Unfinished journey (148)
(The one hundred
and forty-eight, Depok, West Java, Indonesia, 18 October 2014,05.29 GMT)
Time magazine list
of the 25 most influential teens in the world in his recent
Editions.
The 25 Most Influential Teens of 2014
TIME Staff Oct.
13, 2014
Teens today might have a mixed reputation, but there’s no
denying their influence. They command millions of fans on Twitter and Vine,
start companies with funds they raised on Kickstarter, steal scenes on TV’s
most popular shows, lead protests with global ramifications, and even—as of
Friday—win Nobel Peace Prizes. But which ones rise above the rest? We analyzed
social-media followings, cultural accolades, business acumen and more to
determine this year’s list (ordered from youngest to oldest).
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Mo’ne Davis, 13
Mo'ne Davis #3 of Pennsylvania waits to pitch to a Nevada
batter during the United States division game at the Little League World Series
tournament at Lamade Stadium on August 20, 2014 in South Williamsport,
Pennsylvania. (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images) *** Local Caption *** Mo'ne
Davis
Rob Carr—Getty Images
It’s not every day that a black female athlete appears on
the cover of Sports Illustrated—let alone one who’s 13. So Mo’ne Davis made
quite a splash in August when she landed that spot (cover line: “Remember Her
Name”) after pitching a shutout game in the Little League World Series. Her
team, Philadelphia’s Taney Dragons, was eventually knocked out of the
tournament, but not before Davis got accolades from Michelle Obama, Kevin
Durant and Ellen DeGeneres, among others. Many hope she will be a role model
for girls in sports, especially those that are typically male-dominated. —Sarah
Begley
Sasha Obama, 13, and Malia Obama, 16 |
Sasha Obama, 13, and Malia Obama, 16
Sasha and Malia Obama arrive at the ceremonial
swearing-in of their father President Barack Obama at the U.S. Capitol during
the 57th Presidential Inauguration in Washington, Monday, Jan. 21, 2013. (AP
Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)
Pablo Martinez Monsivais—AP
A lot of dads get squeamish about their daughter’s first
prom, but only Malia Obama’s date status could be called “classified
information,” as the President joked on Live! with Kelly and Michael last
spring. Nonetheless, she has emerged as a figure of national interest: her
appearance at Chicago’s Lollapalooza Music Festival caused almost as much of a
stir as the musicians themselves, and her name has spiked in popularity after
her father’s election. (It’s predicted to peak again in 2018.) Sasha,
meanwhile, has become an icon in her own right: after being photographed in a
unicorn sweatshirt, the style sold out at ASOS in a matter of days. —S.B.
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Kiernan Shipka, 14
Actress Kiernan Shipka attends the Elle's Women in
Television event in Los Angeles January 22, 2014. REUTERS/Phil McCarten (UNITED
STATES - Tags: ENTERTAINMENT) - RTX17QSW
Phil McCarten—Reuters
Mad Men fans first met Sally Draper, eldest daughter of
Don and Betty Draper, when she was just five years old. Since then, she’s
transformed into a central, scene-stealing character that may well launch
Shipka into superstardom. As Mad Men‘s final season looms, the actress has
broadened her resume—landing a starring role in the Lifetime movie Flowers in
the Attic—and consistently wowed on red carpets and magazine covers. —Samantha
Grossman
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Jazz Jennings, 14
Jazz Jennings arrives at the 24th Annual GLAAD Media
Awards at JW Marriott Los Angeles at L.A. LIVE on April 20, 2013 in Los
Angeles, California. (Photo by Gregg DeGuire/WireImage)
Gregg DeGuire—WireImage
In a landmark year for transgender visibility in the
media, Jennings stands out for how much she’s already accomplished. She’s been
interviewed by Barbara Walters, met Bill Clinton and become the youngest person
ever featured on the Out 100 and The Advocate‘s 40 Under 40 lists. She even
co-wrote a children’s book, I Am Jazz, loosely based on her life (she started
living as a girl at age 5), that aims to help other kids understand what
transgender means. “I have a girl brain but a boy body,” Jazz says in the book.
