Mukbang Reaction

2014reaction video / video formatactive

Also known as: Mukbang React · Eating Show Reaction

Mukbang Reaction is a 2014 video format where creators respond to eating broadcasts, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, and ASMR eating sounds.

Mukbang reaction is a video format where creators film themselves watching and responding to mukbang (eating broadcast) clips, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, or ASMR-style eating sounds. The format grew out of the global spread of South Korean mukbang culture in the mid-2010s, with YouTube channels like Korean Englishman helping bridge Korean food culture to Western audiences through food reaction content as early as 20141.

TL;DR

Mukbang reaction is a video format where creators film themselves watching and responding to mukbang (eating broadcast) clips, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, or ASMR-style eating sounds.

Overview

Mukbang reaction videos follow a simple setup: a creator watches mukbang footage on screen while recording their own face and commentary. The appeal sits at the intersection of food voyeurism and reaction content, two of YouTube's most reliable traffic generators. Reactions range from genuine shock at portion sizes, to disgust at messy eating, to admiration for a creator's ability to down a family-sized meal solo.

The word "mukbang" (먹방) is a Korean portmanteau of "eating" (먹는, meongneun) and "broadcast" (방송, bangsong). What started as live-streamed communal dining on South Korean platform AfreecaTV around 2010 eventually became a global YouTube genre. The reaction layer added a second screen of entertainment on top, letting viewers experience both the original eating performance and someone else's emotional response to it.

The mukbang format itself originated on South Korean livestreaming platform AfreecaTV in the early 2010s, where hosts would eat large meals while chatting with viewers who tuned in for virtual companionship during solo dinners. As these clips migrated to YouTube, Western creators discovered them and began filming reactions.

One of the earliest and most successful bridges between Korean food culture and Western reaction content was the YouTube channel Korean Englishman, run by Josh Carrott and Ollie Kendal1. The channel built its initial audience around filming the reactions of their English friends to Korean cuisine. In 2014, they introduced fire noodles to their friends as a spicy food challenge, a format that later developed into the widely copied "Fire Noodle Challenge"1. Carrott, who studied Korean language at SOAS University of London and spent time at Korea University, brought genuine cultural knowledge to the format rather than treating Korean food as a novelty punchline1.

Origin & Background

Platform
AfreecaTV (original mukbang format), YouTube (reaction format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
~2014-2015
Year
2014

The mukbang format itself originated on South Korean livestreaming platform AfreecaTV in the early 2010s, where hosts would eat large meals while chatting with viewers who tuned in for virtual companionship during solo dinners. As these clips migrated to YouTube, Western creators discovered them and began filming reactions.

One of the earliest and most successful bridges between Korean food culture and Western reaction content was the YouTube channel Korean Englishman, run by Josh Carrott and Ollie Kendal. The channel built its initial audience around filming the reactions of their English friends to Korean cuisine. In 2014, they introduced fire noodles to their friends as a spicy food challenge, a format that later developed into the widely copied "Fire Noodle Challenge". Carrott, who studied Korean language at SOAS University of London and spent time at Korea University, brought genuine cultural knowledge to the format rather than treating Korean food as a novelty punchline.

How It Spread

The Korean Englishman channel and its sister channel JOLLY (launched in 2017) helped normalize Korean food reaction content for English-speaking audiences. JOLLY expanded beyond food to broader cultural content, pulling in celebrity collaborations with figures like John Cena, Jason Momoa, and Jack Black. By January 2026, JOLLY had accumulated over 5.2 million subscribers and 2.5 billion total views across nearly 1,400 videos.

The cross-cultural appeal was real. In 2019, over half of JOLLY's viewership came from South Korea, showing that Korean audiences enjoyed watching Westerners experience their food culture just as much as Western viewers enjoyed the discovery. Korean Englishman also brought the format to high-profile settings, collaborating with Tottenham Hotspur's Son Heung-min for a Korean barbecue reaction video with teammates Eric Dier, Pierre-Emile Højbjerg, and Hugo Lloris.

Meanwhile, the broader mukbang reaction genre exploded on YouTube. Creators found they could generate views simply by watching existing mukbang content on camera, adding commentary about texture, portion size, or eating technique. The format required minimal production, just a screen recording, a webcam, and genuine (or performed) reactions.

Platforms

YouTubeTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Mukbang Reaction is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The mukbang reaction format typically follows a few common patterns:

1

Pick a mukbang clip. Creators usually select videos with extreme elements like massive portions, unusual food combinations, intense spice levels, or exaggerated ASMR sounds.

2

Record your reaction. Film yourself watching the clip with a picture-in-picture or side-by-side layout so viewers see both the original content and your face.

3

Provide commentary. Most creators narrate their thoughts, ask rhetorical questions ("How is she still eating?"), and react to key moments with visible surprise or disgust.

4

Optional: try the food yourself. Some creators pair their reaction with their own attempt at the same meal or challenge, similar to what Korean Englishman did with fire noodle challenges.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Mukbang reaction content played a role in globalizing Korean food culture during the mid-to-late 2010s. Channels like Korean Englishman moved beyond YouTube fame into real-world cultural diplomacy. Carrott, Kendal, and Carrott's wife Gabriela Kook were invited to Buckingham Palace twice, speaking with King Charles III on both occasions. The second visit was a British-Korean state dinner featuring South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, where the trio sat at the same table as Blackpink members Jisoo, Jennie, and Rosé.

The spicy food reaction subset became its own micro-genre. The "Fire Noodle Challenge" that Korean Englishman kicked off in 2014 spread across YouTube as a standalone challenge format, with thousands of creators filming themselves attempting Samyang's ultra-spicy ramen.

