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Originally from Korea, mukbangs are now a popular kind of internet video on places like TikTok and YouTube. At the beginning of the trend, hosts live-streamed themselves eating large quantities of ...
Our obsession with watching people eat giant meals on camera has now spilled over into other parts of everyday life.
Mukbang influencers are allowed to post videos of them cooking and eating seafood alive because of a loophole in Facebook and YouTube's policies that animal rights groups want closed.
Mukbang translates to “eating broadcast” in Korean. Learn why people in Korea and the U.S. are watching strangers eat large quantities of food on YouTube.
Mukbang: Watch what they eat! In the hallowed hall of food fads, what in the world could be weirder than mukbang? A Korean word, loosely translated it means something like eat-casting.
China has made the decision to outlaw overt gluttony, which also targets Chinese mukbangers who gorge on camera to the enjoyment of millions of culinary kink fans.
Move over, cooking shows. In Korea, the big food fad is eating shows, or mukbang. Korean viewers are so glued to watching strangers binge eating that the live-streamers consuming calories in front ...
Meanwhile, mukbang star Mini has fronted a promotional video on the state-run Guangming Daily, calling on people not to waste food.