Forbes has released its sixth annual ‘30 Under 30‘ list honoring “young change-makers and innovators in the U.S.,” and, once again, the compilation of 600 honorees in 20 total industries is fully populated by digital creators.
A total of 10 digital stars made the cut this year — among them James Charles and Bethany Mota in the Art & Style category; AsapSCIENCE creators Gregory Brown and Mitchell Moffit in Education; Snapchat superstar Shonduras in Marketing & Advertising; Quinta Brunson, Cameron Dallas, Ryan Higa, Tyler Oakley, and Lele Pons in the Hollywood & Entertainment category; and Troye Sivan in Music.
Charles, a 17-year-old makeup artist and Instagram star, made history in October as the first-ever male CoverGirl spokesmodel, while Mota, a YouTube veteran, was honored for building upon her digital fame with a clothing collection for Aeropostale, a DIY school supplies line at Target, and her appearance on Dancing With The Stars. Sivan, the lone digitally-bred musician on the list, had a gold debut album in the U.S. with Blue Neighborhood.
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The fact that one-sixth of all of the ’30 Under 30′ recipients in the Hollywood & Entertainment category are digital stars seems telling of the direction in which the industry continues to evolve. Brunson, a development partner at BuzzFeed sold her Broke show to YouTube Red, while Dallas made a splash with the debut last week of his Netflix docuseries Chasing Cameron. Higa’s first book will hit shelves in 2017, according to Forbes, Oakley inked a production deal with Ellen DeGeneres, and Pons nabbed a Teen Choice Award for her work on Vine.
Past creators to be named to Forbes‘ ’30 Under 30’ list include Lilly Singh, Pentatonix, The Young Turks’ Ana Kasperian, Freddie Wong, Hannah Hart, Harley Morenstein, Smosh, Grace Helbig, and Todrick Hall.