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{{Infobox Person | {{Infobox Person | ||
|name = Ian Parker Bick | |name = Ian Parker Bick | ||
|image = ian-bick.png | |||
|birth_date = May 31, 1995 | |birth_date = May 31, 1995 | ||
|birth_place = Danbury, Connecticut | |birth_place = Danbury, Connecticut | ||
| Line 9: | Line 10: | ||
|status = Released | |status = Released | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Ian Parker Bick''' (born May 31, 1995) is an American entrepreneur, podcaster, public speaker, and media personality from Danbury, Connecticut. | '''Ian Parker Bick''' (born May 31, 1995) is an American entrepreneur, podcaster, public speaker, and media personality from Danbury, Connecticut. He's best known for creating and hosting ''[[Locked In with Ian Bick]]'', a podcast that brings together former inmates, law enforcement officials, addiction recovery advocates, and others whose lives connect to the criminal justice system. Before building his media presence, Bick ran Tuxedo Junction, a nightclub in Danbury, becoming one of the youngest nightclub owners in the country at just 18 years old.<ref name="newstimes2024">Hearst Connecticut Media. "After prison stint on fraud charges, Danbury's Ian Bick finds road to redemption leads to podcasting." NewsTimes, March 18, 2024.</ref> In 2015, he was convicted on federal wire fraud and money laundering charges. He'd defrauded investors of roughly $480,000 and served 36 months in federal prison.<ref name="doj2016">U.S. Department of Justice. "Danbury Man Sentenced to 3 Years in Federal Prison for Defrauding Investors." October 26, 2016.</ref> | ||
Since | Since getting out, Bick has become one of the most visible figures in the "prison influencer" space. His content has reached hundreds of millions of views across social media platforms.<ref name="typesetbrooklyn">Type.Set.Brooklyn. "Unlocking Ian Bick." September 12, 2025.</ref> He appeared in the HBO Max docuseries ''Generation Hustle'' (2021). In 2025, he took part in MrBeast's 100-Day Prison Challenge. He won $500,000, which went toward his federal restitution payments.<ref name="ianbickwebsite">IanBick.com. "About Ian Bick." 2025.</ref> | ||
== Background and Early Life == | == Background and Early Life == | ||
Bick was born on May 31, 1995, in Danbury, Connecticut. He attended Danbury High School.<ref name="gossipdaily">Gossip Daily. "Ian Bick Net Worth and Life After Prison." September 12, 2025.</ref> From the start, he showed real entrepreneurial drive. While still in high school, he began organizing parties and events. Hundreds of people showed up. He estimates he was making up to $10,000 per night during his best events.<ref name="mikemalatesta">Mike Malatesta. "Ian Bick – The Fastest Growing Podcaster in the World." How'd It Happen Podcast, November 5, 2023.</ref> | |||
His early focus was on youth nights and electronic dance music events. During his junior year, he formalized his operation by creating an LLC and getting business debit cards.<ref name="newstimes2021">Hearst Connecticut Media. "Ian Bick defrauded investors of nearly $500K. Now the Danbury man is telling his story in an HBO Max series." NewsTimes, April 15, 2021.</ref> Word spread about his events. Soon he moved beyond house parties into concert promotion at venues across Connecticut and Rhode Island. | |||
== Tuxedo Junction and Business Ventures == | == Tuxedo Junction and Business Ventures == | ||
At | At 18, Bick bought Tuxedo Junction, a live music venue and nightclub in Danbury. That made him one of the youngest nightclub owners in the country.<ref name="newstimes2024"/> The venue became known for big names. Steve Aoki played there. So did The Chainsmokers and 21 Savage.<ref name="ianbickabout">IanBick.com. "About." 2025.</ref> | ||
Beyond Tuxedo Junction, Bick ran several other companies: This Is Where It's At Entertainment, LLC; Planet Youth Entertainment; W&B Wholesale, LLC; and W&B Investments, LLC.<ref name="doj2016"/> In October 2013, he opened Skyy Bar and Lounge, an 18-and-over club at Ives Street in Danbury. That place closed in early 2014.<ref name="newstimes2024"/> | |||
Bick has | Bick has been open about what went wrong. Poor financial management played a role. So did a gambling addiction and piling debt. He's mentioned that a concert he organized at the University of Rhode Island is what triggered everything. He thought it'd been profitable, but it wasn't. Losses added up fast. Rather than telling his investors the truth, he lied about the numbers. He calls this "the one defining moment" that set him on the path to fraud.<ref name="newstimes2024"/> | ||
