Most Valuable Promotions is taking its ringside formula to the cage. The company’s first-ever MMA card on Netflix is being led by Ronda Rousey vs Gina Carano, with Daniella Lapo, Raphaela Milagres, Lexi Williams and Delia Sylvain attached as mvp ring girls.
The move extends a business model that has helped define the promotion’s public image. Most Valuable Promotions has built a reputation in recent years for filling cards with stars inside the ring and viral personalities around them, turning the walkout, the backdrop and the ring-side presentation into part of the event itself.
Lapo arrives with around 195,000 followers on Instagram and a résumé that includes Miami Swim Week and Art Hearts Fashion appearances. Milagres, who now lives in Southern California, won the overall title at Arnold Brazil in 2018 before competing at Olympia weekend later that year, and she now has over 192K followers on Instagram. Williams is based in Los Angeles and has a following of roughly 1.7 to 2 million across Instagram and TikTok. She also appeared at the Mike Tyson vs Jake Paul event in 2024.
Sylvain brings a different path into the lineup. The 27-year-old, reportedly from Mexico, first drew attention on TikTok before launching her influencer career with a viral Fashion Nova bikini video. Together, the four give MVP a lineup that looks built as much for social reach as for live presentation.
The earnings side of the job is part of the appeal. MVP ring girls can make anything from $10,000 to $30,000 per event, while Milagres is thought to be among the highest-paid models tied to the promotion, with estimated earnings near the $20,000 to $30,000 range per event. The exact salaries of Lapo and Sylvain have not been fully stated.
That mix of visibility and money is why the role has become a talking point during Jake Paul’s boxing cards, where the supporting cast often draws as much online attention as the bouts themselves. MVP is now carrying that approach into MMA, with a Netflix debut that gives the promotion a bigger stage and a wider audience than ever before.
The unanswered piece is not whether the company can find attention. It already knows how to do that. The question is whether the same spectacle that worked in boxing will travel just as cleanly into MMA, where Rousey and Carano already give the card enough star power to stand on its own.

