Actor Mehcad Brooks has pushed back against online criticism aimed at a GoFundMe fundraiser launched to support the family of James Van Der Beek following his death Feb. 11, 2026. In a post on Threads, Brooks said he is a close friend of the family, called recent headlines “fake AF,” and told critics they had “no idea” what the family endured.
The fundraiser, organized by friends on behalf of Van Der Beek’s widow, Kimberly, says medical care and a prolonged fight with cancer depleted the family’s finances and that donations will help cover living costs, bills and the children’s education. By Feb. 18, it had raised about $2.69 million from more than 50,000 donations, topping a $1.5 million goal shown on the campaign page.
The flashpoint for critics came after real-estate reporting showed Van Der Beek and his wife bought the Texas ranch they had been renting since 2020 for $4.76 million on Jan. 9, 2026, shortly before his death. A spokesperson for the actor said the purchase relied on help from friends through a trust to secure a down payment, framing it as a move from renting to carrying a mortgage.
Brooks’ response captured the emotional temperature around a recurring question in celebrity crowdfunding: what the public is entitled to know when famous families ask for private help in public. Some commenters argue visibility and earning power should remove the need for donations; others point to healthcare costs, inconsistent work and contract terms that can leave even recognizable actors without long-term security.
Compensation specialists interviewed about the case noted that TV residual payments vary widely and depend on contract details, initial pay and participation terms that young performers rarely secure early in their careers. Van Der Beek had previously said he saw “almost nothing” from early residuals tied to Dawson’s Creek, a point supporters now cite as context for the family’s finances.





















