== Federal Indictment and Prosecution == | == Federal Indictment and Prosecution == | ||
January 2015 brought a 15-count indictment from a federal grand jury in New Haven. Bick faced charges for fraud, money laundering, and making false statements.<ref name="fbi2016">Federal Bureau of Investigation. "Danbury Man Charged with Running Ponzi Scheme." July 2, 2016.</ref> | |||
=== The Scheme === | === The Scheme === | ||
Federal prosecutors | Federal prosecutors said Bick used his various business entities to pull in investment money from friends, classmates, acquaintances, and their parents. He promised them high returns in short timeframes.<ref name="doj2016"/> Two main lies ran through the scheme. | ||
'''Electronics Resale Business''': Bick | '''Electronics Resale Business''': Bick told investors he'd buy electronics—iPhones, tablets, headphones—and flip them online for big profit. According to prosecutors, this business never really got off the ground. It didn't return any real money.<ref name="doj2016"/> | ||
'''Concert Promotion''': | '''Concert Promotion''': He claimed to investors that he could make money organizing and promoting concerts in Connecticut and Rhode Island. He said his past concerts had been hugely profitable. That wasn't true at all.<ref name="fbi2016"/> | ||
Bick signed investment contracts with his victims. Some were called "Loan Agreements." Others were "Music Venture Participation Agreements."<ref name="fbi2016"/> What actually happened? He used their money for personal spending. Hotel stays. Jet skis. He also used money from new investors to pay fake "interest" and "principal returns" to earlier ones. That's textbook Ponzi scheme behavior.<ref name="doj2016"/> | |||
=== Investigation === | === Investigation === | ||
It started in January 2014 when several investors reported losses to local police. Some were around Bick's own age. According to Bick, his attorney eventually told all the investors there was no money left to repay them. That's what triggered the reports.<ref name="newstimes2024"/> One persistent detective saw what was happening and escalated it to federal authorities.<ref name="mikemalatesta"/> | |||
The | The FBI took over. So did the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation Division and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. State agencies helped too: the Connecticut Department of Banking, Danbury Police, and Hartford Police. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael S. McGarry and Christopher W. Schmeisser prosecuted the case.<ref name="doj2016"/> | ||
=== Trial and Conviction === | === Trial and Conviction === | ||
Bick | Police arrested Bick at home. U.S. Magistrate Judge Joan G. Margolis arraigned him in New Haven. He pleaded not guilty and was released on a $250,000 bond.<ref name="fbi2016"/> | ||
November 25, 2015: a jury found him guilty. Six counts of wire fraud. One count of money laundering. He was acquitted on some other charges from the original indictment.<ref name="doj2016"/> | |||
== Sentencing == | == Sentencing == | ||
October 26, 2016. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer handed down the sentence: 36 months in prison plus three years of supervised release. The first year of release would be home confinement.<ref name="doj2016"/> Judge Meyer also ordered Bick to pay full restitution of $480,635 to his victims. More than 15 people had lost money.<ref name="doj2016"/> | |||
His bond got revoked on October 4, 2016. He was locked up waiting for sentencing.<ref name="doj2016"/> | |||
== Prison Experience == | == Prison Experience == | ||
Bick | Bick did his 36 months in federal detention. Five of those months? Solitary confinement. It shaped how he thinks about everything now.<ref name="gossipdaily"/> His appearance—red cheeks and forehead—got him the nickname "McLovin" from other inmates. He got it tattooed on his arm later.<ref name="typesetbrooklyn"/> | ||
He talks a lot about what prison does to your mind. He says it changed him. After he got out at 24, he made a deliberate choice. No nightlife. No rushing back to social media. Instead, he worked regular jobs in the grocery industry for almost three years, focusing on accountability, mental health, and rebuilding relationships.<ref name="ianbickabout"/> | |||
== Post-Release Career == | == Post-Release Career == | ||
Around three years into department manager work at a grocery store, Bick decided it was time to try entrepreneurship again. He was 27. This time he didn't hide from his past. | |||
=== Social Media and Content Creation === | === Social Media and Content Creation === | ||
He started making short videos on TikTok. Prison stories. Mistakes that landed him in federal prison. Millions of views followed across TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, and Facebook.<ref name="mikemalatesta"/> | |||
As of 2025, | As of 2025, his social reach includes: | ||
* '''TikTok''': Over 1.2 million followers with 41.5 million likes<ref name="tiktok">TikTok. "@ianbick." 2025.</ref> | * '''TikTok''': Over 1.2 million followers with 41.5 million likes<ref name="tiktok">TikTok. "@ianbick." 2025.</ref> | ||
* '''YouTube''': Approximately 400,000 subscribers with over 211 million total views<ref name="famousbirthdays">Famous Birthdays. "Ian Bick." 2025.</ref><ref name="thoughtleaders">ThoughtLeaders.io. "Ian Bick YouTube Stats." 2025.</ref> | * '''YouTube''': Approximately 400,000 subscribers with over 211 million total views<ref name="famousbirthdays">Famous Birthdays. "Ian Bick." 2025.</ref><ref name="thoughtleaders">ThoughtLeaders.io. "Ian Bick YouTube Stats." 2025.</ref> | ||
That adds up to roughly 1.7 million followers across platforms. He's one of the biggest names in the prison influencer community.<ref name="typesetbrooklyn"/> | |||
=== Locked In with Ian Bick === | === Locked In with Ian Bick === | ||
January 2023: Bick launched ''Locked In with Ian Bick''. The podcast covers crime, prison, addiction, trauma, redemption, and second chances. Guests include former inmates, people in recovery, law enforcement, attorneys, and survivors connected to the justice system.<ref name="applepodcasts">Apple Podcasts. "Locked In with Ian Bick." 2025.</ref> | |||
The | The show's tagline: "real stories from the people everyone else judges first." It's become one of the fastest-growing justice podcasts in the United States.<ref name="ianbickabout"/> Bick records at Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield, Connecticut. New episodes drop Sundays and Thursdays.<ref name="mikemalatesta"/><ref name="newstimes2024"/> | ||
His approach to interviews is completely unscripted. Before recording, he gets only a one-page biography of his guest. No pre-written questions. Just real conversation that usually goes one to two hours.<ref name="typesetbrooklyn"/> Notable guests have included Bobby Shmurda, George Christie (former Hells Angels leader), and Farrah Abraham.<ref name="ianbickepisodes">IanBick.com. "Episodes." 2025.</ref> | |||
'''Links | '''Podcast Links''': | ||
* Website: https://www.ianbick.com/ | * Website: https://www.ianbick.com/ | ||
* Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/locked-in-with-ian-bick/id1662286355 | * Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/locked-in-with-ian-bick/id1662286355 | ||
| Line 96: | Line 97: | ||
=== Creative Evolution Studios === | === Creative Evolution Studios === | ||
September 2023 brought the launch of Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield, Connecticut. Bick founded it to focus on podcast production, consulting, and helping creators grow their social media.<ref name="gossipdaily"/> The company provides professional equipment and offers podcast consulting, content production, and social media management.<ref name="creativestudios">Creative Evolution Studios. "About." CreativeEvolutionStudios.com. 2025.</ref> | |||
The studio | The studio sits above a strip mall in Connecticut. It's both a podcast recording space and a video production area. Bick even built a reconstructed prison set inside for content.<ref name="typesetbrooklyn"/> | ||
=== Advocacy and Public Speaking === | === Advocacy and Public Speaking === | ||
Bick serves on the board of directors for the National Association for Re-Entry Professionals | Bick serves on the board of directors for the National Association for Re-Entry Professionals, an organization supporting people transitioning out of prison back into society.<ref name="gossipdaily"/> He's spoken at criminal justice reform conferences across the country.<ref name="ianbickabout"/> | ||
