erewhon hauls, ozempic, and chefluencers
Summary
TLDRThe video script by Mina Le explores the intersection of food, fashion, and culture, highlighting the rising trend of luxury food consumption among Gen Z and millennials. Mina discusses the economic 'lipstick effect,' where people indulge in small luxuries like food during economic downturns. She also touches on the historical context of food as a status symbol, referencing Louis XIV's extravagant banquets and the modern interpretation by fashion houses like Moschino. The script delves into the organic food industry's challenges, the influence of social media on food trends, and the emergence of 'chefluencers.' It also addresses the fashion industry's complex relationship with food and body image, and the potential impact of appetite-suppressing drugs like Ozempic on the food industry.
Takeaways
- đš The video discusses the intersection of fashion, food, wellness, and beauty, highlighting how these areas are interconnected and influence each other.
- đ Mina Le shares her personal experience with a high-production photoshoot where her nails were done by a professional manicurist, reflecting on the impact of such experiences on her content creation.
- đœïž The script touches on the cultural significance of food as a status symbol, especially among younger generations like Gen Z, and how luxury food purchases have risen post-pandemic.
- đ It mentions Erewhon, a high-end supermarket in LA, as an example of the luxury food trend and discusses the economic phenomenon known as the 'lipstick effect'.
- đ References to historical examples like Louis XIV and Marie Antoinette are used to draw parallels between past and present perceptions of luxury and extravagance in food and fashion.
- đ The script explores the role of fashion in power and status, citing Valerie Steele's insights on how Louis XIV used fashion and aesthetics to project a modern, powerful image.
- đ± Discussion on the rise of healthy eating trends and the associated costs, touching on the history of the organic movement and the current state of the 'big organic' industry.
- đ The influence of social media on cooking and food trends is examined, with the emergence of 'chefluencers' or cooking influencers, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- đ The script comments on the fashion industry's complex relationship with food, contrasting the promotion of thin body ideals with the use of food in advertising and editorials.
- đ There's a mention of the drug Ozempic and its potential impact on the food industry due to its appetite-suppressing effects, raising concerns about future food consumption trends.
- đ The video concludes with a critique of the fashion industry's past promotion of unhealthy dieting tips and a call for a shift towards healthier snacks, not just as a response to diet drugs but for public health.
Q & A
What is the main topic of discussion in the video?
-The main topic of discussion in the video is the trendification of food, its connection to wellness, fashion, and beauty, and the impact of these trends on society and the food industry.
Why does Mina Le feel distracted while talking about food?
-Mina Le feels distracted because she recently got her nails done in a high-production shoot with a manicurist on set, resulting in long talons that are affecting her ability to do everyday tasks.
What is the 'lipstick effect' mentioned by Mina Le?
-The 'lipstick effect' is an economic phenomenon where, during times of economic downturn, people stop spending on big-ticket items and instead spend on smaller luxury items like lipstick to boost their morale.
What is the connection between luxury food purchases and the 'lipstick effect'?
-The connection is that during economic downturns, people still seek to engage in some form of luxury consumption to feel good, and luxury food purchases serve as a modern equivalent to the 'lipstick effect' where small indulgences compensate for the inability to buy larger luxury items.
Why is Erewhon mentioned in the video?
-Erewhon is mentioned as an example of a luxury supermarket chain in LA that has gained significant hype online, with reports of young people working multiple jobs to afford daily spending at Erewhon, highlighting the trend of food as a status symbol.
What is the role of social media in the rise of food trends?
-Social media plays a significant role in the rise of food trends by providing a platform for influencers to share cooking content, promote certain types of food as trendy or luxurious, and by fostering a community around food-related interests.
What is the term used to describe an influencer who makes cooking videos for social media?
-The term used is 'chefluencer', which is a blend of the words 'chef' and 'influencer'.
How does the fashion industry's history of promoting thinness affect the perception of models and food?
-The fashion industry's history of promoting thinness has led to a distrust and skepticism when thin models or influencers post about food, especially unhealthy food. This is because it contradicts the industry's past promotion of unhealthy dieting habits.
What is the significance of the Ozempic drug in the context of the food industry?
-Ozempic, a drug originally designed to help regulate diabetes, has gained attention for its appetite-reducing side effects and potential misuse as a weight loss method. Its rise could impact the food industry if it leads to reduced food consumption due to decreased appetite.
How does the video discuss the portrayal of food in fashion media?
-The video discusses the portrayal of food in fashion media as a means of exploring women's consumption and sexual appetite, often using the 'gluttonous gamine' trope where thin models are depicted next to large amounts of food without actually consuming it.
What is the potential impact of drugs like Ozempic on the food industry, according to the video?
-According to the video, drugs like Ozempic have the potential to significantly impact the food industry by reducing overall food consumption if they become widely used for appetite suppression. This could lead to changes in the types of products offered by food companies.
