After gobbling down 1.5kg of pig trotters in one sitting and more than 3.5kg of prawns in another visit, a mukbang livestreamer in China has been banned from a buffet restaurant for — you guessed it — ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. For years, people have been heading to YouTube to spend upwards of 60 minutes at a time to watch strangers consume 4,000 or more ...
You might have come across #EatWithMe videos on TikTok, which typically feature young women eating food while encouraging viewers to eat along with them. Many such content creators say they aim to ...
A Chinese 'mukbang' influencer revealed a video of raiding a seafood buffet in Japan while saying, "I will teach a lesson to the Japanese." However, oddly enough, the restaurant in question was owned ...
Join me as I explore delicious food in a mukbang challenge at a buffet restaurant during lunch.
If you go on TikTok and search out 'mukbang', you'll see that the hashtag has had more than 116 billion views. And on YouTube, the food eating videos are still getting millions of plays as people sit ...
Mukbang is a global social media trend that originated in South Korea in the early 2010s. Mukbang involves videos of people who eat very large amounts of (often calorie-rich) food in a single sitting.