Now he shows up at prisons, schools, recovery programs, and reentry organizations. He connects with people who feel trapped by their past mistakes. His message stays consistent: "your past is a chapter, not your whole story."<ref name="ianbickabout"/> | |||
== Media Appearances == | == Media Appearances == | ||
| Line 110: | Line 111: | ||
=== Generation Hustle (2021) === | === Generation Hustle (2021) === | ||
Episode 2 of ''Generation Hustle'' featured Bick. The episode titled "The Party's Over" dropped on HBO Max on April 22, 2021.<ref name="newstimes2021"/> George Plamondon directed this 10-episode series. It looks at entrepreneurial ventures by young people that went sideways. | |||
The episode | The episode traces Bick's journey from teenage party organizer to nightclub owner to concert promoter. It shows his lavish lifestyle funded by investor cash, his downfall, the FBI investigation. One scene shows him in an empty nightclub saying, "I don't think I was a con artist."<ref name="newstimes2021"/> | ||
Plamondon wanted balance in his storytelling. He included investors who lost money. He included the prosecutor. He included Bick himself. The core question was simple: deliberate Ponzi scheme operator or just a kid in over his head.<ref name="newstimes2021"/> | |||
=== MrBeast 100-Day Prison Challenge (2025) === | === MrBeast 100-Day Prison Challenge (2025) === | ||
February 2025 brought MrBeast's 100-Day Prison Challenge. Participants lived in a constructed prison for 100 days, competing for $500,000.<ref name="ianbickwebsite"/> Bick was paired with Lenny Bradley, a former NYPD detective. That created a "cop vs. criminal" dynamic.<ref name="mrbeastpodcast">Apple Podcasts. "MrBeast Cop Exposes Truth About 100 Day Prison Challenge." Locked In with Ian Bick, August 17, 2025.</ref> | |||
He completed all 100 days and won $240,000 from the shared prize. That money went straight to his restitution. What started as internet spectacle became real progress toward redemption.<ref name="ianbickwebsite"/> | |||
When the video dropped on August 16, 2025, Bick released podcast episodes about it. He covered behind-the-scenes details and compared the challenge environment to his actual federal prison experience.<ref name="mrbeastpodcast"/> | |||
== Business Entities == | == Business Entities == | ||
| Line 133: | Line 134: | ||
'''Current:''' | '''Current:''' | ||
* BBE Entertainment, LLC – | * BBE Entertainment, LLC – Runs the ''Locked In with Ian Bick'' podcast (founded January 2023)<ref name="linkedin">LinkedIn. "Ian Bick." 2025.</ref> | ||
* Creative Evolution Studios – Podcast production and content consulting | * Creative Evolution Studios – Podcast production and content consulting (founded September/October 2023)<ref name="gossipdaily"/> | ||
== Terminology == | == Terminology == | ||
* '''Ponzi scheme''': A fraudulent investment operation where returns to earlier investors | * '''Ponzi scheme''': A fraudulent investment operation where returns to earlier investors come from capital supplied by new investors, not from actual profits. | ||
* '''Wire fraud''': A federal crime involving | * '''Wire fraud''': A federal crime involving electronic communications or interstate wire communications to execute a scheme to defraud. | ||
* '''Money laundering''': The process of concealing the origins of illegally obtained money | * '''Money laundering''': The process of concealing the origins of illegally obtained money by passing it through complex banking transfers or commercial transactions. | ||
* '''Restitution''': A court-ordered payment | * '''Restitution''': A court-ordered payment from a convicted person to compensate victims for their financial losses from the crime. | ||
* '''Prison influencer''': A content creator who produces media | * '''Prison influencer''': A content creator who produces media about prison experience, incarceration stories, and criminal justice topics, often from personal experience with the system. | ||
* '''Solitary confinement''': A form of imprisonment | * '''Solitary confinement''': A form of imprisonment where an incarcerated person is isolated from other inmates, typically in a small cell for 22-24 hours daily. | ||
== External Links == | == External Links == | ||
| Line 158: | Line 159: | ||
* [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ian-bick-36ab53240/ LinkedIn] | * [https://www.linkedin.com/in/ian-bick-36ab53240/ LinkedIn] | ||
* [https://www.creativeevolutionstudios.com/ Creative Evolution Studios] | * [https://www.creativeevolutionstudios.com/ Creative Evolution Studios] | ||
