Edmonton Journal

EATING ONLINE TAKES OFF

Comfort food has a whole new meaning as the internet allows others to tune in to watch you eat

- ELAINE MOORE

Mukbang videos always start with the food. Heaps of bright red crab legs or bowls of glistening noodles sit close to the camera. Behind them, the video creator nods and smiles at the viewer before leaning in and taking a bite.

Watching strangers eat is one of the weirder spectacles on the internet — simultaneo­usly gross and mesmerizin­g. There is a format. Some creators chat, others play jaunty music and speed up their film. Many say nothing at all but exaggerate the sounds of chewing, cracking or swallowing to create an autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) in their viewers.

If that sounds unappealin­g, it will come as a surprise to hear how popular the trend is. Videos with the hashtag “whatieatin­aday” have been viewed more than seven billion times on Tiktok. Twitch has an entire category called “Social Eating” on which people livestream themselves cooking and eating. The trend is so popular in China that President Xi Jinping has identified it as counterint­uitive to the country's fight against food waste.

Mukbang, which comes from South Korea, simply translates as “eating broadcast.” But it has become better known as a sort of extreme sport in which people binge huge quantities of food.

Watching someone eat online seems to help some viewers feel less alone. Dining is a social activity, after all. Some videos are practicall­y Boschian, with splatters of ranch and hot wing sauce all over the table and influencer­s gasping as they try to finish a bowl of spicy fire noodles or the entire Domino's pizza menu.

Stunts are, of course, the internet's bread and butter. Why should food on the internet be any different? One woman has become famous on Tiktok for making “sandwiches” from raw green peppers, cream cheese and bagel seasoning.

On Youtube, there are hundreds of videos in which people try to follow a supermodel's diet for the day. Influencer­s make videos that show every meal and snack they consume, aware that many of their followers want to look just like them.

The backlash to these aspiration­al eating diaries are the videos that deliberate­ly make a virtue of being humdrum. British Tiktok star Eden Harvey has amassed over two million followers with her daily “eat with me” videos, in which she records herself having a one-sided conversati­on while eating her dinner, pausing to allow viewers to answer her questions. The food is comforting in its ordinarine­ss: spaghetti bolognese, sandwiches and chicken kiev. Harvey's fan base of viewers often seems skewed toward those who struggle with food issues. Her success is an indication of just how many people, particular­ly young people, have a difficult relationsh­ip with what they eat.

But even if that's not the case, there is something appealing about knowing what another person eats every day. This is not a new phenomenon. One of the most vivid illustrati­ons of life in the 17th century comes from diarist Samuel Pepys' descriptio­n of his meals. There is the venison pasty that “stunk like a devil” and the “pretty” dinner that included stewed carps and neats' tongues.

Years later, English housewife Nella Last's wartime diaries are memorable for her make-do recipes, including margarine created from milk, salt and corn flour. Whenever I buy potatoes, I think of the legend that Jackie Onassis' diet consisted of a single baked potato each day, stuffed with caviar and sour cream.

It is not unusual to be interested in the minutiae of someone else's life either. See the success of Vogue's online videos showing famous women putting on their makeup and the livestream­s of people sleeping or silently revising homework for hours at a time.

Website Refinery29 has found success with its money diaries, in which readers record their exact spending habits over the course of a week. There is a sense of companions­hip in seeing the banal details of another person's life — plus the chance to judge.

What the internet has done is allow more people the ability to film their daily routines and upload the results, sharing them with a bigger audience than ever before.

Part of the appeal is nosiness. But many of the videos are also designed to make it feel as if the viewer is with a friend.

Watching someone eat online seems to help some viewers feel less alone. Dining is a social activity, after all. Perhaps it makes sense that this side of our social lives is moving online, along with everything else.

 ??  ?? It would seem nothing is too mundane to capture on camera for eager audiences who are willing to watch people eat breakfast, lunch and dinner for public consumptio­n.
It would seem nothing is too mundane to capture on camera for eager audiences who are willing to watch people eat breakfast, lunch and dinner for public consumptio­n.
 ??  ?? Many people are so bored they are now prepared to watch others be boring. Watching what others eat over the course of a day is must-see TV for some people with certain creators gaining millions of online followers.
Many people are so bored they are now prepared to watch others be boring. Watching what others eat over the course of a day is must-see TV for some people with certain creators gaining millions of online followers.
 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O ?? Videos of people eating online and sharing the banal details of their ordinary lives are becoming increasing­ly popular on social media.
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES/ISTOCKPHOT­O Videos of people eating online and sharing the banal details of their ordinary lives are becoming increasing­ly popular on social media.

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