Outlines
đœïž Introduction to Food, Fashion, and Culture
Mina Le introduces the topic of the video, which revolves around food, wellness, and fashion. She discusses the connection between these areas and how they are all part of culture. Mina shares her recent experience with a high-production photoshoot where her nails were done by a professional manicurist on set, leading to a discussion on the cultural significance of food and its status as a symbol, especially among Gen Z. She cites a Vogue Business report on the luxury food trend and the rise of expensive supermarket chains like Erewhon, which has gained popularity despite its high costs.
đ The Historical Context of Food as a Status Symbol
The video delves into the historical context of food as a luxury item, using the example of Louis XIV's banquets to illustrate the extravagance of the French aristocracy. It discusses the 'service a la francaise' and the emphasis on aesthetics in food presentation. The influence of Louis XIV and Marie Antoinette on contemporary culture is explored, including the portrayal of their lifestyles in fashion and film. The video also touches on the concept of the 'lipstick effect' and its role in luxury food purchases.
đ± The Rise and Critique of the Organic Movement
Mina discusses the growth of the organic food movement in the 1960s and its principles of sustainability and health. However, she criticizes the current state of the organic industry, suggesting it has become a form of greenwashing. She explains how large organic companies, or 'big organic,' often engage in practices that contradict the original values of the movement, such as long-distance transportation and unethical labor. The video also mentions consumer willingness to pay a premium for perceived wellbeing and the challenges faced by small, ethical farms.
đ The Impact of Social Media and Influencers on Food Trends
The video explores the rise of social media's influence on food trends, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. It discusses the emergence of 'chefluencers,' individuals who create cooking content on social media, and the public's growing interest in cooking and healthy eating. Mina talks about the role of social media in promoting certain food trends and products, and how it has led to an increase in the consumption of superfoods and probiotic foods. She also mentions the influence of celebrities and models on food trends and the public's perception of these trends.
đ The Fashion Industry's Complex Relationship with Food
Mina examines the fashion industry's historical promotion of unhealthy dieting practices and its complex relationship with food. She discusses the industry's use of food in photoshoots and advertisements, often positioning thin models next to abundant food, a concept known as the 'gluttonous gamine.' The video touches on the controversy surrounding models and food, the public's skepticism towards thin influencers' food choices, and the industry's evolving attitudes towards food and body image.
đ The Potential Impact of Appetite-Suppressing Drugs on the Food Industry
The video concludes with a discussion on the rise of appetite-suppressing drugs like Ozempic and their potential impact on the food industry. Mina expresses concern about the misuse of these drugs for weight loss rather than their intended medical purpose. She mentions the potential risks to the food industry if these drugs become widely used, leading to reduced food consumption. The video also highlights the responsibility of the food industry to adapt to changing consumer behaviors and preferences, while hoping for a shift towards healthier snack options.
Mindmap
Keywords
đĄLuxury Food
đĄLipstick Effect
đĄChefluencer
đĄWellness
đĄOrganic Food
đĄFrench Aristocracy
đĄFood as a Status Symbol
đĄHealth and Wellness Industry
đĄSocial Media Influencer
đĄBig Organic
đĄGrotesque Body
Highlights
Mina Le discusses the intersection of fashion, media, culture, wellness, and beauty, and their connection to food.
The cultural significance of food as a status symbol, especially among Gen Z, is highlighted by Vogue Business' findings.
The rise of luxury food purchases is partly attributed to the 'lipstick effect', an economic phenomenon where people splurge on small luxuries during economic downturns.
Erewhon, an expensive supermarket chain in LA, has gained significant attention for its popularity among young consumers willing to work extra jobs to afford its products.
The historical context of luxury food is explored, comparing modern trends to the extravagant feasts of Louis XIV.
The influence of French aristocracy on fashion and food culture is discussed, with examples from Marie Antoinette and modern fashion shows.
The shift towards healthy eating and its impact on the perception of luxury in the food industry is analyzed.
The role of social media in promoting food trends and the rise of the 'chefluencer' is examined.
The transcript explores the skepticism around thin influencers and models promoting food, due to the fashion industry's history of promoting unhealthy body ideals.
The potential impact of appetite-suppressing drugs like Ozempic on the food industry is discussed, with concerns about reduced food consumption.
The transcript addresses the controversy of models and celebrities appearing to consume high-calorie foods while maintaining thin figures.
The fashion industry's use of food in photoshoots and its complex relationship with body image and eating habits is critiqued.
The potential for food trends to shift due to the influence of health and wellness, and the role of pharmaceuticals in weight loss is considered.
The transcript questions the ethics of using food as a status symbol and the implications for public health versus corporate interests.
The hope for a future where healthier snack options are available, not just as a response to dieting drugs but as a commitment to public health.
The video concludes with a call for a balance between food as a cultural and status symbol and the need for healthier, more accessible food options for the general public.
Transcripts
(gentle music)
- Oh, hot.
(bird chirping)
(cat purring)
Hi, my name is Mina Le.
And on this channel I talk about fashion, food.
No, that's not right.
Fashion, media, and culture.
But today I am gonna be talking about food.
(gentle music)
- Is Ozempic right for me?
- Hmm.
