A couple of nights each week, after her corporate 9-to-5 day ends, Tassie Yang does something very few Minnesotans do: She records herself consuming large amounts of food.
With a chatty, casual, girl-next-door appeal, she talks to the camera about the meal she's prepared or purchased, then slurps and smacks her way through, say, 20 oversized oysters (which she prepared in two styles) or 3 pounds of seafood (King crab legs and tiger shrimp). She then posts the videos on her YouTube channel, Tassie Eats.
It's just one of one of hundreds of channels on YouTube dedicated to mukbang.
A mash-up of two Korean words that roughly translate to "live eating," mukbang started about 10 years ago in South Korea. As odd as it sounds, it's found a following not only across the United States, but here in Minnesota.
Some fans say they find the videos entertaining, while others maintain that they help curb cravings. And there's a contingent that plays the videos while they are eating or finds the sounds of others eating to be soothing.
"I used to think it was so ridiculous," said Yang, who lives in Minneapolis. "Who would watch someone else eat?"
Yang started watching mukbang videos after her personal trainer suggested she try a no-carbohydrate diet.
"Just seeing them eat fatty foods that I couldn't eat, it made me feel better," she said.