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9
1.
Name 3 year s ago
Gee.....it's all fake? Who'd a thunk it?
       
3
2.
Nicey 3 year s ago
They don’t influence anything, unless causing their friends to hate them counts.
       
0
3.
Tine 3 year s ago
[quote=Nicey] The do make youngsters (especially young girls, but also boys) feel bad about their looks and bodies. Everyone would be better off by following an artist or musician instead. Anyone who actually creates something, rather than these "fake perfection" @$$holes.
       
-1
4.
Chris 3 year s ago
Someone with <1m subscribers isn’t an influencer - they’re just wannabes
       
0
5.
Onnie 3 year s ago
I feel inadequate now...
       
5
6.
Jackie 3 year s ago
some years back, the word for 'influencer' would have been snake oil, reprobate, carpet bagger, bum and beggar.
       
7
7.
Chesley 3 year s ago
Nothing more than social parasites.
       
3
8.
Tine 3 year s ago
Call them out on it! Let everyone see how fake they really are. They bring nothing good to the world. Nothing.
       
0
9.
Nowell 3 year s ago
nobody is gonna read this sh#t izismile
       
2
10.
Tine 3 year s ago
Nowell, guess that makes you nobody.
       
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"Awful. One of my best friends fell real hard into Instagram, and for a few years it was tolerable and understandable, albeit annoying and strange. Everything needed to be documented in specific ways, so lots & lots of photos, even if it took away from the moment. But the strange part was how, when she’d share things, the captions always told a slightly different story than what actually happened. Like just off enough for me and my other friends to say, huh, that has a weird quality to it.

Fast forward a couple years, and she gets engaged. Boom. This was the catalyst for the worst of the influencer mentality to come out. I was in the bridal party, and it was a nightmare. No gratitude, just demands. Demands for expensive trips and expensive parties and all kinds of things that were above and beyond the means of her closest friends. And all the demands were because she had a “following” and had certain expectations to meet.

It was really heart wrenching to witness someone belittle their best friend and maid of honor for trying to plan a sweet bridal shower because it wasn’t going to be at an expensive restaurant or art gallery. It reached its peak for me when, after the in-state wedding became an expensive destination wedding, there was the demand for an out-of-town bachelorette party a few weeks before. I was honest and said I couldn’t afford the bachelorette (mind you, I made about a thousand sacrifices over those months to afford what I could), and was promptly bridezilla’d and told I ruined the whole experience and that I was an awful, fake, inauthentic person.

It got so bad that the bridal party fractured and disintegrated, she lost two of her best friends (myself and the MOH didn’t even attend the wedding after all her behavior and blow-ups), and we’ve barely spoken since. All so she could have an instagrammable wedding that would look good for the few photos she ended up sharing of it. And, true to the weird strange re-written reality ways she had, she published a public “apology” on her blog for her followers and family that completely distorted and rewrote what happened, painted herself as the victim, and got her the sympathy points she was looking for.

Ppl really lose themselves when they create an artifice for social media. I learned a lot from her."

 

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