== Frequently Asked Questions == | == Frequently Asked Questions == | ||
{{FAQSection/Start}} | {{FAQSection/Start}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=Who is Ian Bick?|answer=Ian Bick is a former nightclub owner who served 36 months in federal prison for wire fraud and money laundering. | {{FAQ|question=Who is Ian Bick?|answer=Ian Bick is a former nightclub owner who served 36 months in federal prison for wire fraud and money laundering. Today he hosts the Locked In with Ian Bick podcast and advocates for criminal justice reform.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What was Ian Bick convicted of?|answer=Bick was | {{FAQ|question=What was Ian Bick convicted of?|answer=Bick was found guilty of six counts of wire fraud and one count of money laundering for defrauding investors of approximately $480,000 through a Ponzi-like scheme.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=How long was Ian Bick's prison sentence?|answer= | {{FAQ|question=How long was Ian Bick's prison sentence?|answer=He was sentenced to 36 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release with the first year in home confinement.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is 'Locked In with Ian Bick'?|answer= | {{FAQ|question=What is 'Locked In with Ian Bick'?|answer=Locked In with Ian Bick is a podcast featuring interviews with former inmates, law enforcement officials, and others affected by the criminal justice system, focusing on crime, prison, and redemption stories.}} | ||
{{FAQ|question=What is Ian Bick doing now?|answer= | {{FAQ|question=What is Ian Bick doing now?|answer=He's a content creator with over 1.7 million social media followers, a podcast host, founder of Creative Evolution Studios, and board member of the National Association for Re-Entry Professionals.}} | ||
{{FAQSection/End}} | {{FAQSection/End}} | ||
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</html> | </html> | ||
{{#seo: | {{#seo: | ||
|title=Ian Bick - Podcast Host | Prisonpedia | |title=Ian Bick - Podcast Host | Prisonpedia | ||
|title_mode=replace | |||
|description=Discover Ian Bick's federal prison experience and transformation. Learn about his advocacy work and insights into the federal prison system. | |description=Discover Ian Bick's federal prison experience and transformation. Learn about his advocacy work and insights into the federal prison system. | ||
|keywords=Ian Bick, federal prison, advocacy, Locked In podcast, transformation, speaker | |keywords=Ian Bick, federal prison, advocacy, Locked In podcast, transformation, speaker | ||
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Latest revision as of 17:59, 23 April 2026
Ian Parker Bick (born May 31, 1995) is an American entrepreneur, podcaster, public speaker, and media personality from Danbury, Connecticut. He's best known for creating and hosting Locked In with Ian Bick, a podcast that brings together former inmates, law enforcement officials, addiction recovery advocates, and others whose lives connect to the criminal justice system. Before building his media presence, Bick ran Tuxedo Junction, a nightclub in Danbury, becoming one of the youngest nightclub owners in the country at just 18 years old.[1] In 2015, he was convicted on federal wire fraud and money laundering charges. He'd defrauded investors of roughly $480,000 and served 36 months in federal prison.[2]
Since getting out, Bick has become one of the most visible figures in the "prison influencer" space. His content has reached hundreds of millions of views across social media platforms.[3] He appeared in the HBO Max docuseries Generation Hustle (2021). In 2025, he took part in MrBeast's 100-Day Prison Challenge. He won $500,000, which went toward his federal restitution payments.[4]
Background and Early Life
Bick was born on May 31, 1995, in Danbury, Connecticut. He attended Danbury High School.[5] From the start, he showed real entrepreneurial drive. While still in high school, he began organizing parties and events. Hundreds of people showed up. He estimates he was making up to $10,000 per night during his best events.[6]
His early focus was on youth nights and electronic dance music events. During his junior year, he formalized his operation by creating an LLC and getting business debit cards.[7] Word spread about his events. Soon he moved beyond house parties into concert promotion at venues across Connecticut and Rhode Island.
