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 of webcams are becoming minor celebrities in Korean culture.

Rachel Ahn, who goes by "Aebong-ee" on her broadcasts, is kind of a big deal in the mukbang world. In fact, when we went to meet her, she wore a mask for fear fans would recognize her on the street.

Every weeknight at 9 p.m., Ahn sits down with enough food to feed a family of six. The night we visit, it was spicy noodles, spicy shrimp, steamed dumplings, fried dumplings and another platter of even spicier noodles, called fire zha jiang myeon.

She carefully displays the platters so they all fit in the frame, turns up lights and her mic, and when she goes live, about 200 of her fans are already chatting in a box next to her video stream. As she begins tearing into the food, the number of simultaneous viewers swells above 1,000.

The demands on Ahn and other mukbang stars like her are high — she can't just eat, she must eat ferociously. As she devours noodles, loud slurping is a must. Audiences offer feedback on a live stream, asking how spicy the noodles are, suggesting she move dumplings closer to the camera or do a dance in excitement. The stream continues for three hours every night.

Korean mukbang star Aebong-ee demonstrates her eating prowess with some American classics, like crinkle cut fries and ice cream.

Aebong-ee YouTube

This fad hasn't just made Ahn a brand, it makes her a living.

"In the beginning I earned nearly nothing. It started out really slow, but now I'm earning more than my salary at my actual job," she says.

For eating lots, and eating loudly, the audience rewards mukbang jockeys with virtual balloons that can be converted into cash. On the night we visit, in the first half-hour of her three-hour webcast, Ahn collected the equivalent of $200.

She and other prolific Korean eaters now have fan clubs thanks to their copious consumption.

Ahn's fan club manager, Min Bo-ram, moderates the chat room during the nightly mukbangs, helping Ahn rise to the ranks of the 100 most popular hosts. She tells NPR she won't stop until "Aebong-ee" is ranked No. 1 among the estimated 3,000 mukbang broadcast jockeys in South Korea.

The tech company supporting this trend is AfreecaTV, which provides the platform these broadcasters use to stream their live eating, and the cash converter that gets them paid. Even the managers at AfreecaTV are surprised this particular trend took off.

At dinnertime hours, 45,000 Korean viewers watch mukbang at the same time, a threefold growth since this emerged in 2013. The top-ranked stars make as much as $10,000 a month, and that's not counting sponsorships from food and drink brands.

But what compels so many Koreans to tune in?

For Ahn, she explains that her mostly female fan base gets to eat vicariously through her.

"Viewers who watch my mukbang are on a diet," she says. "So you call this a sort of gratification through others."

AfreecaTV's digital media manager, Hahn Yeh Seul, suspects the growth of Koreans living alone gives mukbang a boost, since there's a sense of community in coming together at a dinner table, even if it's only virtually.

Kyung Kim, professor of East Asian studies at University of California, Irvine, suggests the audience hunger for mukbang is a yearning for something besides connection — it's a desire for something real.

"Eating is something one activity that is strongly identified as being natural, and spontaneous," Kim says. "You think about K-pop or K-drama [and] they're very artificial, they're all about makeup and plastic surgeries. And a lot of people find this — mukbang — to be the exact opposite of all the things right now Korean popular culture really stands for."

You could argue whether or not eating two extra-large pizzas in one sitting, or a punch bowl full of ramen, is really natural. But Korean viewers? They can't look away.

For behind-the-scenes with Aebong-ee, check out our new East Asia tumblr.

Hae Ryun Kang contributed to this story.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

DAVID GREENE, HOST:

You know, it's hard to turn on a TV in the United States without seeing people cooking. Well, in South Korea, the big food fad is watching strangers eating. Viewers are glued to live streams of other Koreans binge eating. It is such a craze that the people consuming the calories have become celebrities. NPR's Seoul correspondent Elise Hu reports.

ELISE HU, BYLINE: It's dinnertime in Seoul, and we're outside a subway stop waiting for Rachel Ahn, who goes by Aebong-ee. She's kind of a big deal in the world of mukbang, which translates to eating broadcasts. My interpreter spots her first.

UNIDENTIFIED INTERPRETER: I think that's her in the red, in the mask. (Speaking Korean).

RACHEL AHN: (Speaking Korean).

HU: You're a big star.

INTERPRETER: I think she understood.

HU: She wears a mask because fans in the neighborhood might spot her, and there's no time for that. With less than an hour to go before her nightly 9 p.m. broadcast, Aebong-ee must get inside and prepare.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN: (Speaking Korean).

AHN: (Speaking Korean).

MAN: (Speaking Korean).

AHN: (Speaking Korean).

HU: She orders enough takeout to feed a family of six. Tonight, it's spicy noodles, spicy shrimp, steamed dumplings, fried dumplings and another platter of even spicier noodles. By 9, the food's in place, the lights and microphone hot. About 200 of her fans are already chatting in a box next to her video stream. As she begins tearing into her food, the number of viewers swells above 1,000.

(SOUNDBITE OF SLURPING)

HU: That slurping is a specialty. Audiences like it when mukbang stars stuff their faces ferociously while responding to streams of live feedback. They'll watch and chat for hours. And this fad hasn't just made Aebong-ee a brand. It makes her a living.

AHN: (Through interpreter) In the beginning, I earned nearly nothing. And it started out really small. But now I'm earning more than my salary at my actual job.

HU: For eating lots and leading loudly, the the audience rewards mukbangers with virtual balloons that can be converted into cash. Tonight, in the first half hour of her three-hour netcast, Aebong-ee collects what's equal to 200 U.S. dollars. By midnight, she nearly completes all her food. Thanks to her copious consumption, she and other prolific Korean eaters now have fan clubs. No one's more surprised by this than the tech company supporting this trend, Afreeca TV. It provides the platform these mukbang stars use to stream and the cash converter that gets them paid.

HAHN YEH SEUL: (Speaking Korean).

HU: Afreeca TV's Hahn Yeh Seul says at dinnertime hours, 45,000 Korean viewers watch mukbang at the same time, a threefold growth since this emerged in 2013. The top-ranked stars make as much as 10,000 U.S. dollars a month. And that's not counting sponsorships from food and drink brands. But what's compelling so many Koreans to tune in?

SEUL: (Speaking Korean).

HU: Afreeca's Hahn suspects the growth of Koreans living alone gives mukbang a boost since there's a sense of community in coming together at a dinner table, even if it's only virtually.

AHN: (Speaking Korean).

HU: Aebong-ee, who boasts a majority of female fans, says it's about eating vicariously.

AHN: (Through interpreter) Viewers who watch my mukbang are on a diet. And you call this a sort of gratification through others.

KYUNG KIM: Eating is one activity that is strongly identified as natural and spontaneous.

HU: Kyung Kim is a professor of East Asian studies at the University of California, Irvine. He thinks the audience hunger for mukbang is a yearning for something besides connection. It's a desire for something real.

KIM: If you think about K-pop or K-drama - they're very artificial. They're all about makeup and plastic surgeries. And a lot of people find this - you know, mukbang - to be exactly opposite of all of the things right now Korean popular culture really stands for.

HU: You could argue whether eating two extra-large pizzas in one sitting or six platters of Chinese food is really natural. But Korean viewers? They can't look away. Elise Hu, NPR News, Seoul. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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