Social Media Influence: Performative Authenticity and the Relational Work of Audience Commodification in the Philippines

Authors

  • Jeremy Shtern Ryerson University
  • Stephanie Hill Ryerson University
  • Daphne Chan Ryerson University

Keywords:

social media influence, monetization, platform studies, Philippines, social media entertainment, cultural production

Abstract

This article examines issues linked to monetization on social media platforms through an investigation of the work of social media influence in the Philippines. Based on a series of semistructured interviews with Filipino influencers, we asked how influencers understand, engage, and commodify the audience for their content. We suggest that social media influence work in the Philippines is defined by globally connected but locally rooted practices of performed authenticity through which creators employ conscious and identifiable strategies to cultivate a local audience that mostly occupies very different socioeconomic, linguistic, and cultural positions from the creators themselves. We argue that understanding authenticity as work that can be performed and negotiated between producers and their audiences offers new and interesting directions in approaching the commodification of social media audiences.

Author Biographies

Jeremy Shtern, Ryerson University

Associate Professor: School of Creative Industries &Graduate Program Director, York/Ryerson Joint Graduate Program in Communication & CultureRyerson University, Toronto, Canada (001) 416-979-5000 ex 3301

Stephanie Hill, Ryerson University

Joseph-Armand Bombardier SSHRC-CGS Doctoral Scholar and Ph.D. Candidate York/Ryerson Joint Graduate Program in Communication and Culture Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada 

Daphne Chan, Ryerson University

Research AssistantThe Global Communication Governance LabRyerson University

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Published

2019-04-29

Issue

Section

Articles