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who is Charli D’Amelio ? TikTok’s biggest star

Charli D’Amelio : the first person to earn 100 million followers on TikTok and was the second-highest earning TikTok personality

Charli Grace D’Amelio

(/dəˈmiːlioʊ/ də-MEE-lee-oh; born May 1, 2004) is an American social media personality and dancer. She was born in Norwalk, Connecticut, and was a competitive dancer for over 10 years before starting her social media career.

She started actively posting content on the video-sharing app TikTok in late 2019, where she began posting dance videos to trending songs on the platform.

She quickly amassed a large following and subsequently became the most-followed creator on the app.

D’Amelio made her feature film debut with a voice role in the 2020 animated film StarDog and TurboCat, and will star in the Hulu docuseries The D’Amelio Show in 2021.

Her other endeavors include a book, a podcast, a nail polish collection, and a makeup line.

She is the first person to earn both 50 million and 100 million followers on TikTok and was the second-highest earning TikTok personality in 2019 according to Forbes.

Charli D’Amelio is often described as TikTok’s biggest star.

@charlidamelio

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100.7million followers
Charli d’amelio (@chrlidamelio) currently has 422.1K realtime followers and published 112 videos on TikTok which received a total of 6.2M likes. The 16-year-old now boasts 100.7million followers and 7.9billion likes.

Does TikTok pay Charli?

How much money does Charli D’Amelio make on TikTok?

According to Forbes, Charli is the second highest earning TikTok star, making $4million from 2019-2020.

Reports have suggested she can charge as much as $100,000 for one post on her page!


How much likes does Charli D’Amelio have on TikTok?

D’Amelio — who is from Norwalk, Conn. — joined TikTok in 2019 and has since earned a massive following on the app through her viral lip-sync and dance videos. Her videos have accumulated more than 7.9 billion likes combined.


What is Charli Damelios TikTok?

Charli D’Amelio’s fans may have found her secret TikTok account under the automated username @user4350486101671, which has no bio or profile picture. … The 16-year-old TikTok sensation is the most-followed creator on the platform, with over 113 million followers on her main account.


How many TikTok does Charli D’Amelio have?

121.6 million TikTok followers
1. Charli D’Amelio — 121.6 million TikTok


Is Charli D’Amelio rich?

Charli D’Amelio has a reported net worth of $8 million.

According to Celebrity Net Worth, Charli’s net worth is currently $8 million. The website hails her incredible rise to fame on TikTok: She started her channel in 2019, hit 100,000 followers later that year, and then hit 5 million followers a few months later.


Is Charli D’Amelio a celebrity?

At 16, D’Amelio has amassed millions of followers on TikTok and several high-profile beauty deals.

 

Who is Charlie damelio boyfriend?

Charli D’Amelio is the most followed TikTok star, and began dating Lil Huddy in January 2020. Following a brief breakup in April of that same year, the duo is back together and better than ever.

 

Who is Charli dating?

March 2020

As of right now, Charli and Chase seem to be happily dating.

 

How are Tiktokers paid?

To make money from TikTok, you need to gain popularity with a good engagement rate on your videos. … A TikToker with half a million followers with good engagement in the comments and likes can get paid around $450 a month.

The payment is based on sponsored ads calculated as per 1000 views on sponsored videos.

 

Charli D’Amelio And Family On The Reality Of Fast TikTok Fame

Dubbed “the first family of TikTok” as their collective social media profiles reach record-busting heights, the D ’Amelio clan has their feet somewhat surprisingly planted on the ground.

The enigmatic secret to their explosive success just might be what helps them survive the perils of sudden fame.

“I genuinely think I said that to my parents so I didn’t have to clean my room,” deadpans Charli D’Amelio when I ask about her oft-quoted theory that her TikToks perform best when her room is messy. This typical teen snapshot captures the very essence and “lightning in a bottle” appeal of the entire D’Amelio clan. They are so remarkably relatable.

At a mere 17 years old, Charli currently clocks in around 112.6 million followers on TikTok—making her the most followed content creator on the short-form video app worldwide. Her older sister, Dixie, has 50.9 million followers. Add in parents Heidi and Marc (and their family handle of @dameliofamilyofficial), and the family teeters somewhere around 200 million followers collectively.

To wrap your brain around those numbers, that means about two-thirds of America is following what a family from Norwalk, Conn., is doing.
Throughout my chats with the family, I am continually struck by just how normal they all seem. The D’Amelios are the next generation’s clap back to the overfiltered, Facetuned distortions and pressures of the Instagram age. The sisters’ free flow of finishing each other’s sentences comes with all the sarcasm and sweetness you’d expect of close siblings. “We’re just normal siblings who got into this position where people see our whole lives—and I feel like being able to show we do have a normal relationship no matter what is super important,” says Dixie.