- I wanted to know if you'd like to go out
to dinner with me Saturday.
- I'm like super distracted at this moment
because I just got my nails done the other day.
I had previously gotten my nails done recently,
but then I was at this shoot and it was very high production
because there was a manicurist on set.
I have never been to a shoot with a manicurist on set.
And they wanted a different look for my nails
so they gave me these talons.
I don't think there were any photographs
that actually showed my hands
because they were all portraits.
So that was kind of like sad 'cause they look sickening.
But the downside is
I don't really ever keep my nails this long.
Like this is like really, this is really long for me
because I grew up playing piano and you know,
you just like can't play piano with long nails.
But I can't do anything.
I feel like I'm Edward Scissorhands right now.
Okay, so yeah, today I am talking about food,
but I will be talking also about like
wellness and fashion and beauty because it's all connected.
I don't know, I was like inspired to do this
because I don't know if I'm just at the age
where food becomes more topical
because I perpetually feel like my body can't bounce back
from a diet of instant ramen and iced coffee anymore
or if something specifically has shifted
in the cultural zeitgeist.
But whatever it is, I'm not alone,
because apparently zoomers care a lot about food.
Vogue Business reported last year,
coming out of the pandemic and into a recession,
food has remained a status symbol
for some price sensitive Gen Zs,
much like a luxury item or piece of music merch,
experts agree.
Out of 166 16 to 24-year-old
Teen Vogue, Glamour, and Allure readers in the US,
more than half have bought
what they consider to be luxury food or drink.
in the last year.
Probably no other luxury food business has gotten
as much hype online as Erewhon,
an expensive supermarket chain in LA.
Last year, The Cut published a viral piece
on zoomers reportedly working two jobs
to afford daily Erewhon,
spending upwards of $200 a week.
I think the rise in luxury food purchases is in part
the lipstick effect at work.
The lipstick effect is this economic phenomenon
where people stop spending money on big ticket items
like a fancy car or luxury vacation
and instead treat themselves to small things
that make them feel good like lipstick,
hence the name.
It's this idea that basically
no matter what the economic circumstances are,
people still want to engage in
some kind of frivolous consumption to make them feel better.
- There's so many beautiful things out there to buy,
how can you possibly resist them?
- So today I wanna talk about food trends,
the Gen Z and millennial focus on wellness and organics,
the luxury coating of food itself,
and the rise of the chefluencer.
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(keyboard clacking)
In her 2016 book
"Feast for the Eyes: The Story of Food in Photography,"
Susan Bright wrote,
"Ultimately, food is not only about literal taste,
but also about Taste with a capital T,
both the lifestyles we aspire to
and the building blocks of culture itself.
- People's idea of luxury right now isn't even luxury.
It's somebody being able to go to the grocery store
and get a full cart and call it a grocery hall.
- Even though it feels dystopian to say
that food is a luxury,
this has always been the case.
The rich have always had a different diet
from the middle class and the poor.
For example, the food served at Louis XIV's banquets
in the 17th century were more lavish
than any of the food eaten in the rest of France.
His chefs would request exotic foods from other countries
or ingredients that were rare and expensive.
Louis XIV stomach was allegedly
three times the size of an average adult.
(somber music)
And even the manner of eating was vastly different.
One practice that was formalized during his reign
but was actually popular during the Middle Ages,
so he didn't invent this,
it's the service a la francaise,
which is a system by which the dishes for each course are
laid out all on the table all at once,
emphasizing the aesthetic importance of presenting the food
and making sure that the dishes
all like go together aesthetically.
Louis' banquets also featured musicians and dancers
for additional entertainment
and there was this idea that
each banquet had to outdo the last.
Louis put a high value on aesthetics during his reign
and his court invested heavily
in France's art's, fashion and cuisine.
And the impact can be felt still today
with the way that people romanticize France.
According to fashion historian Valerie Steele,
"The theater of power was very important.
Louis XIV wanted to make sure that his appearance
and the appearance of his courtiers
were in accordance with his idea of being
a modern, powerful, civilized monarch,
no longer just a warrior king from the Middle Ages,
but a real kind of Sun King
with all the kinds of mythological connotations."
Yeah, if you didn't know,
Louis XIV was also called the Sun King.
The last French queen Marie Antoinette
continues to carry the legacy of French aristocracy
and I'd argue is actually more linked with extravagance
than Louis XIV,
at least in like popular culture.
The most famous pop culture example is of course
Sofia Coppola's "Marie Antoinette,"
which features the iconic I want candy sequence
that takes absolutely no prisoners
in showing the level of excess afforded to her in real life.
As Elizabeth Way writes,
"Fashion and food may be
the most potent symbols of aristocratic extravagance
and these ideas persist in contemporary culture."
- Let them eat cake.
- For Moschino Fall Winter 2020 collection,
Jeremy Scott dressed his models in garments
that looks like cakes and pastries.
The collection intended to draw attention
to decadence and class inequality.
References to Marie Antoinette
were used to really drive home the theme.
