I never got Lindsey, don't know enough about her, but I my first impression was that she isn't as adept at the presentation/ smoke and mirrors end of things as some other influencers? Probably from a less well off background? Not that that matters to me. I do think I remember that she was a physiotherapist? Which that's no small feat. It's not a glamorous job and quite demanding of one's energy but it is, at least, a bankable skill and something she could return to if need be as a middle aged adult (rapidly approaching).
Many influencer wannabes who are not wealthy don't have many in demand, reasonably compensated and satisfying skills. Instead they are working retail/cafe/odd gig jobs that will be much harder to endure going back to when the bottom falls out. Pay is abysmal and prejudice towards older, less hip folks, abounds. These people I worry about. I do think influencing is short lived for most. People like Lizzy won't have a problem as long as they invest wisely, but people that don't have a safety net, it will likely tough road.
Meowmeowbeans when I lived in SF ages ago (for 8 years) the neighborhoods I lived in chronologically were: Marina (right on the "triangle" between Marina and Pac Heights next to the Balboa Cafe), Nob Hill, The Haight, Tenderloin. LOL. Talk about the wrong direction. Each apartment sketchier then the previous. It was the beginning of the tech boom.
Not the way I had planned, a life trajectory ruined by those charlatans (jk)
That said, living in the Tenderloin I would sit in my car with a friend and have a Rue Paul drag race type show every weekend in my very own nabe. The most colorful characters would hang at the corner shop and there was a drag theater (theatre) near by. Way more exciting than the yuppies in the Marina or the hippies in the Haight. When I lived in the Haight, there was always some sort of present for me on my porch (a sock, a bra, a bong, a human named Sapphire who needed to use my loo). That too, while unsettling, infinitely more interesting.