Charli in particular comes across as beautifully unfiltered. She is spontaneous and authentic—which seems to be a big part of the appeal. “I think it’s the fact I don’t have to worry about being 100%. … Like my room doesn’t have to be perfectly clean every second of the day… because that’s not a normal teenager’s life,” she says. “That’s not how life is—and people understand that. So when they watch me, that’s not what they’re looking for. They’re not going to be like, ‘Hey, your room is really messy, you should figure that out.’ They’re going to be like, ‘Oh, that’s a cool new dance,’ or ‘I like what you did with your hair today,’ something like that.”

“I wasn’t sure if they were just trying to get out of cleaning their room,” says mom Heidi, laughing, “but fast-forward—it is a thing. And I love that. Especially during quarantine, everybody just got to be themselves. People everywhere around the world were going through the same thing and everybody just got to be,” she says. “I think that felt good for a lot of people to feel like nobody’s dressing up and getting glammed up for their day or the weekend. And everyone kind of got it.”

Heidi and Marc didn’t realize at first the impact the platform would have on their lives. “Even though [Charli] had a lot of followers, it was still just fun and kind of crazy that she was gaining so many followers so quickly… but it was still something fun that she was doing,” shares Heidi. “But, when people started reaching out a lot to book her for different jobs, I think that’s when we were like, OK, this is definitely turning into something.”
Their parenting pivot was to take a decidedly chill approach. “The girls have people coming at them from all different directions, and a lot is positive, but a lot is negative— so we try to keep the house a positive environment,” explains Marc. “So we still parent—but I do think we try to make sure that we’re not adding an extra layer of unneeded pressure on the kids. Not that we look the other way on things, but I like that, especially with what’s going on now. … Back in the day, I might’ve nagged about the rooms and things like that. I’m a little bit more lenient now.”

Despite being the youngest of the clan, Charli led the charge in understanding the appeal of TikTok. “For a very long time the people who were in the media were these unattainable people you could never live up to as just a normal person,” Charli says. “I feel like that’s what’s so awesome about TikTok—these normal people and these attainable spots… it’s like the people that everyone gets to see.” If you picture some team plotting Charli’s next viral post, you are dead wrong. “It’s honestly just whatever I feel like doing at that time,” she says, admitting there is no secret formula or magical cracking of an algorithm.

Dixie was slower to engage, but now is enjoying the exponential success like her sibling. “Doing anything as a teenager you were always worried about judgment, and I feel like I didn’t want Charli to be judged,” says Dixie of why she was at first not sure about her little sister publicly posting on the platform. “It’s kind of funny because of the position we are in now, but I was just worried about how she would take it—but she just didn’t care and kept doing what she loved and didn’t stop. I was a little skeptical at first, but it ended up being fun for all of us.” Now, Dixie clearly gets the appeal.

“People just love it because it’s so relatable and no one’s trying to be a model or anything—there is a space for everyone,” says Dixie. “There’s a space where people show art or talk about mental health or do music; there’s literally a group of people for everyone and everyone comes together.”

The success has been sweet, indeed, but were they prepared for all the hate? “Absolutely not,” says Charli. “There is no way to prepare yourself for how certain words that people say will affect you. You can obviously grow thicker skin—but at the end of the day, it hurts. There’s nothing you can really do about that besides just try to better yourself and be the most confident in yourself you can be. … But it breaks my heart that I don’t have an answer because I wish I knew how to make everyone feel better—but it’s just really not that easy.” The family has advocated against cyberbullying and often rallies in support of each other. “Every day is different for us because some days we can get a comment and just laugh it off—and other days it’s the same exact comment and it’s the worst thing in the world,” says Dixie.
“I always say the haters need more love than anyone,” Dixie adds. “They hate because they are probably sad or alone—and I honestly just feel for them. I just want everyone to be happy. I think those are the people you need to respect the most and just be like, ‘I’m sorry you’re going through this and I hope one day you can have full love in your heart and share that with other people.’ Obviously some days it’s upsetting, but I’m not going to go after someone in a vicious way if they’re going to go after me. I’d rather just have fun and joke around with someone even if they hate me.”

This summer, myriad projects range from a clothing collection from the girls called Social Tourist with Hollister, Dixie’s two new songs, podcasts from both the parents and the girls, and a new family docuseries with Hulu. As for Charli?