According to the runway show notes,
"The confectionary cocktail dresses stand as a sly comment
on the denseness of certain people in power."
Even though you could say that critiquing class
by producing a luxury collection is
having your cake and eating it too.
No pun intended.
Scott has said about it,
"All I can do is offer respite.
Even if you continue to fight, you need that moment of joy.
We all need something uplifting.
My role on this Earth has only ever been
to spread joy and bring happiness."
(gentle music)
(keyboard clacking)
It seems like today, to the mainstream at least,
daily healthy groceries is probably considered
more luxurious than like elaborate, buttery, one-off meals
allied dining at a French restaurant.
Though I think just because of
how dominant the French are in high culture,
French food will probably
always be considered luxurious on some level,
so I'm like not worried about them.
Given the shift towards healthy eating,
I thought I'd give a brief overview about
why healthy food costs so much.
There's actually so much more than what I'm going to say,
so I highly suggest reading
"Food Power" by Brian L. McDonald
if you wanna learn more about his food system.
I like relied on it very heavily for all my discoveries.
But I'm going to start in the 1950s.
The 1950s is stereotyped as being like the casserole era
and also the era of those
really weird gross-looking savory gelatin dishes.
I love being Asian.
The '50s was also known for
bringing convenient foods into the American diet
such as frozen orange juice concentrate
and canned chicken breast,
which I don't even know if they still sell
because I don't think I've ever seen that on the shelves.
Packaged cake mixes were first introduced in 1947
and by 1957 accounted for
more than half of the homemade cakes in America.
People liked these pre-made or easy to prep food options
because it gave them more flexibility
to manage their schedules.
As Fortune described the trend in 1953,
"With babies to take care of,
jobs to hold down, and maids scarce,
housewives look to the food processors to perform
many of the services formally carried on
in the family kitchen."
Changing food preferences helped grow the food market
to a $60 billion industry in 1953.
$10 billion more than industry specialists had predicted.
And on the flip side,
home production of foods AKA foods grown in home gardens
continued to decline from at least
1/3 of America's food production before World War I
to 18% in 1942 to just 8% in 1955.
There were also all these technological breakthroughs
that made food production faster,
created more secure packaging,
and better preserved food texture and flavor.
What this also meant though was that
many produced products were roughly the same.
As a result, companies spent more
on advertising and promotional efforts
to make their products more appealing than competitors
with the hopes of building brand loyalty.
âȘ Soup and sandwich âȘ
âȘ Soup and sandwich âȘ
âȘ Have your favorite Campbell's soup and sandwich âȘ
- For example, one grocery store advertisement from 1955
urged shoppers to stockpile only quality IGA brand foods
to prepare for a nuclear attack.
By 1954, the USDA reported that the value added
by manufacturing and food processing had risen considerably
and Americans were paying $4 billion a year more,
adjusted for price changes,
than they did a 1939 for the convenience of products
that transferred some of the work of food preparation
from the home to the factory.
But then in the 1960s an organic movement grew traction
with principles focused on offering
a sustainable, healthy, fair, and safe alternative
to the corporate monster
that industrialized agriculture had become.
Organic agriculture sought to bring
food production systems back to the land
and operate within the limits of nature.
Nowadays the term organic is arguably greenwashing.
I'd recommend reading
Michael Pollan's "The Omnivore's Dilemma"
to get a better understanding of the industry.
But in short, the USDA implemented
a very watery set of standards
for what's considered organic.
Pollan calls the large companies
that produce organic food using industrial methods
as big organic.
And although they grow products
without synthetic pesticides and fertilizers
as required by the USDA,
they often engage in long distance transportation,
energy-intensive production, unethical migrant labor,
and animal cruelty.
As an example, on his book,
Pollan talks about a company called Petaluma Poultry.
He picked up a chicken from this company
from the supermarket
that claimed to be a sustainably farmed, free-range,
and even the company gave this chicken a name Rosie.
He ended up visiting the farm
and found it to be more of an animal factory.
Rosie lived in a shed with a 20,000 other Rosies
who lived very similar lives
to any other industrial chicken.
Other than the fact that their feet is certified organic,
the free-range label was allowed
because there was a little door in the shed
that led to a narrow grassy yard,
but the door remained shut
until the birds were at least five or six weeks old
to prevent them from potentially catching any diseases
and then the chickens were slaughtered only two weeks later.
So for most of their life they spend it
not seeing any sunlight or grass.
Well, I can believe that organic feed and fertilizers
cost more than synthetic ones,
which might justify a higher price
for organic goods than non-organic.
I also often wonder if organic industrial farms
know they can upcharge more
because people assume that these farms,
these companies are going above and beyond
a standard commercial farm
when in reality they aren't.
I mean studies show Americans are prepared to pay premium
to enhance their wellbeing.
Regardless the ability for big organic to function
means that smaller, more ethical farms are squashed out.
Something else I learned in the book is that
supermarket chains don't wanna work
with dozens of different organic farmers.
They'd rather work with one company that is big enough
to offer a complete line of fruits and vegetables
every SKU in the produce section.