“This is called transgender. I was born this way!” —Nolan Feeney
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Flynn McGarry, 15
Jason Schwartzman and host Jimmy Fallon freeze Halloween
treats with Chef Flynn McGarry on Thursday, October 31, 2013 -- (Photo by:
Lloyd Bishop/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank)..
NBC
At an age when many of his peers are still picking around
the green stuff on their plates, McGarry has emerged as a chef du jour in the
culinary industry. After helping to build a high-tech kitchen in his bedroom
(modeled on Grant Achatz’s three-Michelin-starred restaurant Alinea), he
started his own supper club, Eureka. It serves tasting menus—at $160 per
person—at his mother’s home in Studio City, Calif. Since then, he has appeared
on the cover of the New York Times Magazine, cooked on the Today show, and
apprenticed at 11 Madison Park. His ultimate goal? To have, as he puts it, “the
best restaurant in the world.” —S.B.
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Erik Finman, 15
Courtesy of Erik Finman
The rural Idaho native is the founder of Botangle.com,
which offers tutoring over video chat services for teens who, like him, wanted
more than the limited education opportunities within physical reach. To fund
the site, Finman two years ago invested a $1,000 gift in Bitcoin, then an
unlikely digital currency; soon it spiked in value, and he had $100,000. It’s
no wonder, then, that Finman says he struck a deal with his parents: if he
makes $1 million before he turns 18, he won’t have to attend college. —Jack
Linshi
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Nash Grier, 16
Vine star Nash Grier attends the 2014 Billboard Music
Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on May 18, 2014 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
(Photo by David Livingston/Getty Images)
David Livingston—Getty Images
The self-described “King of Vine”—the social media
platform that loops 6-second videos—has more than 9.6 million followers and
over 1.1 billion loops of his comedic videos, more than any other user. His
meteoric rise to fame hasn’t been without scandal: Grier was slammed for using
a homophobic slur on one of his since-deleted Vines. But he’s nonetheless
parlayed his massive audience into endorsement deals, netting thousands to plug
products such as Aquafina FlavorSplash. —J.L.
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Rico Rodriguez, 16
Actor Rico Rodriguez arrives to the 71st Annual Golden
Globe Awards held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on January 12, 2014 -- (Photo by
Trae Patton/NBC/NBC via Getty Images)
Trae Patton/NBC/Getty Images
As scene-stealing Manny on ABC’s smash-hit Modern Family,
Rodriguez isn’t just one of the most visible child actors on TV (the show’s
sixth season premiere averaged more than 11 million viewers)—he’s also one of
the richest. According to reports, he’ll earn a whopping $115,000 per episode
if the show continues through season eight. —S.G.
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Ciara Judge, 16, Émer Hickey, 17, and Sophie Healy-Thow,
17
Emer Hickey, Sophie Healy-Thow and Ciara Judge from
Kinsale Community School in Co Cork as they are named the BT Young Scientists
of the Year at the RDS, Dublin. Picture date: Friday January 11, 2013.
Niall Carson—AP
The trio from County Cork, Ireland took home the grand
prize at the Google Science Fair after wowing the judges with their discovery:
Diazotroph, a bacteria that sucks nitrogen from the atmosphere into soil,
speeding up the germination of cereal crops like barley and oats and—more
importantly—increasing their yield. This advance could play a crucial role in
solving the global food crisis, and Judge, Hickey and Healy-Thow are already
planning to commercialize it. —S.B.
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Shawn Mendes, 16
Canadian music artist Shawn Mendes poses for a portrait,
on Wed., July 8, 2014 in New York. (Photo by Drew Gurian/Invision/AP)
Drew Gurian—Invision/AP
After amassing millions of Vine followers by performing
six-second micro-covers of hit songs, Mendes caught the attention of Island
Records and scored a record deal. His first single, “Life of the Party,” was an
instant smash, making Mendes the youngest-ever artist to debuted in the top 25
on the Billboard Hot 100. And the follow-up EP, titled—what else?—The Shawn
Mendes EP, reached the No. 1 spot on iTunes earlier this year, a mere 37
minutes after its midnight release. —N.F.
