‘Kindness’ influencers on TikTok give money to strangers. Why is that
controversial?
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[October 19, 2024]
By KAITLYN HUAMANI
Every Christmas growing up in Minnesota, Jimmy Darts’ parents gave him
$200 in cash: $100 for himself and $100 for a stranger. Now, with over
12 million followers on TikTok and several million more on other
platforms, philanthropy is his full-time job.
Darts, whose real surname is Kellogg, is one of the biggest creators of
“kindness content,” a subset of social media videos devoted to helping
strangers in need, often with cash amassed through GoFundMe and other
crowdfunding methods. A growing number of creators like Kellogg give
away thousands of dollars – sometimes even more – on camera as they also
encourage their large followings to donate.
“The internet is a pretty crazy, pretty nasty place, but there’s still
good things happening on there,” Kellogg told The Associated Press.
Not everyone likes these videos, though, with some viewers deeming them,
at their best, performative, and at their worst, exploitative.
Critics argue that recording a stranger, often unknowingly, and sharing
a video of them online to gain social media clout is problematic. Beyond
clout, content creators can make money off the views they get on
individual videos. When views reach the millions, as they often do for
Kellogg and his peers, they make enough to work full-time as content
creators.
Comedian Brad Podray, a content creator formerly known online as
“Scumbag Dad,” creates parodies designed to highlight the faults he
finds with this content — and its proponents — as one of the most vocal
critics of “kindness content.”
“A lot of young people have a very utilitarian mindset. They think of
things only in measurable value: ‘It doesn’t matter what he did, he
helped a million people'," Podray said.
Recording practices prompt questions of ethics
From the recording devices and methods down to the selection of
subjects, “kindness content” — like everything on social media — exists
on a spectrum.
Some creators approach strangers and ask them for advice or for a favor,
and if they bite, they receive a prize. Others choose to reward
strangers they see doing a good deed. Kellogg performs a “kindness
challenge,” asking a stranger for something and returning it in kind.
Many of these strangers are unaware they’re being filmed. Some creators
employ hidden cameras and aim to record subjects in a discreet manner.
Kellogg said he wants to be as “secret about it as possible,” but asks
for consent to share the video after the interaction. Kellogg said most
agree because they look "like a superhero” after his challenge.
Another charitable content creator, Josh Liljenquist, said he uses a
GoPro camera and tries to make recording “extremely noticeable," adding,
“Consent’s the biggest thing."
Regardless of the recording method, some see the process as predatory.
“These guys always find someone with cancer or always find someone who
can’t pay their bills because they’re stalking through underserved and
poor areas and they’re just sort of waiting," Podray said. “Looking
through the parking lot like, ‘He looks pathetic enough'.”
Karen Hoekstra, the marketing and communications manager for the Johnson
Center for Philanthropy, studies TikTok-based influencer philanthropy
and says the videos, at times, take advantage of their subjects.
“The model of the man on the street walking up and approaching a
stranger and handing them money is — we’ve all heard this phrase,
terrible as it is — it just strikes me as poverty porn,” Hoekstra said.
“It’s exploitation.”
Calls of exploitation often come when creators feature the same people
across multiple videos, especially when they appear to be homeless or
have a drug addiction. Liljenquist features some people frequently and
maintains that his recurring subjects are like his “best friends."
One user commented on an Oct. 5 video that recent content feels like
Liljenquist is “playing case worker for views,” as he posted several
videos of a woman who followers suspect is struggling with a drug
addiction. He records himself bringing her food, giving her a ride in
his Tesla, and asking her questions that often get one-word responses.
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Influencer Jimmy Darts poses for a portrait, Monday, Oct. 14, 2024,
in Southern California. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
Liljenquist said criticism doesn’t
bother him because he knows his intentions are good.
“I love these people," he said. “They love me.”
Lack of checks and balances
Some criticize the showmanship of “kindness content,” but visibility
is crucial to the model that relies heavily on crowdfunding. Kellogg
is known to start GoFundMe fundraisers on behalf of his video
subjects, usually bringing in tens of thousands of dollars in viewer
donations.
Kellogg, Liljenquist and scores of other creators also use their
personal accounts on payment apps like Venmo, CashApp or PayPal to
accept donations.
Tory Martin, also of the Johnson Center as its director of
communications and strategic partnerships, said transparency about
donations is “not an option if it’s just going to an individual.”
Although these creators aren’t held to standards and regulations
like nonprofits, Liljenquist said he feels donor dollars go much
further in his hands than in the hands of traditional organizations,
which he said are “designed for failure.”
“Nonprofits — not all of them, there are some good ones — but I
would just suggest you do your homework on the nonprofits that you
are giving money to because there’s a good amount of them who take
advantage of the system,” he said.
Some creators have set up nonprofit organizations or foundations to
support their work, but that is not a widespread practice.
Podray said he is “100% sure” some creators “take a rake or that
there’s some sort of nonsense going on.” He also maintains that
select creators hand out fake money to cash in on the trend.
Kellogg said seeing fraudulent or exploitative videos is tough for
him, worrying, “My gosh, every Facebook mom just fell for this and
thinks it’s real.”
New wave of philanthropy
While controversy swirls around these videos in some online circles,
they are part of a hugely popular social media trend with millions
of supporters and thousands who are compelled to donate after
watching.
Although Hoekstra has concerns about some creators’ methods, she
said the introduction to charitable giving these videos make for
young people is valuable.
“Anything that can present philanthropy to them in a new way and
make it accessible and make it exciting I think is a good thing,"
she said. “Obviously, there’s going to be a learning curve, but I
think it’s really exciting to see philanthropy be so accessible and
understandable and embraced in these new spaces and in new ways.”
Some skeptics have become supporters. Kyle Benavidez said he used to
see “kindness content” on social media and think it was fake. But
after his mother was featured in one of Kellogg's recent videos and
a GoFundMe Kellogg created for her raised over $95,000 to support
their family while her husband is in the hospital with cancer, he
said Kellogg’s online persona is true to his real-life character.
“There’s a chapel in the hospital and I always go there every
morning just to pray. ‘Hopefully something happens.’ And then Jimmy
came to our lives,” Benavidez, 20, said. “It's like God sent him.”
Kellogg shows no signs of slowing down his philanthropic work any
time soon and rolls out videos across his social platforms almost
every day. Still, he says doing good deeds on camera only matters if
he and his peers keep it up when the cameras aren’t rolling.
“You can fool people all day and you can make money and do this and
that, but God sees your heart,” he said.
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