Which means not only are small farms
having trouble finding buyers,
but also that it becomes more difficult for consumers
to find and buy quality food.
I think the positive thing though is that more consumers are
starting to recognize the lie of big organic.
And this is why the people who have the means are
more attracted to farmer's markets and grocery stores
like Erewhon which is a certified B Corp,
a certification meaning that
the company is ethical and sustainable.
However, I think I should mention
that large companies like Nespresso,
which I feel like at least
have a pretty large carbon footprint from their coffee pods
achieved the certification
which makes me question how rigorous the review process is.
But whether or not Erewhon is
as sustainable as they market themselves to be,
I'm still waiting for an Erewhon a tell-all documentary.
People believe it and they're willing to pay for it.
Also, there's been a growing concern
over health and wellness in the culture in general.
McKinsey's latest future of wellness research
found that zoomers and millennials are purchasing
more wellness products and services
than older generations across the US, China, and the UK.
Ballooning into an industry valued at $23.5 billion in 2023.
In terms of the food side of
the health and wellness category,
American consumers are buying more superfoods
investing in probiotic foods to improve their gut health
and approximately 28% of Americans are consuming
more protein than before.
A lot of this interest probably has to do with
having more access to information,
and then of course social media,
and the consequent focus on
appearance and desire for community.
I'm sure a good number of people
bought the Hailey Bieber Erewhon smoothies
for the sole purpose of being able to take part in a trend.
Me included, I'm not better than anyone else.
And my honest review is that
the smoothie was too sweet for my taste,
but Erewhon's non-celebrity affiliated mango smoothie,
which I can't remember the name of,
I tried that the last time I was in LA
and it was quite good.
Another reason is potentially COVID-19
and how it made us all consider
our health and wellness more seriously.
(gentle music)
(keyboard clacking)
Since the pandemic, I'd say,
we've seen the rise of a certain type of influencer,
the chefluencer,
AKA an influencer who makes cooking videos for social media
and who may or may not be working as an actual chef.
I would that the social media interest in chefs
mostly stem from pandemic cooking content
in which more people were at home
and either wanted to learn to cook to avoid eating out
or experimented in the kitchen to pass the time.
This meant that there were more people
wanting to make cooking content.
- [Narrator] Prep with me
for my client's 16-person dinner party.
- Here's the green onion.
- [Narrator] Thyme, garlic, and a little bit of butter
to base the steak.
- But also more people wanting to consume said content.
But we also have to talk about Jeremy Allen White
whose consistent placement on
the white boy of the month charts probably helped.
White has been in Hollywood for a bit of time now,
but his role as sexy chef Carmy in The Bear
catapulted him into the spotlight
and memefied kitchen lingo like yes, chef.
Riding the hot chef wave last year The Cut published a piece
profiling the rise of thirst trap chefs
like Cedrik Lorenzen and Anthony Randello
who not only cook topless
but also make explicitly central gestures
to the food they're handling.
- How many people were scared?
Me too, I was really, really scared.
- I'm not sure if these guys are
killing two birds with one stone
by using TikTok as both their job and their dating app
or if they've just realized that to go viral
you have to be a bit more creative and theatrical.
Whatever the reason,
I think part of why they've become so successful doing this
is because of how cooking has been
traditionally delegated as a woman's tour
and so there is something pleasing or cringeworthy
or at least interesting about
seeing a man embracing that role
and putting an aggressively masculine spin on it.
To clarify,
this kind of cooking content does not work on me.
I'm not like you bitches, just kidding.
But I see why it's appealing for some women.
Dani Maher wrote for Esquire about these TikTok creators
and notes that for men the kitchen is a playground.
She quotes academic Irina Mihalache who wrote,
"The process of making cooking safe for men included
the emphasis on play and experimentation
as the main difference
between masculine cooking and domestic suburban cooking.
While women cooked out of necessity,
the new man of the 1960s cooked out of pleasure."
Maher notes,
"Perhaps it is this blend of pleasure and play
with the expertise these hot chefs exemplify
that is key.
Those are some of the traits we associate
with people who cook us luscious meals
and we can't help
but imagine how such traits might extend into, say,
their approach to romance."
I would say that the traits associated with a guy
who cooks for fun include creativity, passion, discipline,
and knowledge of how to use his hands.
And imagining someone who loves to cook for you every meal,
a task that many of us don't enjoy doing
or at least I don't enjoy doing is also appealing.
Woman chefs have benefited too though.
Gabbriette who had a bit of a following
from being in the band Nasty Cherry exploded in popularity
when she started producing cooking videos.
While her food looks good,
I think the whole package of being a pretty girl
with a strong aesthetic
who has a hobby is what makes her successful.
Viktoriia Vasileva writes in her Substack,
"It's cool to be hot
but in today's oversaturated influencer economy,
it's even cooler if you are hot and have a hobby.
It's also refreshing to see content creators
care about something more than
the likes and comments that they get."
Fashion model food content is nothing new, okay?
There's a bunch of videos on YouTube of
Victoria's Secret models
vlogging about what they eat in a day.
