Robert Downey Jr.: ‘It’s horsesh-t’ to say that influencers are the stars of the future

It’s true across the board that if a celebrity became famous in the 1980s or 1990s, they pretty much don’t understand the modern social-media landscape, nor do they understand influencers or people who are famous-for-being-famous. Most of those ‘90s celebrities had to be dragged kicking and screaming onto Instagram, and I doubt many of them even manage their accounts. Very few of them are on TikTok or aware of the TikTokification of modern celebrity. I’m fine with all of this – I mostly lurk on Instagram and TikTok and I know that most of it is not “for” me and that’s fine. I imagine Julia Roberts and Jennifer Aniston feel the same way. Well, Robert Downey Jr. has some thoughts about influencers, social-media personalities and the importance of a celebrity’s online presence. His thoughts are… not exactly based in the reality of 2026.

Robert Downey Jr. recently appeared on the “Conversations for our Daughters” podcast and shaded social media influencers by saying it’s “absolute horsesh-t” to declare them the “stars of the future.” The “Iron Man” icon noted that “nowadays people can create celebrity without ever doing much besides rolling a phone on themselves,” adding: “I don’t look at that as a negative thing. I just look at it as more like the challenge for individuation is being upped.”

“Hopefully the [larger] part of the youth of – let’s just call it America for locality’s sake – is gonna say, ‘Yeah, but that’s not my thing. I want to go do something, I’m going to make something, I want to build something, I want to educate myself and I want to have more inputs, so whatever my output is, it isn’t just a self-aggrandizing kind of influencer-type thing,” the Oscar winner continued.

Downey himself has a sizable social media footprint with an Instagram account that has amassed 58.1 million followers, largely due to the legions of Marvel fans from his tenure playing Tony Stark/Iron Man in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Downey is returning to the franchise later this year as Doctor Doom in “Avengers: Doomsday,” in theaters Dec. 18.

“When I hear people talk about, ‘Oh, the stars of the future are going to be influencers,’ I go, ‘I don’t know what world you’re living in, but I think that that is absolute horsesh-t,’” Downey said. “[My 14-year-old son] kinda got caught up in this whole influencer thing, and next thing you know, it’s like, ‘Hey, if you like the way I’m playing this video game, do you wanna send me a donation?’ And really, it becomes a religion,” the actor continued. “So there’s something about the influencers today that are almost like the Evangelical hucksters of the information age. At the same token, it’s different because we’re playing in this new territory and so it’s a little bit of a frontier and I don’t really have a judgment on it. I also know when I am promoting a film now I’ve gotten to know a few of these influencers, and I find many of them grounded, accomplished, cool people.”

Despite his own large social media following, Downey said he tries “not to get too deep down the rabbit hole” because “I don’t wish to be consumed.”

“I know, like people say, ‘Robert, they just love it when you’re just kind of like seeming off the cuff, and they’re getting a glimpse into your life.’ And I go, ‘But yeah, but I’d be manufacturing that aspect for them, so it’s B.S.,” Downey said. “But I remember Jon Favreau, when we brought the teaser for ‘Iron Man’ to Comic Con, he was tweeting on stage and I saw the audience… This is the new hue where the audience is going to feel like they’re on the steering committee of this thing. Ok, so that’s the new landscape.”

[From Variety]

“I want to go do something, I’m going to make something, I want to build something… so whatever my output is, it isn’t just a self-aggrandizing kind of influencer-type thing.” Not to defend influencers, but have you seen how hard influencers work? Have you seen the effort they put into their jobs? They’ve got high overheads (cameras, equipment, rentals, lighting, clothes, etc) and they put so much time and energy into creating content and trying to find revenue streams. I followed Olympic bronze-medalist Ilona Maher’s journey to stardom, and she talked about how lesser-known athletes were offered classes on how to make good/memorable content so that they could make a name for themselves and attract lucrative sponsorships. Maher has also said that she can easily spend an entire day making her TikTok videos. And she’s literally an Olympian!!

