How Influencers Are Secretly Paid for Social Media Posts: Clipping Sites Explained
The Jimmy Dore ShowDecember 31, 202511 min226,223 views
31 connections·40 entities in this video→The "Clipping Site" Payment Model
- 💡 Influencers are being paid through "clipping sites" for specific social media posts, a method used by political action committees (PACs) to fund campaigns without direct reporting.
- 💰 These sites act as middlemen, allowing PACs to pay influencers for content that aligns with certain narratives or keywords, making the messaging appear organic.
How the Bounty System Works
- 🎯 A bounty is set for a specific task, such as attacking a public figure like Candace Owens, with a payout based on views (e.g., $10 per 100,000 views).
- 📈 Influencers submit links to their posts, and their earnings are tracked via a scrolling percentage counter, with payments capped once the total bounty is distributed.
- ⚠️ Requirements for posts can include specific keywords, video length, and even the use of particular photos or videos, ensuring message consistency.
Platforms and Incentives
- 📱 Influencers can post on multiple platforms like X, Instagram, and TikTok, earning separate payouts for each platform if the content meets the bounty's criteria.
- 💸 The incentive is to create content that aligns with bounties, as it offers a direct financial reward beyond organic engagement.
Identifying Coordinated Campaigns
- 🔍 The coordinated nature of these campaigns is evident when numerous influencers simultaneously post similar content with identical talking points and keywords.
- 🤖 The use of bot farms and VPNs can amplify content and create the illusion of widespread organic support or backlash.
Political and Financial Connections
- 🌍 The discussion links these paid campaigns to political interests, suggesting that entities like PACs and potentially foreign governments use these methods to influence public discourse.
- 🗣️ The video highlights how this system is used to target specific individuals and push particular narratives, as seen in the alleged campaign against Candace Owens.
Knowledge graph40 entities · 31 connections
How they connect
An interactive map of every person, idea, and reference from this conversation. Hover to trace connections, click to explore.
Hover · drag to explore
40 entities
Chapters8 moments
Key Moments
Transcript43 segments
Full Transcript
Topics13 themes
What’s Discussed
Clipping SitesInfluencer MarketingPolitical Action Committees (PACs)Social Media ManipulationAstroturfingBounty SystemsContent CreatorsPaid CampaignsBot FarmsNarrative ControlCandace OwensDigital AgePolitical Influence
Smart Objects40 · 31 links
People· 7
Concepts· 11
Products· 8
Companies· 10
Media· 1
Location· 1
Events· 2