Beyoncé and Jay-Z appeared in the Formula 1 paddock during Saturday and Sunday sessions at the Las Vegas Grand Prix, joining a celebrity attendance list that included Brad Pitt, Rihanna, Kendall Jenner, and Sylvester Stallone across the November 21-23 weekend. The Carter attendance marks their first documented F1 paddock presence since Liberty Media acquired the commercial rights in 2017.
The Las Vegas event, Liberty's first fully controlled street race after buying out local promotion rights for a reported $240 million land package, drew what multiple team hospitality directors described as the highest-value guest roster of the 23-race calendar. Paddock Club packages for the weekend started at $7,500 per person for Friday practice access and scaled to $15,000-plus for three-day suites with grid walks. Liberty does not break out per-event hospitality revenue, but the company's Q3 earnings showed F1 hospitality and licensing up 22% year-over-year to $238 million, driven primarily by Miami and anticipated Las Vegas yield.
The guest mix matters because it reflects where sponsors believe attention lives. Tag Heuer, which has extended its F1 timing partner deal through 2028 at a reported $35 million annually, hosted Jenner and Bad Bunny in its Paddock Club suite. Puma, entering F1 through a multi-year Mercedes teamwear deal starting 2025, placed Rihanna—its creative director for women's lines—in the Silver Arrows garage for both qualifying and race day. The optics are the product: Rihanna's Instagram story from the garage Saturday night logged 4.2 million views within six hours, per social analytics firm Zoomph.
Brad Pitt's presence carried separate weight. He was filming scenes for his untitled F1 film, produced by Apple Original Films and Plan B Entertainment, using a modified Formula 2 car liveried as the fictional 11th team "APXGP." The production, budgeted north of $300 million according to industry tracking, shot live during FP1 and the formation lap Sunday, marking the first time a feature filmhas embedded real camera work into a Grand Prix weekend. Lewis Hamilton is a producer; his deal points are undisclosed, but comparable athlete production credits on major studio projects typically include low-single-digit net points and executive producer fees around $2 million to $5 million. Apple has domestic distribution locked; international rights remain in play, with Warner Bros. and Sony both circling.
What the attendance roster tells team presidents: the Vegas bet worked. Paddock access in 2023 was rationed harder than Monaco, with several teams reporting they turned away six-figure hospitality offers because suite inventory was spoken for by April. That scarcity creates its own market. One Western Conference NBA owner, who requested a Saturday Paddock Club walk and was declined, instead bought a $450,000 three-year hospitality commitment for Miami, Austin, and Las Vegas 2024-2026, locking access before the next pricing cycle.
Liberty is now studying whether to apply the Vegas playbook—owned infrastructure, full revenue capture, scarcity-driven hospitality—to other markets. Miami runs on a 10-year contract with Hard Rock Stadium through 2031; the promoter, South Florida Motorsports, splits revenue but retains local sponsorship control. Austin's Circuit of the Americas holds rights through 2026 under a similar structure. Both deals predate Liberty's current hospitality margin targets. Expect renegotiation pressure when those windows open.
What to watch: Apple's film release is set for June 2025, six weeks before the British Grand Prix. That timing suggests a Silverstone premiere is being negotiated, likely with Sky Sports as broadcast partner given their co-production credit. Separately, Tag Heuer's Paddock Club activation in Vegas included product placement clauses that extend into 2024; their next franchise announcement is expected at the Miami GP in May. Puma's Rihanna integration will be tested again in Bahrain, the 2025 opener, where her attendance would confirm this was strategy, not stunt.
The Carters left Sunday night on a Gulfstream G650 registered to Parkwood Entertainment. They did not attend the afterparty at Zouk Nightclub, where McLaren hosted Lando Norris and approximately 800 guests until 4am. But they were photographed near the Red Bull Racing hospitality unit Saturday evening, standing within six feet of Christian Horner and a group that included two individuals identified by paddock regulars as representatives from LVMH's watchmaking division. Tag Heuer is LVMH. Red Bull's title sponsor, Oracle, has a deal through 2026. Sometimes a sighting is just a sighting. Sometimes it is not.