She mostly wants to focus on just being a teen. “Definitely,” she says when asked if she regrets how her success has made her grow up fast. “I think that’s just how it is when you’re thrown into this and everyone’s saying you have to be a role model, you have to be this person. You’re like, ‘Oh, well, I still kind of need one of those myself.’ I feel like when I am 20 years old maybe I will be a great role model, but right now I’m learning with everyone else.”
As to where the girls see themselves in 10 years? “Each day is like a lesson and we’re constantly learning and having these opportunities,” says Dixie. “We’re going to take what comes at us. Music is a thing that I’ve always loved but never thought would become a career. Now that I have this opportunity, I’m going to take it and run with it because I’m just very grateful.” But mostly, they see themselves together as a family and as sisters. “We’ve been there for each other before social media and we’re going to be there for each other aft er social media, and that’s all that matters,” says Charli. “We trust each other more than anyone else and we know exactly what the other is going through, which is super helpful,” says Dixie.

“I have no idea where I’d like to take what I’ve been given because if you had asked me two years ago, what I would have said would be extremely different—and I feel like that’s the beauty in the internet,” Charli says. “My entire life turned into something very different, so what I am doing in five years could be something completely different from what I’m doing right now. It may not even have to do with social media—but I think that’s the most exciting part.”

Charli D’Amelio is TikTok’s biggest star

She has no idea why ?

The young people of Ohio weren’t physically distancing, and Gov. Mike DeWine needed to do something.

“Young people think they’re pretty invincible. That just goes with the age,” DeWine said. They are “the hardest demographic to reach … You’ve got to have the right messenger.”

But who? The Republican governor is 73 years old. As the pandemic swept the country in late March, he needed Charli D’Amelio — even if he didn’t yet know who she was.

Charli is simultaneously a completely ordinary teenager and a complete anomaly. This spring, she had two events to celebrate. She turned 16 with a quarantine-style party where family and friends drove by her home in Norwalk, Conn. Oh, and she became the most popular creator on TikTok.

For her May 1 birthday, she created a short video of herself dancing to “Sixteen” by Ayesha Erotica while wearing a hoodie printed with the words “Charli’s 16 Squad.” The hoodie was only for her inner crew, but it looked like a piece of merchandise that her more than 58 million TikTok followers buy in droves.

Thanks to her online stardom, she’s danced onstage with Bebe Rexha at a Jonas Brothers concert, appeared on “The Tonight Show,” and will voice a character in the upcoming animated flick “StarDog and TurboCat.” Her family — which includes older sister and fellow TikTok influencer Dixie, stay-at-home mom Heidi, and father Marc, a clothing entrepreneur who came up short in two local political races — recently inked a production deal with Industrial Media to create a reality show. She’s finishing her sophomore year of high school while being attacked online by Perez Hilton.

She’s been on TikTok for a little more than a year.

The app where users create, view and share short-form videos has reportedly been downloaded more than 2 billion times. It’s one of the most popular social media platforms in the world, and Charli D’Amelio is its undisputed ruler.

As with most TikTok stars, Charli creates all kinds of videos, but dancing is her specialty. Goofy dances. Choreographed dances. Solo dances. Group dances. Trending dances. Original dances.

She mostly films them in ordinary spaces like her bedroom. Her dad makes sure she makes the bed first. This is in part why people like her videos so much: They feel like she’s a peer. And TikTok rewards authenticity above all.

For outsiders, her popularity might feel as elusive as TikTok’s appeal in general. For insiders, there’s no explanation necessary. It just makes sense. She’s Charli. Just say her first name and everyone knows who you’re talking about. Try to figure out exactly what sets her apart from the other teens dancing in their bedrooms on TikTok, and you won’t get too far.

Pose the question to Charli, and she’ll shrug and tell you she has no idea. Her TikTok bio reads, “don’t worry i don’t get the hype either.”

Ask any number of her friends, fans and collaborators, and they all tend to repeat the same things: She’s a genuinely real but genuinely talented 16-year-old girl just having fun online.

Ask fellow influencer Avani Gregg, and she’ll tell you it’s that Charli is “the most caring person,” and that when hackers took over Gregg’s TikTok and Twitter accounts earlier this year and posted graphic videos of people being executed, Charli was the first to call and check on her.

Or ask TikTok star Madi Monroe, who will tell you “literally everybody on the Internet sees Charli as just like a normal girl. They look at her, and they’re like ‘Oh, my gosh, I could do that, too.’”
Pop star Bebe Rexha will say she’s “ truly passionate” and that she and her sister Dixie are “loving, humble and very hard-working.”

Dixie, meanwhile, will say, “She’s very natural and happy and shows her personality, but also has a real talent for dance.”

And while that all might sound somewhat benign, it comes with real power. The best way to explain involves a Midwestern governor, a manufacturer of cleaning products and an unprecedented global pandemic.

DeWine teamed up with Cincinnati-based Procter & Gamble and the ad agency Grey Group to craft a campaign to reach Gen Z. And they called Charli. But she had a demand: The campaign must have a charitable component.

Once they agreed, she came up with the choreography — after finishing her math homework. The dance, which she posted on March 24, is at once simple and complicated. After some hip flares and hand motions, a full body roll mimics the instructive lyrics of “Big Up’s” by Jordyn & Nic Da Kid feat. Yung Nnelg.