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Jaden Smith, 16
Actor Jaden Smith arrives at the Teen Vogue Young
Hollywood issue party on Friday, Sept. 27, 2013 in Los Angeles. (Photo by Dan
Steinberg/Invision/AP)
Dan Steinberg—Invision/AP
Smith rose to fame as the son of Will Smith, occasionally
popping up in movies. But his real legacy may well be his Twitter musings,
which are equal parts absurdist (“Anything You See In Any Magazine Ever Is
Fake.”) and insightful (“Once You Witness A Cycle Enough Times You Step Out Of
It.”), earning him more than 5 million followers and labels like, “Confucius
for the Internet age.” One of Smith’s recent posts sums him up pretty well:
“Hate Me Love Me Doesn’t Matter I’m Still Occupying Time Inside Of Your
Psyche.” —S.G.
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Becky G, 17
Singer Becky G attends the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards at
The Forum on August 24, 2014 in Inglewood, California. (Photo by Christopher
Polk/Getty Images for MTV)
Christopher Polk—Getty Images
Mega-producer Dr. Luke (who’s worked with Britney Spears,
Kesha and Katy Perry) signed Becky G to his label in 2011 after watching her
YouTube covers. The investment paid off: Rebecca Marie Gomez, who began
performing at age 9 to help out her cash-strapped parents, saw her irresistible
ode to young love, “Shower,” chart in more than a dozen countries and become a
top 20 hit in the U.S. this summer. When she’s not writing her own music, she
represents Covergirl as one of its youngest-ever Latina spokeswomen and helps
craft tunes for other pop acts, like Cher Lloyd and fellow teen Cody Simpson.
It’s fitting that one of her first music videos was a Jennifer Lopez cover
(retitled “Becky From the Block“); she’s well-positioned to follow in her
footsteps. —N.F.
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Salma Kakar, 17
Kakar is the lead rider on the co-ed Afghan National
Cycling Team, which has drawn global praise for promoting female empowerment in
a country where it has been rare to see women driving, let alone competing in a
sport. Her dream is to wave the flag of Afghanistan at the Olympics one day,
and to show the world how far Afghan women have come. —J.L.
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Lorde, 17
Singer Lorde poses backstage during The 24th Annual KROQ
Almost Acoustic Christmas at The Shrine Auditorium on December 8, 2013 in Los
Angeles, California. (Photo by Gabriel Olsen/Getty Images for Radio.com)
Gabriel Olsen—Getty Images
The New Zealander, born Ella Yelich-O’Connor, started
2014 off strong by nabbing two Grammy Awards for her inescapable smash-hit
“Royals.” Since then, the singer-songwriter has become a force in music and pop
culture: her debut album, Pure Heroine, went platinum; she won an MTV Video
Music Award; and she signed on to curate the Hunger Games: Mockingjay — Part 1
soundtrack, out Nov. 21. She has also established herself as a role model who
promotes healthy body image. In March, she shared two photos of herself, one
Photoshopped and one unedited, to remind her more than 1.3 million Twitter
followers (at the time) that “flaws are ok.” —S.G.
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Lydia Ko, 17
Lydia Ko of New Zealand plays a shot on the 8th hole
during the first round of the CME Group Titleholders at Tiburon Golf Club on
November 21, 2013 in Naples, Florida.
Sam Greenwood—Getty Images
After going pro last year, Ko now ranks third among women
golfers worldwide, sparking interest in the sport “not just in her native South
Korea and adopted homeland of New Zealand but also among juniors across the
globe,” as golf legend Annika Sorenstam wrote in this year’s Time 100. Thanks
to her many tournament wins and endorsement deal with Callaway, she’s also the
youngest millionaire in LGPA history. “That’s big money,” she said in April.
“But when I’m out there I’m thinking about making birdies and hitting good
shots and making putts rather than, ‘OK, this putt is going to give me an extra
thousand.'” —S.G.