My point is that someone like Maher understands this new stardom paradigm, where people aren’t siloed into “okay, I have a REAL job” versus “I’m just an influencer with no talent!” It’s all part of the same exact ecosystem, and the younger celebrities HAVE to play the game. Younger actors have spoken about this endlessly too – that casting directors check to see how many followers they have, or they’re losing parts to some influencer with a huge following. Anyway, RDJ… just doesn’t get it.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red.

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11 Responses to “Robert Downey Jr.: ‘It’s horsesh-t’ to say that influencers are the stars of the future”

  1. Lucky Charm says:

    I’m with RDJ, I just don’t get it, either. My son was telling me about the proposal he’s planning for his girlfriend and I asked him WHY is he spending so much time, energy, and money on a proposal and not save that for the wedding. He said it’s because TikTok and IG that’s what everyone is doing now. What happened to just bending on one knee and asking “will you marry me?” Lol

  2. Mel says:

    Influencers suck because they sell a lifestyle to you that they aren’t living themselves. Do you know how many of them are broke AF while they’re telling you to buy luxury items or take luxury trips that they don’t pay for? How many act like their experts when they’re just idiots with equipment. Fifty percent of Americans read and understand on a 6th grade level and are easily influenced by those who present themselves as better / smarter/ richer/ more connected, that’s how we got the manosphere full of monsters. Influencers are awful and they and places like TikTok are part of the reason this country is a toxic, dumb mess at the moment.

  3. Charlotte Corday says:

    Oh, he absolutely gets it.

  4. jferber says:

    He’s just jealous for influencers to be more famous than movie stars like him (who won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar in case you forgot!) He makes me tired. He always acts the same way, playing himself, in every film. That was also said about Marilyn Monroe and John Wayne, though he’s in neither of their league.

  5. Thinking says:

    There are too many influencers doing similar things. In that sense, I think he’s correct. No one has the time to be that interested in that many people doing the same thing.

    Whether someone is a doctor influence, lawyer influencer, or realtor influencer, there all making videos where they mimic the same viral trends.

    With actors, whether they’re good or bad, they’re at least creating work that’s a bit distinct in whatever genre they perform in.

    If you’re an Olympian, I think you have a naturally marketable skill that you can show off in videos that is distinct from a doctor influencer dancing to the Escobar song. Someone like Aniston or even Gwyneth also produces content that is distinct . But the influencers who follow every single trend are kind of strange to watch, even if they are putting in a lot of work.

  6. Earl says:

    Influencers, like it or not, are here to stay. They’re the new “reality” stars. The best ones do exactly what Downey is talking about: bringing something to the table because they have built something, performed something or done something that isn’t just self-aggrandisement. Ilona Maher is an Olympian who has performed on a television competition and her platform grew not only because she was charming and beautiful and knew how to light herself and hold her camera but because she let the audience see behind the curtain. She makes it look easy because she does it well. However, too many influencers try to spin silk out of air and fall short. They are performative and boring and they vastly outnumber the good ones.

  7. The Marchioness of Blorf says:

    My problem is mostly with these influencers that sling health and wellness products that can be harmful to people. Others make it hard for viewers to discern what’s paid content by either putting their # ad thing in 2 pt white text or don’t disclose at all. I am well aware I’m an Old but I got into Ilona Maher through her rugby playing and got into her socials after.

  8. Jamie42 says:

    I think he does get it. I started to watch “The Manosphere” on Netflix and had to turn it off. (A documentary on male influencers.) The men were vapid and boring but obviously believed that anything they said was fascinating and worth listening to–narcissism online, no matter how well produced.

  9. Thinking says:

    You’re essentially a marketer when you’re an influencer. That’s probably why conflating them with being a “star” is strange. Taylor Swift uses influencer techniques for her social media, but she essentially has a separate job from the marketing role she might perform on Instagram and her stardom arises from doing something outside just marketing

  10. Kathryn says:

    He’s right. For every interesting influencer out there, there are countless vapid ones shilling something

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