Charli D'Amelio becomes the first TikTok star to reach 100 million followers days after she hemorrhaged followers in video controversy
- The TikTok megastar Charli D'Amelio hit a milestone early Sunday, becoming the first creator on the video-based social-media platform to reach 100 million followers.
- D'Amelio, 16, known for dancing the renegade and for participating in other viral TikTok trends, shot to viral fame over the past year, becoming the most followed person on the app with lightning speed.
- Her star has expanded beyond TikTok to other social-media platforms, television commercials, a book deal, and a partnership with the coffee and doughnut chain Dunkin'.
- D'Amelio lost about a million followers last week following blowback for a video with her family and the beauty influencer James Charles, but the shelf life for the scandal on the internet is short, and users appear to have quickly forgiven the teen creator.
Charli D'Amelio, TikTok's biggest star, early Sunday became the first user on the platform to pass 100 million followers, cementing her status as TikTok's most followed creator less than two years after she started posting videos.
D'Amelio, 16, last week lost about a million followers following criticism over a YouTube video. She appears to have quickly rebounded, however, celebrating 99 million followers on Saturday and 100 million just a day later.
In the video, which featured her parents; her older sister, Dixie; and the beauty guru James Charles (who is no stranger to scandals of his own) sitting around a dinner table, D'Amelio lamented that she had not yet reached 100 million followers by the anniversary of her having reached 1 million.
"Ugh, I wish I had more time," she said. "Because imagine if I hit 100 mil' a year after I hit a mil'."
"Was the 95 not enough?" Charles retorted before D'Amelio clarified that she preferred "even numbers."
The internet's fury was exacerbated by the behavior of D'Amelio's sister, who acted disgusted by the food, specifically snails, prepared by the personal chef Aaron May.
As her 19-year-old sister gagged and left the table, the younger D'Amelio suggested that they be served "dino nuggets" instead, prompting criticism that the teens were entitled and lacked proper etiquette. The video even prompted a feud with Trisha Paytas, the 32-year-old YouTube star known for spawning controversies of her own.
In a video response to her follower loss, D'Amelio said both the video and the backlash were part of "one huge misunderstanding."
The D'Amelios have spent the past year dominating the quickly growing social-media platform, and their star power had extended beyond the platform that made them famous. In February, D'Amelio appeared in a Super Bowl commercial for Sabra, the popular hummus brand. In September, she launched a partnership with Dunkin' when the coffee and doughnut juggernaut began selling a cold-brew beverage bearing her name.
As The Verge noted, D'Amelio's ascent to 100 million users marks a major milestone for social-media stars at large, as it took 14 years for the first YouTube star to reach that following on the platform. On TikTok, it took her about a year and a half since she began posting to the platform in May 2019.
In addition to TikTok, D'Amelio and her family have dipped into other social media, like YouTube, Instagram, and Twitter on their quest to turn their massive social-media fame into profit. D'Amelio, who spent years as a competitive dancer before winning followers doing the renegade and other viral moves on TikTok, is set to release her first book, titled "Essentially Charli: The Ultimate Guide to Keeping It Real," in December.
The teen's status as the biggest TikTok star is likely to go unchecked in the near future, as only two other creators, Addison Rae and Zach King, have passed 50 million followers, according to data from Social Tracker.