Tuxedo Junction and Business Ventures
At 18, Bick bought Tuxedo Junction, a live music venue and nightclub in Danbury. That made him one of the youngest nightclub owners in the country.[1] The venue became known for big names. Steve Aoki played there. So did The Chainsmokers and 21 Savage.[8]
Beyond Tuxedo Junction, Bick ran several other companies: This Is Where It's At Entertainment, LLC; Planet Youth Entertainment; W&B Wholesale, LLC; and W&B Investments, LLC.[2] In October 2013, he opened Skyy Bar and Lounge, an 18-and-over club at Ives Street in Danbury. That place closed in early 2014.[1]
Bick has been open about what went wrong. Poor financial management played a role. So did a gambling addiction and piling debt. He's mentioned that a concert he organized at the University of Rhode Island is what triggered everything. He thought it'd been profitable, but it wasn't. Losses added up fast. Rather than telling his investors the truth, he lied about the numbers. He calls this "the one defining moment" that set him on the path to fraud.[1]
Federal Indictment and Prosecution
January 2015 brought a 15-count indictment from a federal grand jury in New Haven. Bick faced charges for fraud, money laundering, and making false statements.[9]
The Scheme
Federal prosecutors said Bick used his various business entities to pull in investment money from friends, classmates, acquaintances, and their parents. He promised them high returns in short timeframes.[2] Two main lies ran through the scheme.
Electronics Resale Business: Bick told investors he'd buy electronics—iPhones, tablets, headphones—and flip them online for big profit. According to prosecutors, this business never really got off the ground. It didn't return any real money.[2]
Concert Promotion: He claimed to investors that he could make money organizing and promoting concerts in Connecticut and Rhode Island. He said his past concerts had been hugely profitable. That wasn't true at all.[9]
Bick signed investment contracts with his victims. Some were called "Loan Agreements." Others were "Music Venture Participation Agreements."[9] What actually happened? He used their money for personal spending. Hotel stays. Jet skis. He also used money from new investors to pay fake "interest" and "principal returns" to earlier ones. That's textbook Ponzi scheme behavior.[2]
Investigation
It started in January 2014 when several investors reported losses to local police. Some were around Bick's own age. According to Bick, his attorney eventually told all the investors there was no money left to repay them. That's what triggered the reports.[1] One persistent detective saw what was happening and escalated it to federal authorities.[6]
The FBI took over. So did the Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation Division and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. State agencies helped too: the Connecticut Department of Banking, Danbury Police, and Hartford Police. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael S. McGarry and Christopher W. Schmeisser prosecuted the case.[2]
Trial and Conviction
Police arrested Bick at home. U.S. Magistrate Judge Joan G. Margolis arraigned him in New Haven. He pleaded not guilty and was released on a $250,000 bond.[9]
November 25, 2015: a jury found him guilty. Six counts of wire fraud. One count of money laundering. He was acquitted on some other charges from the original indictment.[2]
Sentencing
October 26, 2016. U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Alker Meyer handed down the sentence: 36 months in prison plus three years of supervised release. The first year of release would be home confinement.[2] Judge Meyer also ordered Bick to pay full restitution of $480,635 to his victims. More than 15 people had lost money.[2]
His bond got revoked on October 4, 2016. He was locked up waiting for sentencing.[2]
Prison Experience
Bick did his 36 months in federal detention. Five of those months? Solitary confinement. It shaped how he thinks about everything now.[5] His appearance—red cheeks and forehead—got him the nickname "McLovin" from other inmates. He got it tattooed on his arm later.[3]
He talks a lot about what prison does to your mind. He says it changed him. After he got out at 24, he made a deliberate choice. No nightlife. No rushing back to social media. Instead, he worked regular jobs in the grocery industry for almost three years, focusing on accountability, mental health, and rebuilding relationships.[8]
Post-Release Career
Around three years into department manager work at a grocery store, Bick decided it was time to try entrepreneurship again. He was 27. This time he didn't hide from his past.
