Everywhere you look online, from gaming and fashion to music, travel and culture, you’ll find social media influencers. |
These social media influencers do what they’re famous for: influencing and creating trends. |
Do you follow any social media influencers, Beth? |
Erm… I don’t follow any specifically, I would say, but I do see influencers on Facebook and Instagram -- things like that. |
Well, the most successful influencers have millions of followers |
and, not surprisingly, this has caught the attention of another group of people trying to get their message out to the public: politicians. |
Politicians using the media to win elections is nothing new |
but, in this episode, we’ll be finding out what happens when social media influencers become politicians themselves. |
As usual, we’ll be learning some useful new words and phrases. |
But first, I have a question for you, Beth. |
The most followed Instagram account of 2025 belongs to footballer Cristiano Ronaldo, but how many followers does he have? |
a) 6.7 million, b) 67 million, or c) 667 million? |
Ooh… I’m going to go down the middle: 67 million. |
Well, we’ll find out the answer later in the programme. |
Around the world, politicians are realising that they can reach a lot of people through social media influencers. |
There have even been allegations of politicians paying for the support of influencers in places like Colombia, Argentina and Indonesia. |
And one place where politics has become a big topic on social media is Nigeria. |
Nigeria is a country with a huge, young population. |
There are around 200 million people in total and 70% of them are under 30. |
Many of these young voters are turned off, meaning not interested, in traditional media, but they do follow social media influencers. |
Adline Okere is BBC Igbo news editor in Lagos, Nigeria. |
She spoke with BBC World Service programme The Fifth Floor about the situation there: |
Influencers are super important to shaping the narrative of these young people. |
Some of them started in, you know, activism. |
Some of them started out with lifestyle and then branched into politics. |
Adline thinks influencers are super important in Nigerian politics. |
She uses super to mean very, extremely, or more than usual. |
For example, if you say you’re super happy about something, you mean you’re very happy about it. |
In Nigeria, influencers are shaping the narrative of elections. |
If someone shapes a narrative, they have a strong influence over how something is presented or understood. |
Influencing things, of course, is exactly what influencers do, but now, more and more social media personalities are branching out into politics. |
When you branch out, you start doing something different from what you usually do, such as a new activity or job. |
So, what happens when influencers become politicians themselves? |
Here, Adline Okere explains more to Faranak Amidi, presenter of BBC World Service’s The Fifth Floor: |
What about in Nigeria? |
Is there a pushback against these influencers who got involved in promoting political parties? |
Absolutely -- a huge pushback! |
They will also go back and dig up information about these people from their personal lives and then publish them on social media. |
In Nigeria, there was a pushback against social media influencers turned politicians. |
A pushback is a negative reaction or rejection of something that has happened. |
In fact, the public reaction was so bad, people started to dig up information about influencers who promote politicians. |
If you dig up information about someone, you try to find details about them. |
We have a similar phrase -- dig up dirt on someone, which means trying to find information about someone which could damage their reputation. |
So, social media can be a powerful tool for politicians but getting involved in politics doesn’t always go well for social media influencers. |
OK. Pippa, isn’t it time you revealed the answer to your question? |
Yes, I asked, "How many followers does Cristiano Ronaldo, the footballer, have?" |
And the answer was c) 667 million, at the time of recording. |
That’s a lot more than I have, Beth. |
And me... |
wow! |
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with the phrasal verb turned off, meaning uninterested. |
When super is placed before an adjective, it means very or more than usual. |
Social media influencers who shape the narrative have a strong influence over how something is presented or understood. |
If you branch out into something new, you start doing an activity or job that is different from what you usually do. |
A pushback is a negative reaction to something new that has happened. |
And finally, the phrasal verb dig up means to try and find information. |
This is often about a person and their private life in order to try and damage their reputation. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
Bye! |

BBC六分钟英语
BBC六分钟英语


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