Itâs antithetical to the job.
vox.com/culture CULTURE The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. The Wednesday edition of the Vox Culture newsletter is all about internet culture, brought to you by senior reporter Rebecca Jennings. ðï¸ Influencers will never influence you to buy less stuff ð¸ For about five minutes a few months ago, people seemed to genuinely believe that our culture was entering the age of âdeinfluencing.â âStep aside, [influencers](,â [wrote CNN](. âA new breed of âdeinfluencersâ has arrived, and theyâre saying that materialism and overpriced trends are no longer in style.â The idea of the âdeinfluencerâ was that instead of encouraging you to buy stuff, the influencer would encourage you to ... not buy stuff. At first, many videos tagged âdeinfluencingâ were genuine appeals to push back against influencer culture; people talked about how overspending and viral haul videos were part of an unsustainable and unethical system of capitalism that moved at the speed of [TikTok]( trends, often including mea culpas about how their own videos had contributed to that system. It was pretty interesting, honestly, to hear people whose livelihoods depend on selling other peopleâs products reflect publicly on what their job has meant for the [mental health](, spending habits, and ethics of both themselves and their viewers. What started as a rare glimpse into what professional salespeople truly feel and believe, however, immediately became a rather ingenious sales pitch once the hashtag caught on: Instead of influencing people to buy stuff, influencers who tagged their posts âdeinfluencingâ were simply posting negative reviews of products they didnât think were worth the money, and â more often than not â telling you what to buy instead (one was captioned âshowing you products that can potentially help with overconsumerism!â) Lorena Spurio/Vox Did anyone really think a TikTok trend was the beginning of the end of capitalism? Probably not. In the months since âdeinfluencingâ faded from the discourse, TikTok has made consumption on its platform even more inescapable with the launch of TikTok Shop, a feature allowing viewers to buy a product shown in a video without leaving the app. TikTok Shop videos â recognizable by the orange shopping cart tag next to the description â are everywhere, and they are leaving [peopleâs TikTok feeds âin shambles.â]( TikTok has always been full of product-hawking, much of it rather sneaky: You might be watching a video of someone doing their makeup and they happen to name [the brand of mascara theyâre wearing](, or a lifestyle influencer is showing her newly renovated living room and suddenly all the commenters demand to know where she bought her lamp. (If she says no, [thatâs gatekeeping](! Even the very language of the platform encourages consumption!) The app was already full of cheap, unethically made goods from sites like Temu or AliExpress, but TikTok Shop has made it even easier for people to buy them and much more lucrative to sell them. Still, stories about how âinfluencing is overâ have proliferated ever since influencers have existed. It happened [when the FTC]( sent warning letters to influencers saying that they needed to include advertising disclosures on all of their sponsored posts, and the mainstream media predicted this would torch their ability to come off as relatable and authentic (the effect was the [opposite](). It happened when influencers were called out for promoting [disastrous music festivals](, it happened when [Instagram added the option]( to hide âlikeâ counts on photos, and it happened when the pandemic [forced everyone inside](. Yet so far, nothing has come even remotely close to slowing the influencer economy. By all metrics, the industry is growing: The number of content creators is expected to grow at a 10 percent to 20 percent compound rate during the next five years, [according to Goldman Sachs](. The [market]( is on track to rise from $16.4 billion in 2022 to $21 billion in 2023, and advertisers are spending [less in traditional media and more on influencers]( because young consumers tend to trust [influencers over brands]( and [social media over national news outlets](. The definition of âinfluencingâ has continually expanded, not contracted; what started as the province of consumer categories like fashion, beauty, travel, food, and fitness now includes political activism, literature, music, art, corporate life, dating, and mental health. If it exists, there are influencers for it. The result is that the internet now feels like a place whose sole purpose is selling you something. And itâs not going to change â in fact, itâs going to get much, much worse. Thatâs according to both the logic of growth-at-all-costs capitalism and also Michael Serazio, journalist and communications professor at Boston College and author of the new book [The Authenticity Industries: Keeping It âRealâ in Media, Culture, and Politics,]( out this November. In it, he explores the commodification of identity, why âselling outâ has no meaning anymore, and why amateurs â that is to say, regular people on social media â make the most effective salespeople. âThe vast majority of content we consume when weâre on social media is by amateurs as opposed to professionals, and thatâs a dramatic shift in terms of how weâve gotten our media content over the years,â he says. âThe notion of the amateur is that theyâre doing it for love and not for money; they enjoy the creative expression, they have no ulterior motives. That has created the expectation in audiences that these folks are trustworthy, and thatâs exactly what makes them valuable to then sell on behalf of marketers and corporations.â Tech platforms, he explains, have [long profited from the notion]( that their users are people who are only there because theyâre having fun. Marketers for tech companies claim that social media is a more democratic alternative to traditional media, with its gatekeepers and top-down approach to information and culture (meanwhile, they gloss over the fact that theyâve simply replaced those human gatekeepers with black-box algorithms that no one understands yet govern everything we see). Highly visible and successful influencers complicate that image, which is part of why platforms and influencers have paradoxically [always been at odds with one another](. Marketers, however, love influencers, who have the sheen of âregular person just doing this for fun,â even when theyâre making money at it. And whenever there is a [cultural pushback against influencersâ âtoo polishedâ aesthetics]( or [cynical cash grabs](, itâs not as though the whole industry collapses: It simply shifts to accommodate whatever aesthetic takes its place. The attention and the ad money might be going to different creators or different platforms, but wherever people are supposedly being âauthenticâ on the internet, the money will follow. âAdvertising is geographically imperialistic,â says Serazio. âItâs always seeking out new spaces that it has not yet colonized. Thereâs a constant craving among users for something authentic, pure, and not trying to sell you something. But wherever you find that, it will wind up being filled in, a product will be inserted into it.â Itâs a never-ending cycle, he says, which has over the past few years led to a sense of disillusionment among audiences. âThe internet isnât fun anymore,â Kyle Chayka declared in [the New Yorker]( recently, pointing to [Google]( searches cluttered with ads and SEO bait, [Facebook](âs baffling quests to capitalize on the latest tech crazes, and whateverâs happening with the mess that is [Elon Musk](âs takeover of âXâ (formerly [Twitter](). âThe social-media Web [sic, lol] as we knew it, a place where we consumed the posts of our fellow-humans and posted in return, appears to be over,â he writes. Instead, itâs been filled by âanonymous trolling, automated recommendations, [and] runaway monetization schemes.â With all of this degradation of internet spaces that once felt freer and more fun, itâs almost shocking that there really hasnât been any widespread pushback. Sure, plenty of people have aired their grievances with social media and the worsening experience of being online, but theyâre doing so on social media because on the current version of the internet, where else can you go and actually be heard? Similarly, as much as millennials and Gen Z say they [distrust capitalism](, are interested in [anti-work ideology](, and [support socialist policies](, in a cutthroat, individualist economy, no one without significant privilege can realistically opt out. âTo complain about âselling outâ is a privileged thing to do,â says Serazio. âOnce the music industryâs revenue model was completely decimated, you didnât hear anyone complaining about selling out anymore.â The same is true for the labor economy writ large: For his Gen Z college students, Serazio says, the concept of selling out has no meaning whatsoever; the goal is to sell out, even though they may criticize the system it upholds. Young people know that where thereâs money to be made, people will find a way to make it, and if itâs not you, itâll be somebody else (watch any of the millions of YouTube videos directed at young men on [how to make âpassive incomeâ](). Given the chance to shill a random companyâs possibly useless product for a few thousand bucks, very [few young people will say no](. After all, itâs the surest way of becoming a professional influencer, still one of the [most sought-after jobs among kids](. [Seventy percent of content creators say]( brand sponsorship deals are the top way they make money, followed by sharing ad revenue with tech platforms, affiliate links, and starting their own brands â all of which depend on selling products to consumers. As long as this system exists, advertising and marketing will continue to fill in the gaps like weeds. And if we think the internet is colonized by ads now, itâs not going to get better. âHaving studied this for two decades or so, I will say that whatever we think of as really commercialized right now, we will look back nostalgically on in five or 10 or 20 years as being so much less commercialized, so much more pure and Edenic,â Serazio says. âI know itâs crazy to think, but itâs just an abiding truth weâve seen over time.â The influencers are just a symptom, and by virtue of the literal job description â make money by taking sponsorship deals from consumer brands â theyâre not the ones who will be lighting the way toward an online anti-capitalist backlash. Instead, it will show up like wildflowers among the weeds, poking out in private group chats, niche newsletters, or studiously gatekept forums. An internet where everything is built on scale, where each pixel of digital real estate is up for grabs by the highest bidder, is an internet where only influencers, billionaires, and scammers win out. Itâs an internet that will continue to suck until itâs not worth using at all. This story is part of Vox's Buy Less Stuff package. [Read more stories here](. Clickbait - How big tech companies [really think about AI]( behind closed doors.
- Even as Google is in its flop era, [SEO experts are finding ways]( to still get rich by making the internet worse.
- [TikTok is ending]( its $2 billion creator fund.
- People are [using Snap Map]( to see firsthand perspectives from Gaza.
- How TikTok food critic Keith Lee [accidentally caused chaos]( in the Atlanta restaurant scene.
- Greenville, North Carolina, was quiet â [until Mr. Beast came along](.
- Chinese influencers are using AI clones of [themselves to pump out content](.
- A [fascinating profile of Lil Tay](, the teen influencer who supposedly "died" and now is attempting a comeback as a pop star. One Last Thing [This is]( the hardest I've laughed at a TikTok in recent memory.
Â
[Learn more about RevenueStripe...]( [Facebook]( [Twitter]( [YouTube]( Manage your [email preferences]( or [unsubscribe](param=culture). If you value Voxâs unique explanatory journalism, support our work with a one-time or recurring [contribution](. View our [Privacy Policy]( and our [Terms of Service](. Vox Media, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Floor 12, Washington, DC 20036. Copyright © 2023. All rights reserved.