Eating radio, an online buzzword, is the most popular in China, Japanese and Korean. Internet celebrities, who eat and broadcast, have become the focus of fans' attention, and their popularity is also related to the audience's boredom and lack of goodwill.
Eating Broadcasting is a kind of "food reality show" program that rose on the Korean network from the end of 20 14 to the beginning of 20 15. Specifically, it is to sit in front of the webcam at home, broadcast the process of eating live to netizens, and rely on the popularity of "eating" to get a reward.
There are three main reasons for the popularity of eating and broadcasting: "high face value", "big appetite", "not getting fat" and "making money every day" are far from as good as they look. It requires not only hard training the day after tomorrow, but also talent.
I'm afraid most people can't do it no matter how hard they try. The "audience" who watch amateur meals are all patients who are suspected of "lack of intimacy".
Full-time "foodies" eat for two or three hours in front of the camera every day, and this kind of performance also requires skills: Take Li Changxun, a young Korean.
In front of the webcam, Li Changxun exaggerates, slurps when eating, and sometimes lures the audience with food in front of the webcam. Li Changxun also invested in a high-quality microphone in order to capture the squeaky sound when eating.
Li Changxun said that thousands of netizens come to watch his "performance" every day. During this period, netizens will interact with him through the message window. If the netizen likes his performance that day, send him a "star balloon".
Netizens need to pay for star balloons, that is, each star balloon is the actual income of Li Changxun and his network TV channel. When the broadcasters convert the balloons they get into cash, they can easily earn salaries.