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Chloë Grace Moretz, 17
Actress ChloÎ Grace Moretz attends the 2014 Young
Hollywood Awards brought to you by Samsung Galaxy at The Wiltern on July 27,
2014 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ari Perilstein/Getty Images for
Variety)
Ari Perilstein—Getty Images
The Atlanta native has already built an impressive resume
with roles in films like (500) Days of Summer, Kick-Ass, Hugo and Carrie, and
this year was no exception. She was the lead in this summer’s If I Stay, based
on the best-selling novel of the same name, which netted $47.6 million at the
box office (despite a considerably low budget) and also starred opposite Denzel
Washington in hit thriller The Equalizer. Next up: roles in Dark Places, the
film adaptation of Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn’s gripping crime novel, and
the sci-fi thriller The Fifth Wave. —S.G.
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Kylie Jenner, 17, and Kendall Jenner, 18
Reality stars Kendall and Kylie Jenner share hot spring
trends for teens on "Good Morning America," 2/8/13, airing on the ABC
Television Network. (Photo by Donna Svennevik/Disney-ABC via Getty Images)KYLIE
JENNER, KENDALL JENNER
Donna Svennevik—ABC/Getty Images
Together, the Keeping Up With the Kardashians co-stars
hosted red-carpet events, released clothing and nail polish lines and even
published a dystopian young-adult novel this past summer (though yes, they had
some help). But they’ve had solo success too—Kendall with modeling (she’s
walked the runway for designers like Marc Jacobs) and Kylie with
pseudo-entrepreneurship (she’s launching a line of hair extensions and hopes to
get into acting). Next up: a multimillion-dollar mobile game? —N.F.
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Malala Yousafzai, 17
Pakistinian teenager and education activist Malala
Yousafzai is interviewed on GOOD MORNING AMERICA, airing MONDAY, AUG. 18
(7:00-9:00am, ET) on the ABC Television Network. (Photo by Ida Mae Astute/ABC
via Getty Images) MALALA YOUSAFZAI
Ida Mae Astute—ABC/Getty Images
Two years and one day after Taliban gunmen shot her in
the head while she was riding to school, the Pakistani youth activist became
the youngest-ever recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize. The accolade caps an
impressive—albeit early—career for Yousafzai, who has used her organization,
the Malala Fund, as a platform to promote girls’ education, help Syrian refugee
children and demand the return of the Nigerian girls kidnapped by Boko Haram,
among other things. In April, she received an honorary doctorate in civil law
from the University of King’s College in Canada. “Malala is a testament that
women everywhere will not be intimidated into silence,” Gabrielle Giffords
wrote of Yousafzai in this year’s Time 100. “We will speak, no matter how hard
it is to do so.” —S.G.
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Rachel Fox, 18
Teen Vogue's 10th Anniversary Annual Young Hollywood
Party - Arrivals
Jason Merritt—Getty Images
Known to Desperate Housewives fans as Kayla Scavo, the
teen actress somehow found enough time between TV and movie shoots to train
herself in the art of day trading: she says her investments earn her a 64
percent annual return. Now she’s trying to pay it forward. In addition to
running the blog Fox on Stocks, which offers financial literacy tips for teens,
Fox has created the MyGenLoves index, which tracks 20 companies that are
currently hot in the youth market (such as Chipotle and Urban Outfitters).
—S.B.
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Bethany Mota, 18
Internet personality Bethany Mota attends Blake Michael's
18th Birthday at Riviera 31 on August 9, 2014 in Beverly Hills, California.
(Photo by Imeh Akpanudosen/Getty Images)
Imeh Akpanudosen—Getty Images
The fashion and beauty blogger has spent five years
building her YouTube channel, Macbarbie07, into a bona-fide business—with 7.4
million subscribers, 565 million-plus views, and between $500,000 and $750,000
in annual ad revenue. Now she’s expanding her brand. This year, Mota appeared
on Project Runway as a guest judge and Dancing with the Stars as a celebrity
competitor, all while overseeing the clothing line she launched with
Aéropostale. She also released her first single, “Need You Right Now.” —S.G.