Charli D’Amelio

reaching 100 million followers on TikTok is no small feat.

When I met Charli D’Amelio at Super Bowl LIV in 2020, I could see she had that spark you need as a performer or entertainer to draw an audience. She felt like a kindred spirit, maybe because I started out as a dancer too. When Charli dances, she connects. She’s the biggest new teenage star right now, and it’s not simply that she dances on TikTok. She’s the best at it. When she dances, people want to be like her. Her authenticity comes through the screen. There’s huge responsibility in such a high level of fame. With each new follower or video that brings in millions of views, Charli shows that the days of simply waiting to be discovered for your talents are gone. Put yourself out there on your own terms, and as Charli has proven with true authenticity, they will come.

100 Million TikTok Followers Can’t Be Wrong

How a 16-year-old from suburban Connecticut became the most famous teen in America

Charli D’Amelio was criticized by the ‘View’ host Sunny Hostin, who accused her of ‘stealing’ dances from Black creators

Sunny Hostin of “The View” said Charli D’Amelio “misappropriated” Black TikTokers’ dances.
Hostin criticized D’Amelio and Addison Rae for performing dances on “The Tonight Show.”
Black TikTokers recently went on “strike” to call out dance appropriation on the app.

The TikTok star Charli D’Amelio has been criticized by the “View” cohost Sunny Hostin, who called her a “prime example” of “misappropriating” dances created by Black TikTokers.

The episode, which aired Monday, featured a discussion about Courtney Love’s recent claims that Olivia Rodrigo plagiarized one of her band’s album covers. “I don’t think it should be considered ‘cute’ or ‘sweet’ to misappropriate other people’s creative content,” Hostin said. “We’re seeing it big-time on TikTok with Black creators.”

She said Black TikTokers “create these incredible dances that go viral like the Renegade dance and Savage and then you see white teenage women misappropriate that content and make millions of dollars off of it.”

She cited the 17-year-old D’Amelio, who is one of the biggest TikTok stars in the world, as a “prime example” of this. D’Amelio joined TikTok in late 2019, and her lip-syncing and dance videos exploded in popularity. She has over 180 million TikTok followers and has a Hulu docuseries with her family coming soon.

“She even appeared on Jimmy Fallon, doing all these dance moves and didn’t even give credit to the creators,” Hostin said. “I think that these creators need to stop stealing things from other people and making money off of it.”

A fellow panelist, Ana Navarro, agreed, saying: “You see some of the systemic racism that people don’t want to address: the way that the white folks are getting treated versus those who are actually doing the creation.”
The TV appearance Hostin is referring to occurred on “The Tonight Show” in March 2020. As part of an ongoing segment in which TikTok stars teach Fallon viral dances, D’Amelio demonstrated choreography from dances like “Say So” and “Hard Times.” While a YouTube clip of the segment credits the TikTok handles of the original dancers, there was no credit for the dancers on-screen.

This isn’t the first time D’Amelio has been accused of stealing dances from Black TikTokers. In February 2020, an article published by The New York Times reported that the Renegade TikTok dance that contributed to D’Amelio’s popularity wasn’t created by her but by an Atlanta teenager named Jalaiah Harmon. D’Amelio later credited Harmon as the creator of the dance during a collaboration at the NBA All-Star Game in 2020.

D’Amelio did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Shortly after D’Amelio’s guest segment on “The Tonight Show,” a fellow TikTok star, Addison Rae, also appeared on the show. Like D’Amelio, she demonstrated popular TikTok dances. Both Rae and Fallon faced social-media backlash for appearing not to credit the original creators of these dancers, most of whom were Black.

Fallon later addressed the controversy during an episode on April 6, when he interviewed the creators of some of these viral dances.

The issue surrounding Black TikTokers’ work being used without credit by white influencers has been highlighted recently by Black TikTokers who are refusing to make a dance to Megan Thee Stallion’s new song, “Thot S—,” in a “strike” intended to call out dance appropriation on the app.

Charli D’Amelio Fans Rush to Defend TikToker, 17, Over Twerking Video

TikTok star Charli D’Amelio

has been defended by legions of fans, after footage emerged of her twerking at a Fourth of July party on Sunday night.

In a video clip—shared by JT, of rap duo City Girls, on Instagram stories—the social media sensation, 17, was seen pulling out the risqué dance move as she partied with a group of pals at a star-studded bash.

Stabilizing herself against what appeared to be the edge of a stage, D’Amelio was cheered on by a small group as she got into the celebratory spirit.

 

Why Charli damelio leave TikTok?

TikTok’s biggest star Charli D’Amelio has said she’s grown tired of posting. She said she has “lost the passion” for TikTok because of the negativity.