A TikTok rival promised millions to Black creators. Now some are deep in debt.

Triller made its name recruiting talent with lavish perks. Now, dozens of influencers are struggling to get paid. ‘We were made to look like fools,’ one creator said.

August 3, 2022 at 12:01 p.m. EDT
David Warren, 22, in North Hollywood, Calif., on July 21. (Tavon Taylor for The Washington Post)
18 min

Last fall, David Warren seemed to be on the verge of a breakthrough.

With more than half a million followers on TikTok, Warren, 22, had left Hot Springs, Ark., for a one-bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, near a dance studio, where he could attend classes five days a week.

Warren had the promise of stability in the form of a lucrative, year-long deal with Triller, a short-form video app that looks and functions similarly to TikTok. He was part of a group of what Triller touted as 300 Black content creators offered contracts totaling $14 million — “the largest ever one-time commitment of capital to Black creators,” the company bragged in a November news release.