I want more from these influencer cover stories Jabari Jacobs / Seventeen.com This week I got a press blast from Seventeen’s publisher about mega TikTok sisters Charli and Dixie D’Amelio appearing on the magazine’s digital cover. This is a big deal for the sister and other young influencers. What could be more validating than a legacy women’s publication — that they probably grew up reading — giving them the same royal treatment as traditional celebrities?
At just 16 and 19, Charli and Dixie D’Amelio have managed to handle their meteoritic rise — and all the attention and pressure that comes with it — without losing sight of who they are.
I can’t imagine the kind of scrutiny these teens face every day. I also can’t imagine it being easy that Dixie simply turns “all [her] comments off” and compartmentalizes just to get through a work day. That takes constant maintenance, and it takes a huge toll on a young person’s mental health. I appreciate Charli’s vulnerability in talking about her eating disorder so that she can help someone else, but I wish she and the writer could have also addressed how damaging it could be for a young woman with an eating disorder to be constantly seen by millions every day. I’d love to know the long-term impacts of keeping up a desirable image and body to keep your thrilling and lucrative influencer job. How radical would it be for a young fan to read about that in a magazine like Seventeen or Cosmo?
The Seventeen feature on the D’Amelio sisters also presents their “meteoric rise” as incidental, and that the family is not “trying too hard to make things happen” when they negotiate major multimillion-dollar business deals. I feel like this does a huge injustice to both the influencer grind and to the D’Amelio family’s success. Even though they may talk about their jobs with an aspirational kind of whimsy (as if their new Morphe makeup line blew in their front door with the wind), to have built the empire that the family has requires a lot of effort (taking countless business meetings and continuously pitching). It also takes a lot of luck — aka being pretty and white. It’s an effort and privilege that we can value, envy, criticize, and/or resent…but I would have loved to see any of that in a cover story.
They're not trying too hard to make things happen — and that seems to be part of their magic. "Everyone always asks us what our plans are for the next year. I don’t know even know what my plan is for tomorrow. I just live day by day and I’m excited for everything," Dixie said. So what advice would they give their millions of followers who want to follow in their footsteps? "Be yourself, have fun, make mistakes,” the girls advised.
Plus, if influencers benefit from being perceived as more ~real~ or independent — at least in the way that traditional celebrities aren’t — here is a great opportunity to ask them to be a little more self-reflective.
...I am also going to ask fashion influencers to step it up: Tying a flannel around your waist is not fall fashion! Instagram / @laurabeverlin / @whitneynrife To my dear, beloved Lakelynns and Cayleighs on Instagram: I know fall is your season. You have hundreds of thousands of followers. Fashion is your thing! It’s what you’ve built your brand on, and what drives big commission dollars from your LikeToKnowIt links. I respect that.
Tanya Want more? Here are other stories we were following this week. The Breonna Taylor announcement has sparked anger and heartbreak on social media. After months of nationwide protests, petitions signed by millions, and widespread calls on social media for their arrest, the three police officers involved in the killing of Breonna Taylor were not charged for her death in Wednesday's grand jury decision in Kentucky.
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