Usually it's less well received
the non-model food influencer content I find,
which I'll talk about later,
but what makes Gabbriette interesting is that
she breaks away from the mold of like
acai bowls and superfood powders
to like actual foods that could be appealing to non-models
such as empanadas and scallop crudo.
She still does have a mostly health conscious way of eating.
She often makes recipes that are grain free
with vegan ingredients,
but it seems like she's actually interested
in making food that she wants to eat
and not just making food that she's like supposed to eat.
This is all on top of having actual culinary skills,
which cannot be said for some models.
I think what works for Gabbriette is that
she doesn't try to be relatable.
I think especially in the realm of food,
a lot of people have difficulty seeing models as relatable.
Being able to cook good food
and recreate recipes of existing supermarket products is
incredibly impressive
and it's a very niche skill.
And something that I think people would watch
even if like the person making this content
wasn't conventionally attractive,
but obviously it still helps if you are.
That's not to say that every model with cooking skills is
getting positive attention though.
Nara Smith, a model and home cook
became notorious on TikTok for her slow cooking videos,
and I really mean slow cooking.
- [Nara] Toddlers requested some yogurt this morning
and we were running low,
so I just decided to make it myself.
- [Mina] Nara is a stay-at-home mom.
She has two young kids, is pregnant,
and spends most of her day cooking for her family
while wearing beautiful outfits.
Her husband is also a model and a Mormon,
which has caused many people to believe
that they're pushing Mormon propaganda.
I wanna add though that Nara has recently said
she's not a practicing Mormon
and the two were not married in a temple.
- I don't wear garments, I didn't get married in the temple.
Both me and my husband are on our own journeys
and figuring out how we want to raise our kids.
- I personally have no issue with Nara.
And what I find really weird about all of this is that
she's sort of become the poster child
for the whole tradwife movement
when to my knowledge,
she has never said her lifestyle is better
than other people's
and she's never said that woman like shouldn't be working.
She hasn't said anything crazy.
And she's also not even fully
a stay-at-home mom in my opinion,
because in my opinion,
anyone who's monetizing content on TikTok is
not a stay-at-home mom.
They are like a work from home mom.
She's a content creator.
And also while I think that
she probably loves cooking like genuinely,
I highly doubt that she spends this much time cooking
every single thing that her kids eat.
But also if she had the time and she loves to do it,
then like who cares?
I think the root cause of people's fury
towards Nara Smith is because they feel that
she's encapsulating like the perfect ideal of motherhood
that's been spoonfed to all of us by Western society.
She's a rich young mom
who spends a lot of time nurturing her family.
She loves doing it, and she's beautiful,
and never seems stressed and never complains online.
And it's also not lost in me that she's Black
and Black women are held to remarkably unfair standards,
especially when it comes to motherhood.
The writer of the Substack CartoonsHateHer,
wrote a really great essay on
the feeling of guilt a lot of mothers have
that I think is relevant
and also really nice
because she writes like as a mother herself.
She writes,
"This is one reason that mom discourse is so toxic.
When you say that you've made a certain decision,
for example, working versus staying home
or using screens versus not using screens,
you are implying that
the other choice is harmful to children,
or at least not beneficial.
You can say, this is just me,
I don't judge anyone who does things differently
as I often do,
but the implication is there.
You made the choice for a reason.
Yes, every kid is different,
but on some level you think you chose the better thing,
otherwise, why would you have chosen it?
It can be difficult to reach across the aisle sometimes
and talk with women who have made
all the opposite decisions we have,
feeling neither judgmental of them or judged by them."
(gentle music)
(keyboard clacking)
Regardless of how we feel towards certain food influencers,
the one thing that's true is that food is in.
And brands who are always
quick to cash in on a mainstream interest
are pivoting towards food as well.
Technically this isn't like a super new idea.
Giorgio Armani made history in 1998
when he opened the first luxury branded restaurant,
the Emporio Armani cafe in Paris.
At the time, Armani told Forbes that he wanted
a new concept to give customers a break from shopping,
a place to have lunch or a drink after work.
But the difference is in those days,
branded restaurants were developed
to keep customers in the store longer
with the hope that they would spend more.
It was a sort of like bonus thing for existing clients.
But now there are restaurants designed
as marketing attractions
with the goal of acquiring new customers.
Zoe Hofman writes for nss magazine,
"Not only does it increase revenue,
but it also solidifies brands
as more than just places to buy clothes,
they become cultural elements of society,
recognized for more than their collections.
And of course, working with Michelin-starred chefs
means the food is delicious,
which is always a positive point."
These restaurants allow luxury brands
to fold in more people into their brand community
without having to compromise their clothing prices.
A Gucci Osteria burger at their Beverly Hills location
will cost you about $48 before tax and tip,
which is still considered quite a lot for a burger,
but is much more affordable
compared to anything they sell at their boutiques.
Ralph Lauren actually offers two tiers of food pricing,
a model that mimics how the brand offers
both expensive and cheaper clothing lines.
