SICLLGAug 22, 2025

Anti-establishment sentiment on TikTok: Implications for understanding influence(rs) and expertise on social media

arXiv:2508.16453v1h-index: 1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

It addresses the problem of understanding how social media contributes to distrust of institutions, particularly for researchers and policymakers, but is incremental as it applies existing methods to a new platform.

This study analyzed the prevalence of anti-establishment sentiment (AES) on TikTok across finance, wellness, and conspiracy theory topics, finding AES most common in conspiracy content and rare in the others, with varying engagement patterns and platform incentives for such posts.

Distrust of public serving institutions and anti-establishment views are on the rise (especially in the U.S.). As people turn to social media for information, it is imperative to understand whether and how social media environments may be contributing to distrust of institutions. In social media, content creators, influencers, and other opinion leaders often position themselves as having expertise and authority on a range of topics from health to politics, and in many cases devalue and dismiss institutional expertise to build a following and increase their own visibility. However, the extent to which this content appears and whether such content increases engagement is unclear. This study analyzes the prevalence of anti-establishment sentiment (AES) on the social media platform TikTok. Despite its popularity as a source of information, TikTok remains relatively understudied and may provide important insights into how people form attitudes towards institutions. We employ a computational approach to label TikTok posts as containing AES or not across topical domains where content creators tend to frame themselves as experts: finance and wellness. As a comparison, we also consider the topic of conspiracy theories, where AES is expected to be common. We find that AES is most prevalent in conspiracy theory content, and relatively rare in content related to the other two topics. However, we find that engagement patterns with such content varies by area, and that there may be platform incentives for users to post content that expresses anti-establishment sentiment.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes