Australia
Domestic Australian news brands (ABC, 7, and 9 News) are widely accessed in social media networks with more than twice as many mentions overall when compared with individual creators or journalists. Australian creators are also in short supply with foreign personalities (mostly US and UK) making up 87% of the top 15 most mentioned names and 72% of the names in the top 100. Many of those foreign creators, commentators, and politicians are associated with the political right (Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Ben Shapiro, Joe Rogan) helping to spread a range of libertarian and anti-immigration views to some sections of Australian society. Jordan Shanks and Michael West are the most prominent home-grown independent creators to make the top list, along with right-leaning TV anchor Andrew Bolt (Sky Australia) and the global affairs editor for the public broadcaster (ABC) Laura Tingle.
Michael West is an Australian investigative journalist and founder of Michael West Media, an independent news website specialising in investigative journalism. A former columnist for major Australian papers (Fairfax), he is known for reporting on corporate tax avoidance and government accountability. His work is supported largely by donations.
Jordan Shanks-Markova, known online as Friendly Jordies, is an Australian YouTuber and political satirist. He often interviews politicians and uses comedy to engage younger audiences. Shanks’ videos have led to high-profile legal disputes, most notably a defamation lawsuit by former New South Wales Deputy Premier John Barilaro, whom Shanks accused of corruption and portrayed satirically. The case was settled when Shanks apologised and agreed to edit two videos to remove content that Barilaro claimed were ‘offensive’.18 Shanks combines his YouTube channel with live comedy shows and is popular with many younger Australians.
Punters Politics, hosted by former teacher Konrad Benjamin, is another initiative looking to make the news more accessible to ‘everyday Australians’. Satirical content posted to YouTube and short-form video platforms aims to explain complex political topics, such as corporate tax loopholes and lobbying laws.
Despite the relatively low impact overall for Australian-born news influencers, leading politicians have been attempting to court popular news-adjacent and lifestyle podcasters during recent elections – in shades of Donald Trump’s playbook.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, for example, spent time with online personalities such as Ozzy Man Reviews, a comedian with 6.1m YouTube followers, reality TV star Abbie Chatfield, and The Grade Cricketer, the persona of two super-fans who have a popular podcast offering a comedic take on cricket culture in Australia. The Grade Cricketer reaches nearly 1m followers across X, YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok and its creators also make money from live shows.
Proportion that regularly pay attention to creators/influencers in social and video networks
23%
(14/24)
Proportion that regularly pay attention to news brands/journalists in social and video networks
29%
(10/24)
Gender balance
13
of the top 15 individuals are men
These lists represent the individuals most mentioned by respondents to our 2025 and 2024 Digital News Report surveys in the context of news and social media and video networks. Respondents who used Facebook, YouTube, X, Instagram, Snapchat or TikTok for news were asked where they paid most attention – including options for traditional news media/journalists, digital-first news outlets not associated with traditional media, creators/personalities who mostly focus on the news, creators/personalities who occasionally focus on the news. For each type, we asked respondents to name up to three examples of who they paid attention to. We then counted the individuals mostly using a tool called OpenRefine to help us use a semi-automated approach to clean the data (e.g. resolve misspellings or alternative names, remove duplicates etc.). In parallel, we also used ChatGPT5 to process and recode the original data, and to identify the most mentioned individuals to give us a way of comparing results. Further details on the tools we used and on small differences in methodology between 2024 and 2025 are provided in our methodology section (link).
Why did you use open fields rather than closed lists to collect the data?
We used open text response boxes, first, because in many countries the most popular news creators and influencers have not yet been identified by previous research. Second, because it would likely not be possible to fully capture the broad and fragmented nature of this ecosystem using a fixed listed of response options. And third, because we wanted to adopt an audience-centric approach whereby respondents could enter names that they considered news sources to them, even if they did not meet accepted standards or definitions within academia or the journalistic profession. This means that many of the names we list here would perhaps have been excluded under a more top-down approach.
How definitive is the order of the named individuals in each country?
In some cases, especially near the bottom the list, differences in the number of mentions for individuals are very small. Given our survey methodology, and the associated margin of error, the precise rank order should be read as indicative rather than definitive. Many other individuals were mentioned by respondents in the context of news, even if they do not make the top 15 using our approach. The lists should therefore be seen as indicative of some of the top news individuals in each country.
Why are some popular individuals with high follower counts lower down the list than individuals with high follower counts?
There are a number of possible reasons for this. First, some popular creators such as musicians and comedians are known more for entertainment than for news and their follower counts are often higher as a result. This means that even if they do occasionally talk about news related issues, not all of their followers will be aware of it. Second, some individuals working for traditional media may have relatively low personal followings but are widely distributed via social accounts of news brands. Third, there is a margin of error in surveys such as this (see previous answer) that needs to be borne in mind.
Did you exclude any individuals or other entries as part of the process?
Our lists are inclusive in terms of being faithful to the individual names mentioned by respondents. We removed just a handful of actors, sports stars, and celebrities if we were sure they did not post on any news-related issues. In most cases this did not affect the top 15 names that are published in this report for each country.
Many creators operate as part of collectives or use pseudonyms. How did you deal with these categorisation issues?
In terms of creator collectives or social-first brands, such as the Daily Wire (US) or TLDR News (UK) we followed the lead of our respondents. Where audiences have identified them as individuals, we have tended to categorise these as creators rather than news brands, but where they have mentioned a brand, we included them in our list of news brands. Where it was clear, however, that the brand is the work of one individual (e.g. Es.decirdiario/Sheila Hernández in Spain) we categorised them as an individual and made the connection clear in the description. Many creators use pseudonyms and, in these cases, we combined mentions of these with the real names. Again, we tried to make the connection clear in the description.
How did you deal with politicians and the overlap between politicians and political commentary?
Politicians and businesspeople are also frequently mentioned by survey respondents in the context of news sources on social media, and often have significant followings (e.g. on X, Donald Trump has 109m, Narendra Modi 109m, and Elon Musk 225m). Many politicians are also content creators and commentators who shape public debates. Some content creators have become politicians, and vice versa. We chose to include politicians if they were named by respondents in the context of news, but we have also shaded serving (or recently serving) politicians in grey to make clear the different relationship they often have with news consumers.