Their Polo Bar in Manhattan qualifies
for a $3 sign rating I think.
But for anyone who doesn't pay $45 for a branzino,
but who still wants to be folded
into the Ralph Lauren brand,
well lucky for them they can purchase a latte
from the brand's coffee stand Ralph's Coffee for under $10.
Having drank a luxury branded coffee from a redacted brand
because you know, I'm not trying to start any drama,
I can say there's nothing really special
about branded coffee,
at least the one I had.
The only thing that's special is the logoed coffee cup,
which you can post on social media for extra clout.
And speaking of being in the age of social media advertising
fashion brands are pressured to go viral,
which means they wanna create spectacles
worthy of sharing online.
I talked about how runway shows
have become more interactive in a previous video,
but similarly fashion branded food installations and dinners
have also sprung up to compel
invited influencers and fashion writers to make content.
For example, the jewelry brand Mejuri
hosted a gelato popup and Chin Chin in London Soho
where guests could browse the latest collection
while eating gelato.
This was after running an ad campaign
that showed pictures of hands holding food by the way.
Also being able to cross over into multiple industries
allows brands to outreach influencers
from different categories.
For example, a clothing brand launching a homeware line
can now gift branded, I don't know, candles
to an interior decorator influencer.
And you know, in a similar vein,
more films and TV shows these days are also crossing genres
so that they can be listed
under multiple different streaming lists
like they can be listed under top comedies of the month
and top romances of the month.
It's rare now for a movie to just be a straight comedy
because it's not as marketable.
I also feel like it might be a loophole for award season,
which is why a bunch of my friends and I were confused
that The Bear was nominated
for like best comedy in the TV category.
Like sure there are funny moments,
but I wouldn't really consider it a comedy
like it's kind of dark.
It just like sounded like to me that
they didn't wanna compete
in the same category as Succession,
which is a show that I actually think is
funnier than The Bear
but was considered a drama during award season.
But honestly, food is the universal language
and you don't have to be a food influencer
to post food on your account.
A lot of influencers, regardless of their niche,
will post about their meals.
Monica Titton explains,
"Food is often used instrumentally by a fashion influencer
as an index of their persona's authenticity.
Nothing signals real life credibility
like the very human and universal need to eat.
And on social media, nothing engages followers
like an enticing photograph of a meal."
It's interesting though that we're seeing
the rise of food posting and food events
in the fashion scene
given the fashion industry's history of
encouraging starvation to get a thin body ideal.
I think this is why when a model
or in particular like a thin influencer
when they post a lot about food online,
it's not always as well received.
For instance, like back in February 2023,
Bella Hadid said in an interview
that her favorite snack was pizza.
- Probably pizza at least once a day.
It's always like a go-to 'cause it always, you know,
it tastes good every time.
- The interview segment was posted onto TikTok
where everyone had a field day
with many people proclaiming that
pizza was not actually Bella's favorite food.
I actually do think Bella Hadid loves pizza,
a hot take maybe.
And at the risk of sounding like a stalker,
but I swear I just did a quick Google search yesterday.
In 2015, she name dropped her favorite New York pizza places
in a Fashionista interview.
They include if you're interested,
Gemma's, Bar Pitti, and The Bowery.
She's also talked about pizza
in a number of other interviews over the years
and has been photographed plenty of times
with pizza in hand.
I think what this annoyance actually stems from,
and Bella was just a scapegoat for this,
but it really comes down to the overall distrust people have
towards thin people eating junk food,
combined with the annoyance towards celebrities
pretending to be more relatable than they are.
To the first point,
pizza seems to be the number one choice
when it comes down to thing girls posing with food
and therefore is the food that
most people eye with suspicion.
For example, apparently an annual tradition following the
Victoria's Secret fashion show,
when those were still a thing,
with a giant pizza party among all the models.
There's nothing unique about a celebratory pizza party,
but we should consider the context.
For years fashion magazines glorified
these Victoria's Secret models
and spread unhealthy dieting tips
to bully the rest of us into trying to look like them.
And rather than blaming the industry
for pushing this propaganda,
a lot of people instead blamed the models.
So a pizza party splurge,
whether or not it actually happened
sounded unrealistic to many people read as a subtle flex
that these models could just eat badly
and still look the way that they do,
or it sounded like these models were trying
to absolve themselves
from perpetuating toxic beauty standards.
- Pizza.
- Pizza.
- Pizza.
- Lily's having a pizza party after this.
- I've talked to a lot of models
and many of them at least like nowadays are
really like not judgmental about other people's bodies
and are actually very judgmental about their own
because they're sort of told like during their entire career
that their bodies are the only things worthy about them.
While I think sometimes models can internalize that
and then become responsible
for pushing unhealthy dieting advice,
like when Kate Moss infamously said,
"Nothing tastes as good as skinny feels,"
a lot of them are just as negatively affected
by the industry's ideals as the rest of us.
Because let's face it,
the fashion industry has always been telling people
they need to be thinner and what to eat and what not to eat.
