This paper introduces the concept of the âRage Influencerâ to explain how charismatic
high-performing actors spread anger, intimidation, public reprimands, and dominant
emotional expressions through workplace communication as seemingly effective and
imitable models of success. Existing research has examined related figures and
behaviors, including toxic workers, brilliant jerks, abusive supervisors, petty tyrants,
workplace bullying, and toxic leadership. However, these concepts primarily explain
harmful behavior, lack of cooperativeness, hostile supervision, or negative effects on
subordinates. They do not sufficiently explain why anger sometimes becomes attractive,
imitated, and reproduced as organizational culture through everyday communicative
practices.
This paper conceptualizes anger not merely as a failure of emotion regulation, but as an
emotional and communicative resource that may be exchanged for influence, legitimacy,
control, and voice within specific workplace environments. When anger is expressed by
actors who possess charisma, high performance, symbolic status, or organizational
authority, it may be misrecognized as seriousness, responsibility, decisiveness, or strong
leadership. In such cases, anger is not only disliked; it is also learned and imitated
through speech, silence, public correction, labeling, written messages, and everyday
interaction.
Drawing on theories of charismatic authority, social learning, prestige bias, emotional
contagion, psychological safety, organizational silence, and memetic reproduction, this
paper theorizes how anger becomes culturally transmitted within workplaces. It
distinguishes between broad and narrow meanings of the Rage Influencer. In the broad
sense, the concept may include political agitators, religious leaders, war mobilizers, or
social media figures who spread anger, hostility, resentment, or victimhood into
collective action. In the narrow sense, which is the focus of this paper, the Rage
Influencer refers to a workplace actor who uses performance, authority, charisma, and
symbolic legitimacy to make anger appear effective, legitimate, and imitable.
The paper argues that the danger of the Rage Influencer lies not simply in anger itself,
but in the transformation of anger into a charismatic success style. Anger becomes
harmful when it is made attractive by charisma, justified by performance, protected by
symbolic status, and reproduced through imitation. Therefore, organizational
intervention should not focus only on individual anger management. It must redesign
the emotional selection environment in which anger is rewarded, silence is mistaken for
stability, and dominant emotional communication is misrecognized as competence.