Jamaica News

Jamaican Pilot Wins Private Jet in MrBeast Showdown

Written by Primenewsplus

Before the cameras rolled, he was one of 100 pilots from around the world, one face in a sea of uniforms, headsets, and aviation experience. By the end, Jamaican pilot, Jabari Brown wins private jet wasn’t just a headline, it became the emotional core of a story defined by resilience, cultural strength, and honor.

Riyadh watched as MrBeast shut down freeways, spun jets on runways, and transformed a city into a massive endurance arena.

But beneath the spectacle was the quiet, calculating rise of 20 year old Jabari Brown, aka Treezy, who out-thought and outlasted nearly every competitor and who held on longer than almost everyone else.

From One of 100 to the Final Three

When the challenge began, “Jamaican pilot wins private jet” seemed far-fetched. Ninety-nine highly skilled aviators stood between him and the prize.

The first challenge required three teams to drag a 40,000-pound aircraft across a finish line using nothing but strength and discipline. The Jamaican pilot’s team pushed through and earned their place in the next round.

From One of 100 to the Final Three

The Jet Blast That Tested Everyone

Next came one of the most intense trials: the very jet they were fighting to win spun in a circle, blasting 60 mph winds at the contestants as they balanced on small platforms.

Pilot after pilot was tossed off like paper.

But the Jamaican pilot adapted. He shifted his stance, planted himself sideways, and held on with intelligence and control.

His strength wasn’t loud. It was strategic.

And people literally followed Jabari’s strategy.

A Jet Rolling Through Riyadh and the Weight of Exhaustion

When the jet was towed through one of Riyadh’s busiest freeways, the remaining pilots had to walk alongside it with one hand on the fuselage. Road signs were rotated to make space for the wings. Cars slowed as crowds recorded the surreal scene.

The Jamaican pilot’s grip never faltered.

Others slipped from sweat.
Another collapsed under the strain.

But the Jamaican pilot — calm, steady, and focused — kept moving forward.

The Making of Jabari Brown — From Uncertain Teen to Commercial Pilot

Long before MrBeast introduced him to millions, Jabari Brown’s journey was already forged through discipline, talent, and relentless self-belief.

Jabari Was a National AAU Track Champion

As a freshman at Dunbar High School, Jabari was known not for flying planes — but for flying over hurdles.

Before aviation ever entered his life, he was an AAU national hurdles champion, one of the top young track athletes in Southwest Florida.

Even when official school practices were canceled, Jabari trained at home, setting up makeshift hurdles in his yard and refusing to let lost seasons derail his progress. This early discipline — the ability to train alone, fight setbacks, and push himself without applause — became one of the defining traits that carried into every chapter of his life.

Track made him explosive.
Track made him focused.
Track made him tough.

And those qualities would later show up in the MrBeast challenge — especially in the endurance rounds.

Jabari Also Emerged as a Rising Rap Artist

Parallel to athletics, Jabari found success in yet another unexpected arena: music.

Under the name Treezy2x, he earned:

  • Over 2.7 million SoundCloud streams

  • Listeners in 132 countries

  • Over 9,000 playlist placements

At just 16–17 years old, he wrote:

“All I ever wanted was 100k streams — but God gave me 2 million.”

It was clear even then: Jabari was a young man capable of turning passion into momentum.

Discovering His True Calling — Aviation

Despite talent in track and music, aviation still felt distant.
In high school, Jabari didn’t fully know what career he wanted. He even considered nursing because it felt practical.

But in August of the previous year, he met a pilot named Zbig, who invited him into a cockpit and changed his life forever.

From that moment, Jabari committed himself completely.

He trained daily.
He logged over 100 hours in record time.
He never missed a flight session.

Rapid Rise — From Ray Scholar to Commercial Pilot

On July 14, 2023, Jabari passed his checkride through EAA Chapter 66, earning recognition as an EAA Ray Scholar — a competitive program awarded to promising young aviators.

By November, he passed the FAA Commercial Pilot Written Exam with a 90%.

And on December 18, 2023, he proudly announced:

“Newest COMMERCIAL PILOT in America — all praises be to God.”

This wasn’t just a young pilot.
This was a young professional with direction, hunger, and the tools to build a real aviation career.

Why Jabari Fought for the Jet

So when he said on camera:

“I gotta get that jet and start my charter business.”

it wasn’t bravado.
It wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment dream.

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It was the next logical step in a journey built across:

  • national-level athletics

  • global music success

  • mentorship

  • EAA training

  • commercial pilot certification

  • unwavering discipline

  • and deep faith

The making of Jabari Brown wasn’t accidental.
It was years of preparation meeting the moment.

The Final Hour: A Cultural Clash and a Test of Trust

When only three pilots remained, MrBeast delivered the final twist:

They had one hour to decide who would win the jet.
If more than one hand remained on the jet at the end, nobody would win.

What followed showed profound cultural and personal dynamics.

The Jamaican Pilot: Focused, Principled, and Against Leaving It to Chance

The Jamaican pilot made it clear that he did not want the outcome to be decided by luck.
He believed a challenge of this magnitude deserved an earned victory.

This reflected a Western-influenced mindset grounded in:

  • competition
  • merit
  • standing on one’s effort

The Other Two Finalists: Doubt and Cultural Tension

The other two contestants openly expressed that they did not believe the Jamaican pilot would remove his hand if he lost.

This doubt created tension — a clash between perception and intention.

Yet the two finalists, shaped by cultural traditions emphasizing honor and trust, insisted on a method where everyone’s word would matter – luck.

A Final Agreement: Three Briefcases

Eventually, the group agreed to settle it with a briefcase draw — one containing the golden ticket.

In the cultural frameworks influencing the other two finalists, once an agreement is made:

  • a man’s word is binding
  • honor outweighs ambition
  • promises are absolute

And even with millions at stake, they accepted the decision as final.

The Emotional Break: Integrity Takes Center Stage

When the Jamaican pilot opened his briefcase and revealed the golden ticket, everything paused.

But the real emotion came seconds later.

Both finalists had to decide whether to honour their word or not. Integrity won and they lifted their hands with little attempt to stall or force a tie.

And at that moment, the Jamaican pilot broke down in tears.

Maybe because he won a jet.
Or maybe because the two men who doubted him, still chose to honour him.

Still chose integrity. Still chose fairness.

It was humanity at its purest.

A Jet Won Through Strength, Vision, and Honor

When the Jamaican pilot finally let go of the jet, collapsing in emotion, it marked the end of a journey fueled by endurance, discipline, and an entrepreneurial dream.

He walked away with the private jet he plans to use to start his charter business.

The other two finalists walked away with something meaningful too, $20,000 each and the respect of millions who watched their unwavering honour.

This wasn’t just a viral video.

It wasn’t just a prize.

It was a moment where three men from different cultural worlds proved that:

  • trust
  • respect
  • sacrifice
  • and integrity

still matter.

In the end, the jet didn’t just fly away with a new owner.

It carried a powerful truth:

Sometimes the greatest victories are shared, even when only one man takes home the prize.

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