if you make that much, incorporate yourself. tax laws love corporations.
I'm not sure if you were joking or not, but I've seen this brought up seriously elsewhere before where I didn't want to have to debate it, so here's the info. You can't turk under anything but your personal SSN, so your income from that must remain personal self-employment income, making it irrelevant here regardless.
But that aside, it seems most people have no idea of the ongoing costs and time-consuming extra paperwork that would be involved in incorporation... several hundred dollars to file initial incorporation paperwork, several hundred dollars a year annual 'franchise tax' payment ("A franchise tax is a fee paid for the privilege of doing business as a corporation in that particular state."), several hundred dollars a year in filing fees for various required paperwork, a hundred dollars or so annually for buying the most expensive tax software version each year (or several hundred dollars annually to get an accountant to handle business taxes)... and then you still have to do your personal taxes too, plus file employee-type tax paperwork and tax prepayments on yourself for the business throughout the year (there is a 'pass-through' option for the LLC type of incorporation that can reduce the extra tax paperwork, but then you're back to treating it all as personal self-employment income on your taxes, yet still owing those other extra fees). As the 'business' paying all its earnings to its sole employee, there wouldn't be profits to pay corporate income tax on for it, but you'd still owe basically the same total taxes as self-employment, just with the 'business' having to pay its half of the Social Security + Medicare portion to the government before paying 'you', instead of you paying both halves on your personal taxes. And as an added 'bonus', to be able to receive or make payments in the name of your corporation, you'd need to open a separate 'business'-class checking account at your bank after filing the incorporation paperwork, and that type of account usually doesn't have a no-monthly-fees option like personal bank accounts do. It's only the very large companies that can shuffle things around in a "tax laws love corporations" kind of way.
TLDR: you can't incorporate for turking, and wouldn't come out ahead if you could.