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Joshua Wong, 18
Joshua Wong, leader of the student pro-democracy group
scholarism addresses demonstrators after the press conference of Hong Kong
Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying in Hong Kong on October 2, 2014. Hong Kong's
embattled leader rejected protesters' calls for him to resign, but in a
significant concession agreed to talks with a students group involved in mass
pro-democracy demonstrations that have paralysed parts of the city.AFP PHOTO /
Philippe Lopez (Photo credit should read PHILIPPE LOPEZ/AFP/Getty Images)
Philippe Lopez—AFP/Getty Images
Wong, who recently covered Time‘s international edition,
has become the face of the Hong Kong protests, a civil disobedience movement
demanding that China stages unfettered elections for Hong Kong’s top political
position. To some, he’s a symbol of hope—a youth rallying his peers to fight
for a cause they believe in. In mainland China, however, many argue Wong is an
extremist and an emblem against China’s storied national order. —J.L.
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Austin Mahone, 18
singer Austin Mahone poses for a portrait in Los Angeles.
His EP "The Secret" released on May 23, 2014. (Photo by Matt
Sayles/Invision/AP
Matt Sayles—Invision/AP
Mahone’s social media following is modest compared to
that of Justin Bieber—the pop star to whom he’s most often compared—but it’s
still powerful: Mahone’s 7 million Twitter followers helped him became the
first artist to hit No. 1 on Billboard‘s new Trending 140, a live-updated chart
that tracks what songs have people buzzing online. It helps, of course, that he’s
got a pretty sizable resume: in addition to touring with Taylor Swift and
signing with Chase Records/Cash Money, Mahone released his first U.S. EP, The
Secret, in May; it debuted at No. 5 on the Billboard 200. —N.F.
Correction appended: Oct. 14, 2014, 5:18 p.m. E.T. An
earlier version of this article misstated Mahone’s record label.
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Tavi Gevinson, 18
Actress Tavi Gevinson of 'Enough Said' poses at the Guess
Portrait Studio during 2013 Toronto International Film Festival on September 7,
2013 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Larry Busacca/Getty Images)
Larry Busacca—Getty Images
Gevinson may bristle at being called the “voice of a
generation,” but the label does fit: Rookie, her online magazine for teenage
girls, gets roughly 3.5 million hits a month—thanks in part to her mix of
personal essays (see: her poignant editor’s letter about graduating high school
and mourning “forever”) and insightful pop culture coverage (see: her chat
about feminism with Lorde, the Seth Rogan contribution to Rookie‘s “Ask a Grown
Man” video advice column). Next up: the recent high school grad, currently
starring in the Broadway play This Is Our Youth, plans to head to college after
a gap year. —N.F.
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Megan Grassell, 19
Megan Grassell
Courtesy of Megan Grassell
After taking her 13-year-old sister shopping for bras,
Grassell was perturbed by how sexualized most of the available choices were for
young girls; everything seemed to have padding and underwires. So she started
her own company, Yellowberry, to offer an alternative: comfortable, colorful
training bras with names like Junebug and Sugar Cookie. She initially raised
$42,000 through Kickstarter—well above the $25,000 goal she set for herself—and
now runs a full-fledged online retailer. —S.B.
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Troye Sivan, 19
Actor Troye Sivan attends the 4th Annual Streamy Awards
presented by Coca-Cola on September 7, 2014 in Beverly Hills, California.
(Photo by Kevin Winter/SAs 2014/Getty Images for DCP)
Kevin Winter—Getty Images
The South African-Australian may have initially broken
through as an actor—he snagged a role in 2009’s X-Men Origins: Wolverine after
a Hollywood producer found him on YouTube—but he’s found major success this
year as a musician. Thanks in large part to the support from his 2.8 million
YouTube subscribers, Sivan’s latest EP, TRXYE, which he recorded in secret,
topped iTunes sales charts in more than 50 countries following its August
release. —N.F. (Continoe)
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