friction and capturing margin that previously leaked to third-party agencies. This vertical integration matters because experiential marketing budgets are growing faster than digital spending for the first time since 2019, according to Event Marketer's annual benchmarking survey. Chief marketing officers at luxury and lifestyle brands are demanding proof-of-attendance data and post-event purchase attribution, which festivals alone cannot deliver without production partners who own the data stack.
The consolidation also creates leverage in a fragmented market. Event production remains cottage-industry territory, with most agencies running $5 million to $20 million in annual revenue and limited balance-sheet capacity to scale. MARI can now offer multi-market, multi-event programs with centralized contracting and reporting, appealing to CMOs who prefer fewer vendor relationships. The deal positions Emanuel to negotiate sponsorship packages that bundle media, ticketing, and activation under one commercial structure, which is how Endeavor historically built WME-IMG's sports-marketing dominance before the sale.
Operators should watch three follow-on moves. First, whether MARI acquires or launches a measurement platform to close the attribution loop between event attendance and purchase behavior, likely within six to nine months. Second, whether Bucket Listers begins staffing satellite offices in Asia-Pacific markets, where luxury-brand experiential spending is growing fastest. Third, whether Emanuel consolidates MARI's event-production assets into a single operating subsidiary ahead of a potential spin-off or minority stake sale, which would require a unified P&L and client roster.
Emanuel now controls the production layer that sits between brand checkbooks and festival real estate, exactly where margin accumulates when experiential budgets double.