
New Books in Sociology Emily Hund, "The Influencer Industry: The Quest for Authenticity on Social Media" (Princeton UP, 2023)
Jan 19, 2026
Emily Hund, a research affiliate at the Center on Digital Culture and Society, dives into her book about the rise of the influencer industry. She highlights how the Great Recession pushed many into digital personal branding. Hund discusses the journey from early bloggers to today's complex influencer landscape. Authenticity, once a valued trait, has turned commercial. She also addresses ongoing challenges like vulnerability and industry precarity, illuminating the unexpected costs of this digital fame.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Influence Became A Measurable Commodity
- Influence has a long intellectual prehistory but became a measurable social commodity in the 20th century.
- The internet and personal branding paved the way to digital influence being tradeable and valued.
The Recession Sparked The Influencer Wave
- The 2008 Great Recession was a pivotal catalyst for people to pursue online personal branding and influencing.
- Economic precarity pushed many into posting and monetizing audiences as an alternative career path.
Influence Is The Industry's Product
- The influencer industry is distinct because it trades influence itself as the product.
- That required quantification and created firms to measure and sell individual influence.


