Andrew Zimmern, the Minnesotan famous for eating giraffe beetles, sauteed bumblebees and other insects on TV, has been paid more than $57,000 to promote Minnesota as a tourism destination in the past year, according to a review of state records.
Zimmern's contract, which ends this month, required two posts per month to reach his more than 1 million Twitter and other social media followers, while also appearing at and promoting a State Fair cooking contest.
For his work as a social media "influencer," Zimmern is fetching nearly 30% more pay than Minnesota legislators, who earn $45,000.
The Zimmern promotion of Minnesota via the hashtag #onlyinMN is part of a broader effort by Explore Minnesota — the state's travel and tourism bureau — to use new and widely accepted marketing techniques to draw more visitors, boosting tourism revenue and state coffers, and even persuade newcomers to move here.
"It gives us an opportunity to reach an audience that we just can't reach on our own," said John Edman, director of Explore Minnesota. "The bottom line is to market today you have to be playing in this space."
The social media influencer campaign, totaling a little more than $90,000, is a small portion of the agency's $14 million budget, about three-fourths of which is spent on marketing.
By the standards of some other states, Minnesota's relationship with Zimmern is relatively small potatoes. Florida paid hip-hop star Pit Bull $1 million to promote the Sunshine State, though the arrangement became mildly scandalous — and classically Floridian — when he posted a video to promote the state that had sexual overtones.
In an e-mail, Zimmern said the relationship is just another way to show his love for Minnesota: