Robert Downey Jr. Slams Influencers as "Stars of the Future" in Fiery Rant

Robert Downey Jr. has criticized the notion that social media influencers will become the "stars of the future," calling it "absolute horseshit." Speaking on a podcast, the actor urged young people to pursue meaningful paths like building, creating, and educating. He acknowledged that his own 14-year-old son was briefly drawn into influencer culture, comparing some influencers to "Evangelical hucksters." Despite his massive online following, Downey said he avoids over-engaging with social media because he doesn't "wish to be consumed."

Key Points: Robert Downey Jr. Slams Influencer "Stars" Claim

  • Downey calls influencer-as-future-star idea "absolute horseshit"
  • He urges youth to build, create, and educate instead of self-aggrandizing
  • His 14-year-old son briefly got caught up in influencer culture
  • He acknowledges some influencers are grounded and accomplished
3 min read

Robert Downey Jr slams claim that social media influencers are "stars of the future"

Robert Downey Jr. calls the idea that social media influencers are the "stars of the future" absolute horseshit, urging youth to pursue meaningful paths.

Robert Downey Jr slams claim that social media influencers are "stars of the future"
"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 horseshit.' - Robert Downey Jr."

Washington DC, May 7

Actor Robert Downey Jr. has criticised the growing perception that social media influencers will become the "stars of the future," calling the idea "absolute horseshit," according to Variety.

Speaking on the "Conversations for our Daughters" podcast, the 'Iron Man' star said modern digital platforms have made it easier to achieve celebrity status without traditional creative work.

"Nowadays people can create celebrity without ever doing much besides rolling a phone on themselves," he said, 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," according to Variety.

He further said he hopes young people will choose more meaningful paths in life.

"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,'" he said.

Downey, who has a massive social media following of over 58 million on Instagram, acknowledged that influencers themselves are part of a changing media landscape.

"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 horseshit,'" he said, as per the outlet.

The actor also reflected on his own experience with social media culture, including how his 14-year-old son was briefly drawn into influencer-style content creation.

"[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," he said.

Downey added that influencers can resemble "Evangelical hucksters of the information age," though he also acknowledged the evolving nature of digital platforms.

"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," he said.

He further noted that while promoting films, he has met several influencers whom he found "grounded, accomplished, cool people," according to Variety.

Despite his huge online presence, Downey said he avoids over-engaging with social media.

"I don't wish to be consumed," he said.

Reflecting on early digital engagement in Hollywood promotions, he recalled the launch of Iron Man at Comic-Con.

"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," he said, according to Variety.

Downey is set to return to the Marvel universe in Avengers: Doomsday, scheduled for release on December 18.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
I partly agree with RDJ, but let's be fair - influencers do create engagement and community. In India, we see folks like Bhuvan Bam or prajakta koli building real careers from digital content. The problem is when people confuse *fame* with *respect* or *skill*. There's space for both traditional actors and digital creators.
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Vikram M
This is classic old guard vs new media debate! Who cares if they're "stars" or not? The real issue is the quality of content and values being promoted. Many Indian influencers are actually teaching skills - cooking, fitness, finance - and adding real value. Let's not gatekeep creativity. But yes, the "easy fame" culture is worrying for kids.
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James A
As someone working in digital marketing in Bangalore, I see both sides. Influencers have democratized fame - you don't need Bollywood or Hollywood connections anymore. But the "huckster" comparison is spot on. So many of these folks push pyramid schemes, fake products, and unrealistic lifestyles. RDJ's point about meaningful paths is crucial for Gen Z.
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Priya S
Respectfully disagree with Uncle Robert here! 🙈 In India especially, influencers are bridging gaps - teaching regional languages, explaining government schemes, sharing mental health resources. Yes there's junk content too, but the *potential* is real. Times change. My grandmother's "stars" were radio announcers, now everyone's on YouTube!
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Michael C
Love how RDJ balances criticism with self-awareness - he acknowledges good

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