Kamala Harris courts influencers at DNC

By Andrea Chang, Los Angeles Times

Malynda Hale angled her iPhone toward her face and filmed a quick selfie video as she headed over to the first day of the Democratic National Convention.

“I’m already annoyed and it’s not even 8:30. Nobody knows anything and this is very confusing,” the 38-year-old influencer says in the clip, which she immediately uploaded to her 53,000 Instagram followers. “I’m gonna give you the real, unfiltered version of what it’s like to be at the DNC.”

Hale, a singer and actress from Northridge, is one of more than 200 social media influencers who received credentials — a first for the DNC — to attend the four-day convention. In granting digital content creators access to delegates, studio space and events, Kamala Harris’ campaign hopes they will use their vast online followings to promote the party’s message and galvanize young voters, who showed deep apathy about President Joe Biden’s bid for reelection.

Malynda Hale in 2019. Hale grew her social media following during the pandemic when she began speaking about social justice issues. Her trip to the DNC was sponsored by Stand Up America, which paid for flights for her family and an Airbnb in Chicago. (Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Rooftop Cinema Club/TNS)
Malynda Hale in 2019. Hale grew her social media following during the pandemic when she began speaking about social justice issues. Her trip to the DNC was sponsored by Stand Up America, which paid for flights for her family and an Airbnb in Chicago. (Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Rooftop Cinema Club/TNS) 

“They obviously view us as a direct line to this demographic, because a lot of them are bypassing traditional media to see what the influencers and the public figures and creators that they follow are saying about political events,” Hale said in an interview with The Times. “It’s a great idea to kind of use us as, like, a democratic liaison to certain generations.”

Since arriving in Chicago over the weekend, Hale has been unleashing a quick-fire barrage of Instagram stories, reels, grid photos and TikTok videos, capturing the glam and grind of being a chosen influencer.

In more than 50 posts uploaded to her social channels on Monday alone, she chronicled her difficulties picking up her badge, the scene at the creator lounge at the United Center and her view from the arena floor before the evening’s speakers took the stage (“Our actual seats are in the nosebleeds,” she says into the camera).

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