Scale & Platform: Difference between revisions
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When you watch a Mukbang video you see a person unpacking and eating the food. This can take for hours sometimes. Meanwhile the person explains what she is eating and how she likes it. At the sometime the person is in contact with an audience. Through a lifestream the audience can ask questions and talk to the person who is eating. | When you watch a Mukbang video you see a person (mostly little Korean girls) unpacking and eating the food. This can take for hours sometimes. Meanwhile the person explains what she is eating and how she likes it. At the sometime the person is in contact with an audience. Through a lifestream the audience can ask questions and talk to the person who is eating. | ||
Examples: | |||
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C8cqwyEKASE Vdeo1] | |||
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GSJjTsw2kd8 Video2] | |||
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlQbePzb0Pg Video3] |
Revision as of 23:32, 20 April 2015
Mukbang
Muk-bang or mukbang (Korean: 먹방, lit. "eating broadcast") is a type of performance in which someone eats large quantities of food, while interacting with their audience, for apparent entertainment value. Usually done through a webcast, muk-bang became popular in South Korea in the late 2000s. - according to Wikipedia.
When you watch a Mukbang video you see a person (mostly little Korean girls) unpacking and eating the food. This can take for hours sometimes. Meanwhile the person explains what she is eating and how she likes it. At the sometime the person is in contact with an audience. Through a lifestream the audience can ask questions and talk to the person who is eating.