Apparently these days, the most popular dream job among children is influencer. I’ve seen articles about it, and both the articles and the comments are invariably full of judgy statements about how Kids These DaysTM are such narcissists/their brains are being rotted by social media/they don’t want to do anything valuable with their lives.

But like. I think the kids are onto something, tbh. The thing is, working a 9-5 (or 8-5, as the average job is nowadays) job is a pretty shit deal. You have no say in your work environment and have to do whatever you’re told. The hours make a medieval peasant’s workload look light, and that’s not even counting the commute you’ll likely have to make. What little free time you have left over is spent recovering, so you don’t have time to do anything fun. And you get to do this for the rest of your life.

At least if you’re an influencer, you set your own hours and may wind up working much less than 40 hours a week. You get to work from home, and there’s a small chance you’ll hit it big and get rich. There’s zero chance of that at your standard office job. If you can swing it, it’s not a bad deal at all.

And I don’t think there’s anything morally wrong with being an influencer. Are some of them shitty? Sure. But that’s true of any job. You could argue that being an influencer contributes nothing to society, but really, how many jobs do contribute anything worthwhile to the world? Is it really more respectable to type numbers into spreadsheets all day just to make your boss richer? Or to write up reports no one reads? At least influencers entertain people.

TL;DR: The kids know the grind is bullshit, and they see becoming an influencer as a way to escape that.

  • lorgo_numputz@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    If I may summarize what I think I’m hearing from you:

    This is the current version of “Going to Hollywood” / “Hitting it big” so you can make some money and set your own rules.

    And, since these are people, some of them will be very cool individuals and some will be absolute trash and there will be a number who are in-between those extremes.

    If so then I can’t really argue with you. Who wants to work at the Fedex Copy Center and try to make it that way?

  • honeyontoast@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Kids have always had wild career dreams, it’s not new it’s just a different medium. It’s fine. I’m not sure it’s a conscious decision to escape the grind though. I grew up with kids who wanted to be movie stars or athletes. Why? Because they idolised movie stars and athletes and want to be like them. It’s what they’re exposed to the most. Now kids are exposed to influencers the most, so they wanna be one too.

    I wanted to be a train driver 🚂

    • DarbyDear@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      This is actually a really good point that I hadn’t considered! My career dream as a kid was zoologist (which never quite panned out for me). My only concern with kids that want to be influencers is if they’re looking for love and attention they aren’t getting at home, and that’s entirely out of concern for their mental and emotional health. I don’t really think it’s bad for kids to want to be influencers though, as long as they understand what they’re getting into if they start putting serious effort into creating a career out of it.

  • thegiddystitcher@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    When I was a kid I used to play at being a radio DJ, record myself on a tape recorder and force my parents to be interviewed. Playing at being a YouTuber or whatever doesn’t really seem any different to that, to me.

  • strudel6242@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    The kids know the grind is bullshit, and they see becoming an influencer as a way to escape that.

    I have a strong doubt that kids see influencers as an “escape” from the grind, but rather as a “cool” career path where they can get fame and admiration from many people without a whole lot of study or physical labour put in.

  • king_dead@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Me and my fiance were looking at dolls and tbh i found it sad. They had these “i can be anything” set and the doll in question was a barista doll. What kid honestly wants to work for Starbucks for the rest of their life? Kids deserve better, bigger dreams than we give em

    • Thrashy@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      A friend of mine from architecture school wound up as barista during the Great Recession and genuinely ended up loving it, to the point that he tried to buy a coffee shop from a guy who was retiring. Unfortunately for him, he couldn’t get a small business loan mid-recession (the bank told him “you have the most airtight business plan we’ve seen in a hot minute, but we’re just not making loans right now”) and he wasn’t able to make it work.

      There’s no shame in wanting to work in the service industry. The challenge is in finding a way to do it without being exploited.

  • unsunny@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I feel that depending on what kind of content creation it is, some of the people balking at those kids who want to be influencers don’t realize that it is still a lot of work. This is being a freelance entertainer, you still need to learn strategies. I’m preparing to start VTubing (independently) at 20 as a side hustle, and there is an astounding amount of preparation to do it well. Also, these content creator lifestyles can also be appealing for disabled/chronically ill people like myself. A good community will wish you well, understand, and not ask you for a doctor’s note if you need time off frequently; a manager at a corporate job, not so much. Disabled or not, everyone deserves flexibility, and being an influence can support that well.

  • GhostMagician@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    People wishing to land into a large sum of money that would free them from the obligation to have to work to survive is enough proof that lot of people don’t really grow up wanting to do mundane 9-5 tasks. Its just that for some, those childhood dreams never managed to actually become feasible reality and now they got to do what they have to in order to survive.

  • Moneymunkie@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Mean to me it feels like when this gets brought up in an article, its another one of those moral panic sort of things that go “look at what the kids want to be when they grow up, society is in decline!” as if they didn’t have dreams of being a movie star or something when they were young. I wanted to be a astronaut despite my fear of going on rollercoasters lol, kids love dreaming big regardless of how actually feasible those dreams are.

    And I can see why being an influencer would be appealing, getting to feel cool and popular, the perks that come with it like free stuff, having it revolve around an area they are passionate in like gaming for example. Plus considering that to those kids who might be inspired to become an influencer from following one, they’ve probably also gotten the sense that it must be one of the best jobs ever since they’ve probably only gotten to see the good, fun, positive sides of the job as thats usually the stuff that gets posted, but not so much with the bad side of it. Burning out is a fairly common problem for one, especially with a big pressure to keep pumping out content super regularly.

    Personally not for me though, the idea of fame just doesn’t appeal at all to someone scared of people like me and I’m burnt out enough as is haha.

  • Hexorg@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    At least in my circles the notion of a god influencer virtually doesn’t exist. All influencers I’ve heard of are the Karens that want free everything for exposure. And they can’t even provide large enough exposure to offset the costs.

    Influencers are essentially one-person advertisement agencies, right? Which I guess is fine but we all know how modern advertisement agencies use shitty tactics to squeeze every Penny they can. So if an influencer goes that route they will likely not be generally liked.

    • balerion@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      Not all influencers advertise. A YouTuber who makes money solely from their Patreon is still an influencer.

    • balerion@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      Sure, but that’s true of any job. If everyone were a doctor, society would fall apart. That doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with wanting to be a doctor, or even with a significant portion of the populace being doctors.

  • alex [they/them]@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    I’m older than the kids today and when I grew up I wanted to be a singer or a sportsperson and everyone else did. It’s just another wild dream, it’s normal to want to be cool and rich and famous when you’re a kid.