Social Media and Content Creation
He started making short videos on TikTok. Prison stories. Mistakes that landed him in federal prison. Millions of views followed across TikTok, Instagram, YouTube Shorts, and Facebook.[6]
As of 2025, his social reach includes:
- TikTok: Over 1.2 million followers with 41.5 million likes[10]
- YouTube: Approximately 400,000 subscribers with over 211 million total views[11][12]
That adds up to roughly 1.7 million followers across platforms. He's one of the biggest names in the prison influencer community.[3]
Locked In with Ian Bick
January 2023: Bick launched Locked In with Ian Bick. The podcast covers crime, prison, addiction, trauma, redemption, and second chances. Guests include former inmates, people in recovery, law enforcement, attorneys, and survivors connected to the justice system.[13]
The show's tagline: "real stories from the people everyone else judges first." It's become one of the fastest-growing justice podcasts in the United States.[8] Bick records at Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield, Connecticut. New episodes drop Sundays and Thursdays.[6][1]
His approach to interviews is completely unscripted. Before recording, he gets only a one-page biography of his guest. No pre-written questions. Just real conversation that usually goes one to two hours.[3] Notable guests have included Bobby Shmurda, George Christie (former Hells Angels leader), and Farrah Abraham.[14]
Podcast Links:
- Website: https://www.ianbick.com/
- Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/locked-in-with-ian-bick/id1662286355
- Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2UjiFLVz77x1TQ2V7bsrJv
- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRvVklIft6DMelVW18M0oBw
- iHeart Radio: https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-locked-in-with-ian-bick-107932612/
Creative Evolution Studios
September 2023 brought the launch of Creative Evolution Studios in Ridgefield, Connecticut. Bick founded it to focus on podcast production, consulting, and helping creators grow their social media.[5] The company provides professional equipment and offers podcast consulting, content production, and social media management.[15]
The studio sits above a strip mall in Connecticut. It's both a podcast recording space and a video production area. Bick even built a reconstructed prison set inside for content.[3]
Advocacy and Public Speaking
Bick serves on the board of directors for the National Association for Re-Entry Professionals, an organization supporting people transitioning out of prison back into society.[5] He's spoken at criminal justice reform conferences across the country.[8]
Now he shows up at prisons, schools, recovery programs, and reentry organizations. He connects with people who feel trapped by their past mistakes. His message stays consistent: "your past is a chapter, not your whole story."[8]
Media Appearances
Generation Hustle (2021)
Episode 2 of Generation Hustle featured Bick. The episode titled "The Party's Over" dropped on HBO Max on April 22, 2021.[7] George Plamondon directed this 10-episode series. It looks at entrepreneurial ventures by young people that went sideways.
The episode traces Bick's journey from teenage party organizer to nightclub owner to concert promoter. It shows his lavish lifestyle funded by investor cash, his downfall, the FBI investigation. One scene shows him in an empty nightclub saying, "I don't think I was a con artist."[7]
Plamondon wanted balance in his storytelling. He included investors who lost money. He included the prosecutor. He included Bick himself. The core question was simple: deliberate Ponzi scheme operator or just a kid in over his head.[7]
MrBeast 100-Day Prison Challenge (2025)
February 2025 brought MrBeast's 100-Day Prison Challenge. Participants lived in a constructed prison for 100 days, competing for $500,000.[4] Bick was paired with Lenny Bradley, a former NYPD detective. That created a "cop vs. criminal" dynamic.[16]
He completed all 100 days and won $240,000 from the shared prize. That money went straight to his restitution. What started as internet spectacle became real progress toward redemption.[4]
When the video dropped on August 16, 2025, Bick released podcast episodes about it. He covered behind-the-scenes details and compared the challenge environment to his actual federal prison experience.[16]
Business Entities
Historical (Pre-Incarceration):
- This Is Where It's At Entertainment, LLC
- Planet Youth Entertainment
- W&B Wholesale, LLC
- W&B Investments, LLC
Current:
- BBE Entertainment, LLC – Runs the Locked In with Ian Bick podcast (founded January 2023)[17]
- Creative Evolution Studios – Podcast production and content consulting (founded September/October 2023)[5]
Terminology
- Ponzi scheme: A fraudulent investment operation where returns to earlier investors come from capital supplied by new investors, not from actual profits.
