The King's Thai Cuisine had just opened for lunch when Josh Liljenquist approached the counter, stack of cash in hand.
"I have a question for you," he asked the woman working the register at the Fridley restaurant. "How many egg rolls could I get for $500?"
But the order wasn't for a party or eating challenge gimmick. Liljenquist explained it would go to "a lot of hungry people" experiencing homelessness.
This is what Liljenquist, 26, does most days: He visits a Twin Cities restaurant, orders hundreds of dollars' worth of food and then gives it away. It's all on camera, fodder for his TikTok channel's more than 5 million followers who help his videos routinely garner hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of views. But the account's success is raising questions about the line between the positive influence of broadcasting good deeds vs. the potential unintended harm of social media exploitation.
Liljenquist, of Chaska, and business partners Ronald Wright and Dan Dunareanu of Calgary, Alberta, call this their passion project: a philanthropic effort, they say, aimed at helping people in need and inspiring those who watch.
"We're calling it 'the Josh Lilj effect,'" Wright said, a reference to Liljenquist's social media handle. "People see the videos, and they want to support, and we typically show the business' name or shout them out, and then just let the magic happen."
This kind of content is effective in part because it taps into a softer side of humanity at a time when much media is negative, said Dana Klisanin, a psychologist with ReWilding Lab who has studied digital altruism.
"When people watch Josh, they're a part of vicarious living. They are seeing someone else do this, and it's sort of mirroring what they wish they could do, perhaps," she said. "And just to see somebody doing something good feels good."