A Vogue article that was written in 1913 titled
"The Diet's The Thing" had an entire section
dedicated to starvation methods
in order to lose five to 10 pounds each month.
And yet despite these attitudes towards eating
the fashion industry still loves to photograph
a skinny model next to bountiful foods.
A framing that fashion scholar Jess Berry calls
the gluttonous gamine.
Barry explains that these images explore women's consumption
as metaphorical of sexual appetite
and argues that food is portrayed
as either seduction or revulsion.
Philosopher Mikhail Bakhtin explored the dichotomy
between classical and grotesque bodies
that I think we can apply to this.
In his definition,
the classical body is the body of
Greek sculpture and Renaissance paintings.
A body that possesses no open orifices.
For Bakhtin,
the grotesque body on the other hand is one that
like eats drinks, defecate, copulates,
becomes pregnant, et cetera.
It embraces mutable human anatomy.
It's like the real life version
and the classical is like the Barbie doll.
The fashion industry has
historically emphasized the classical body
by making their thin models into objects
that pose like prettily next to food.
They're usually not eating the food.
That's why the October 2010 Vogue Paris issue,
which featured an editorial
with plus-size model Crystal Renn
was like shocking at the time.
The photos were shot by Terry Richardson
and mostly consisted of Renn feasting
on a massive plate of spaghetti,
various meats, seafood, and cheese.
Amy Odell reported for The Cut at the time,
"The mammoth of an issue is
already riding on plenty of hype,
and these images have just the kind of shock value
that will aid that effort.
You know, look at the plus-size model eating.
Ew yuck food bleh.
Despite the mini-explosion of plus-size models
in fashion magazines over the past year,
fashion still seems to be having a hard time
not gawking at them."
Not only is Crystal eating, but she's plus-size too.
And what Odell refers to in her report is that
these pictures offer a new kind of fetish to appear,
the one that can only see fat bodies
as an archetype of voluptuous Venus
and they're not really a step forward
towards breaking the barrier between fashion and food.
(gentle music)
(keyboard clacking)
I do feel like the increased interest in food is
less about food itself ironically
and more about aligning with
the status markers of rich celebrities
as well as conveying a thin body type,
which is why it's mostly healthy food
that's being talked about.
And this is made clear to me about
the rise in drugs like Ozempic happening at the same time.
Ozempic is a semaglutide drug
that famously has appetite reduction side effects
and is being increasingly misused as a weight loss method
rather than to help regulate diabetes,
which is what it was originally designed for.
CNN reported in October last year
with 1.7% of America's population
prescribed a semaglutide drug in 2023
up 40 folds in the past years
that could spell serious trouble for the food industry.
I also feel like that figure,
that percentage is like quite low
because I'm sure there are a bunch of people
who are not actually prescribed Ozempic
and are kind of like doing it under the table.
Even though Ozempic is still a new trend though
there are some rising concerns among industry people
that consumers will buy less food
because they won't be as hungry.
However, because of how expensive Ozempic is
without insurance it's around $1,000 for a monthly supply
and have to keep taking it or your appetite comes back.
I think a lot of people don't realize that
like you basically have to take it forever.
So the price for one
and then the fact that it's only available as an injection,
which could scare some needle-phobic people,
these things can prevent a majority of people
from taking it.
ConAgra CEO Sean Connolly said that
any significant drop in calorie consumption due to the drugs
is a long way off.
But if the meds do gain traction,
he said the company would respond with new products.
"Let's say they go to smaller portions,
then we evolve the innovations,
and we design smaller portions.
And if they switch to different types of nutrients,
we switch to different types of nutrients.
If they change the kind of pack sizes they snack on,
we'll change that."
Food trends shift every so often
like any other consumer goods.
So big companies have had some practice
in introducing or discontinuing products
to match people's evolving tastes.
For example, Pepsi Cola and Coca-Cola have already started
offering their products in smaller sizes
for customers who want help with portion control
or who want to spend less
'cause I think they cost less or they should cost less.
However, Bernstein analyst Alexia Howard
cautions that drugs like Ozempic have the potential
to have a bigger impact on food consumption
than arguably anything that we've seen before.
That's daunting.
Changes won't happen overnight, she notes,
but it could be long lasting.
I'm personally hoping that Ozempic, Wegovy, similar drugs,
that they'll never become so impactful
that they'll actually change the entire food industry,
though I also think that like
reading the responses big snack has made is
kind of worrisome and gross.
Like the concerns are never about public health and safety
and only about how to sell more snacks, which is fabulous.
I love corporate responsibility.
What I do hope to happen is
just like snacks being healthier.
We do have a problem in America with
how unhealthy a lot of these products
that are getting pushed onto the American public are.
So I'm for like healthier snacks,
but I hope it's not
because they feel like everyone's taking dieting drugs.
Okay, anyway, this is the end of the video.
Thank you so much for sticking around.
As always, I hope you have a lovely rest of your day.
Would love to know what your thoughts are
on the trendification of food
and I'll see you next time.
Bye.
(lips smacking)
(gentle music)
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