Patreon CEO just told Bricks and Minifigs to stuff it, literally.
Patreon CEO Jack Conte posted a video Tuesday refusing a corporate takedown request from Bricks and Minifigs against the creator account of Reckless Ben.
Patreon CEO Jack Conte has publicly refused a corporate takedown request from Bricks and Minifigs targeting the Patreon account of Reckless Ben, the YouTube creator at the center of the $200,000 LEGO Star Wars collection scandal.
In a video posted to his JackConteExtras YouTube channel on Tuesday, June 2, 2026, Conte directly addressed the request and ruled against it on the record.
“We have in fact unfortunately determined that Bricks and Minifigs can stuff it, we’re keeping Ben’s page up,“ Conte said.
It is the loudest public rejection yet of the LEGO chain’s escalating legal pressure campaign against Ben Schneider and the Mansell family, and it lines up directly with what observers have suspected for over a week. Bricks and Minifigs corporate is now pursuing what its own internal documents call a shift “from defense to offense“ against the creator who exposed the consignment dispute.
So far, every offensive move the company has made has backfired publicly.
How we got here
The Patreon takedown request is the latest move in a corporate strategy that has been working against Bricks and Minifigs from the start.
The chain’s franchise location in Salem-Keizer, Oregon, is accused of failing to return a $200,000 Star Wars LEGO collection that Bryan Mansell and his elderly father consigned in 2023. After Reckless Ben’s first viral video about the case in late May 2026, Bricks and Minifigs corporate sued Ben and the Mansell family on May 28 for what the company called a “viral extortion campaign.” On May 31, BAM CEO Ammon McNeff publicly apologized to the Mansell family on the ACOB podcast and offered professional mediation.
On June 1, Reckless Ben fled to Mexico after a new “no bail” arrest warrant was issued against him in Utah, citing what he called “mystery“ reasons.
Around the same time, a leaked internal memo from Bricks and Minifigs corporate to its franchise network surfaced via Reckless Ben’s coverage. The memo, which fusion94.org’s analysis described in detail, instructed franchisees on how to handle the fallout and announced that the company was shifting “from defense to offense.”
The Patreon takedown request appears to have been part of that offense.
It did not survive the request stage.
Why Patreon publicly refused
Patreon’s standard practice on corporate takedown requests is to handle them internally, evaluate the legal merit, and either remove the content or notify the creator. CEOs of major platforms rarely respond to individual takedown requests in public, on YouTube, by name.
Jack Conte did.
By posting the response on his personal JackConteExtras channel, Conte effectively put the entire creator economy on notice that Patreon was not going to remove Ben’s account at the request of a chain accused of corporate malfeasance against an elderly customer.
The “stuff it” framing is not the language of a legal department. It is the language of a platform CEO publicly endorsing the position of a creator whose case the platform considers legitimate journalism rather than harassment.
For the creator economy more broadly, Conte’s video is a notable data point. Patreon has been criticized in the past for being too cautious on edge-case creator disputes. The Reckless Ben situation has produced one of the most direct platform-side defenses of an individual creator in recent memory.
The bigger picture
Every legal move Bricks and Minifigs has made since the story went viral has produced a worse public outcome for the company.
The May 28 lawsuit framed Ben and the Mansells as running an “extortion campaign.” The framing got widely mocked and helped push the Mansell family GoFundMe past $200,000.
The May 31 apology from CEO McNeff was a goodwill gesture that landed flat because it came after the lawsuit, not before.
The Utah arrests of Ben, conducted by American Fork Police Department officers, triggered the “Mormon Mafia“ conspiracy theory now trending on X.
The leaked “from defense to offense” memo gave observers a literal playbook to point at when describing the company’s actual strategy.
The Patreon takedown request, now publicly rejected by the platform’s CEO on YouTube, is the latest move that produced more bad press than it prevented.
The pattern is consistent. The company keeps trying to control the story through legal pressure. Each attempt produces more public attention on the underlying facts of the case.
Where this leaves things
For Bricks and Minifigs corporate, the Patreon refusal is a meaningful setback. The company’s ability to remove Ben’s content from the platforms where he reaches his largest audiences is now in question. YouTube has not yet acted on any takedown attempts. Patreon has now publicly refused. Substack and other platforms are watching.
For Reckless Ben, currently in Mexico, the Patreon endorsement is a real lifeline. His Patreon page is his largest direct revenue source and the primary platform where he releases extended versions of his videos. The CEO of the platform publicly defending his page is the kind of validation that is hard to manufacture and impossible to fake.
For the Mansell family, the GoFundMe continues to climb. Civil litigation in Oregon continues. Mainstream coverage is expanding into financial press as questions about Bricks and Minifigs corporate’s franchise practices, escrow handling, and crisis management get sharper.
For the broader creator economy, the Conte video is going to be referenced for years. A major platform CEO publicly telling a corporate adversary to stuff it on behalf of an individual creator is not common. The fact that it happened in the middle of one of the most-watched corporate accountability stories of 2026 makes it a meaningful precedent.
Bricks and Minifigs has stores in over 300 locations. The Mansell collection had 780 sets. The Patreon page is still up. The YouTuber is in Mexico. The CEO of one of the biggest creator platforms on the internet just told the LEGO chain to stuff it in a video that anyone can watch.
This is what “from defense to offense” looks like in practice when the public is watching.
Article compiled and edited by Derek Gibbs (entertainment editor) and the Clownfish TV newsroom.
Pirates and Princesses is part of Clownfish TV. For more news, views, and rants on geek lifestyle, fandom, and pop culture, visit piratesandprincesses.net. Watch Clownfish TV on YouTube at @ClownfishTV where new episodes drop daily. Subscribe to the Clownfish TV podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart, and wherever else you get your podcasts. Sign up for the free newsletter at more.clownfishtv.com.
Hat Tips:
JackConteExtras YouTube channel (June 2, 2026), Patreon CEO Jack Conte’s verified “Bricks and Minifigs can stuff it” video response to the takedown request
X / Twitter (June 2, 2026), verified @Awk20000 post documenting and amplifying the Conte video clip
ResetEra (June 2, 2026), aggregated community discussion of the Conte response including the direct YouTube link
fusion94.org (May 28, 2026), original analysis of the leaked Bricks and Minifigs internal memo including the verified “from defense to offense” framing
Reckless Ben YouTube channel (May 21 to June 1, 2026), source coverage including “Bricks and Minifigs responded to my video,” “I got Bricks and Minifigs leaked Email,” “Bricks and Minifigs CEO promises to answer all my questions,” and the verified Patreon Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3 video releases
Kotaku (June 1, 2026), Lewis Parker’s verified reporting on Reckless Ben fleeing to Mexico and the “Mormon Mafia” conspiracy framing
Yahoo Entertainment / Express Tribune (May 30 to June 1, 2026), verified coverage of the Utah arrests and ongoing legal context
ACOB podcast (May 31, 2026), CEO Ammon McNeff’s verified apology to the Mansell family and the offer of professional mediation
Bricks and Minifigs corporate (May 21 and May 28, 2026), official statements and the verified “viral extortion campaign” lawsuit framing
Salem Business Journal, original verified reporting on the Mansell consignment agreement metadata
Patreon corporate (Wikipedia archival), platform background including Jack Conte co-founder/CEO status and the verified creator-fee structure context
Mansell family GoFundMe (current totals as of June 2, 2026)