- Wire fraud: A federal crime involving electronic communications or interstate wire communications to execute a scheme to defraud.
- Money laundering: The process of concealing the origins of illegally obtained money by passing it through complex banking transfers or commercial transactions.
- Restitution: A court-ordered payment from a convicted person to compensate victims for their financial losses from the crime.
- Prison influencer: A content creator who produces media about prison experience, incarceration stories, and criminal justice topics, often from personal experience with the system.
- Solitary confinement: A form of imprisonment where an incarcerated person is isolated from other inmates, typically in a small cell for 22-24 hours daily.
External Links
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Who is Ian Bick?
Ian Bick is a former nightclub owner who served 36 months in federal prison for wire fraud and money laundering. Today he hosts the Locked In with Ian Bick podcast and advocates for criminal justice reform.
Q: What was Ian Bick convicted of?
Bick was found guilty of six counts of wire fraud and one count of money laundering for defrauding investors of approximately $480,000 through a Ponzi-like scheme.
Q: How long was Ian Bick's prison sentence?
He was sentenced to 36 months in federal prison, followed by three years of supervised release with the first year in home confinement.
Q: What is 'Locked In with Ian Bick'?
Locked In with Ian Bick is a podcast featuring interviews with former inmates, law enforcement officials, and others affected by the criminal justice system, focusing on crime, prison, and redemption stories.
Q: What is Ian Bick doing now?
He's a content creator with over 1.7 million social media followers, a podcast host, founder of Creative Evolution Studios, and board member of the National Association for Re-Entry Professionals.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 Hearst Connecticut Media. "After prison stint on fraud charges, Danbury's Ian Bick finds road to redemption leads to podcasting." NewsTimes, March 18, 2024.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 U.S. Department of Justice. "Danbury Man Sentenced to 3 Years in Federal Prison for Defrauding Investors." October 26, 2016.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Type.Set.Brooklyn. "Unlocking Ian Bick." September 12, 2025.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 IanBick.com. "About Ian Bick." 2025.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Gossip Daily. "Ian Bick Net Worth and Life After Prison." September 12, 2025.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Mike Malatesta. "Ian Bick – The Fastest Growing Podcaster in the World." How'd It Happen Podcast, November 5, 2023.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Hearst Connecticut Media. "Ian Bick defrauded investors of nearly $500K. Now the Danbury man is telling his story in an HBO Max series." NewsTimes, April 15, 2021.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 IanBick.com. "About." 2025.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Federal Bureau of Investigation. "Danbury Man Charged with Running Ponzi Scheme." July 2, 2016.
- ↑ TikTok. "@ianbick." 2025.
- ↑ Famous Birthdays. "Ian Bick." 2025.
- ↑ ThoughtLeaders.io. "Ian Bick YouTube Stats." 2025.
- ↑ Apple Podcasts. "Locked In with Ian Bick." 2025.
- ↑ IanBick.com. "Episodes." 2025.
- ↑ Creative Evolution Studios. "About." CreativeEvolutionStudios.com. 2025.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 Apple Podcasts. "MrBeast Cop Exposes Truth About 100 Day Prison Challenge." Locked In with Ian Bick, August 17, 2025.
- ↑ LinkedIn. "Ian Bick." 2025.