Fun Facts

Josh Carrott's paternal grandmother was ethnically Chinese, and he first encountered Korean culture through South Korean expat students at an international school in Qingdao, China, where his family moved when he was 12.

Ollie Kendal was pursuing a master's degree in biblical studies when he and Carrott incorporated their production company Kendal & Carrott in the UK in November 2013.

On Carrott's 32nd birthday, Kendal published a partially fictitious autobiography ghostwritten by Carrott's friends, with proceeds donated to Carrot Land Adventure Park in New Zealand.

Derivatives & Variations

Fire Noodle Challenge:

Spun off from Korean Englishman's 2014 video introducing fire noodles to British friends, this became a standalone challenge format copied by thousands of creators worldwide[1].

Celebrity food reaction collaborations:

The format expanded to include professional athletes and actors trying Korean food on camera, as seen in Korean Englishman's collaborations with Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers players[1].

ASMR mukbang reactions:

A sub-variant focused specifically on reacting to the sound design of ASMR eating videos rather than the quantity of food.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    Korean Englishmanencyclopedia

Mukbang Reaction

2014reaction video / video formatactive

Also known as: Mukbang React · Eating Show Reaction

Mukbang Reaction is a 2014 video format where creators respond to eating broadcasts, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, and ASMR eating sounds.

Mukbang reaction is a video format where creators film themselves watching and responding to mukbang (eating broadcast) clips, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, or ASMR-style eating sounds. The format grew out of the global spread of South Korean mukbang culture in the mid-2010s, with YouTube channels like Korean Englishman helping bridge Korean food culture to Western audiences through food reaction content as early as 2014.

TL;DR

Mukbang reaction is a video format where creators film themselves watching and responding to mukbang (eating broadcast) clips, typically featuring oversized meals, extreme spice challenges, or ASMR-style eating sounds.

Overview

Mukbang reaction videos follow a simple setup: a creator watches mukbang footage on screen while recording their own face and commentary. The appeal sits at the intersection of food voyeurism and reaction content, two of YouTube's most reliable traffic generators. Reactions range from genuine shock at portion sizes, to disgust at messy eating, to admiration for a creator's ability to down a family-sized meal solo.

The word "mukbang" (먹방) is a Korean portmanteau of "eating" (먹는, meongneun) and "broadcast" (방송, bangsong). What started as live-streamed communal dining on South Korean platform AfreecaTV around 2010 eventually became a global YouTube genre. The reaction layer added a second screen of entertainment on top, letting viewers experience both the original eating performance and someone else's emotional response to it.

The mukbang format itself originated on South Korean livestreaming platform AfreecaTV in the early 2010s, where hosts would eat large meals while chatting with viewers who tuned in for virtual companionship during solo dinners. As these clips migrated to YouTube, Western creators discovered them and began filming reactions.

One of the earliest and most successful bridges between Korean food culture and Western reaction content was the YouTube channel Korean Englishman, run by Josh Carrott and Ollie Kendal. The channel built its initial audience around filming the reactions of their English friends to Korean cuisine. In 2014, they introduced fire noodles to their friends as a spicy food challenge, a format that later developed into the widely copied "Fire Noodle Challenge". Carrott, who studied Korean language at SOAS University of London and spent time at Korea University, brought genuine cultural knowledge to the format rather than treating Korean food as a novelty punchline.

Origin & Background

Platform
AfreecaTV (original mukbang format), YouTube (reaction format)
Creator
Unknown
Date
~2014-2015
Year
2014

The mukbang format itself originated on South Korean livestreaming platform AfreecaTV in the early 2010s, where hosts would eat large meals while chatting with viewers who tuned in for virtual companionship during solo dinners. As these clips migrated to YouTube, Western creators discovered them and began filming reactions.

One of the earliest and most successful bridges between Korean food culture and Western reaction content was the YouTube channel Korean Englishman, run by Josh Carrott and Ollie Kendal. The channel built its initial audience around filming the reactions of their English friends to Korean cuisine. In 2014, they introduced fire noodles to their friends as a spicy food challenge, a format that later developed into the widely copied "Fire Noodle Challenge". Carrott, who studied Korean language at SOAS University of London and spent time at Korea University, brought genuine cultural knowledge to the format rather than treating Korean food as a novelty punchline.

How It Spread

The Korean Englishman channel and its sister channel JOLLY (launched in 2017) helped normalize Korean food reaction content for English-speaking audiences. JOLLY expanded beyond food to broader cultural content, pulling in celebrity collaborations with figures like John Cena, Jason Momoa, and Jack Black. By January 2026, JOLLY had accumulated over 5.2 million subscribers and 2.5 billion total views across nearly 1,400 videos.

The cross-cultural appeal was real. In 2019, over half of JOLLY's viewership came from South Korea, showing that Korean audiences enjoyed watching Westerners experience their food culture just as much as Western viewers enjoyed the discovery. Korean Englishman also brought the format to high-profile settings, collaborating with Tottenham Hotspur's Son Heung-min for a Korean barbecue reaction video with teammates Eric Dier, Pierre-Emile Højbjerg, and Hugo Lloris.

Meanwhile, the broader mukbang reaction genre exploded on YouTube. Creators found they could generate views simply by watching existing mukbang content on camera, adding commentary about texture, portion size, or eating technique. The format required minimal production, just a screen recording, a webcam, and genuine (or performed) reactions.

Platforms

YouTubeTwitterReddit

Timeline

2023-01-15

First appears

2023-06-01

Goes viral

2024-01-01

Continues in use

2025-01-01

Mukbang Reaction is still actively used and shared across platforms

View on Google Trends

How to Use This Meme

The mukbang reaction format typically follows a few common patterns:

1

Pick a mukbang clip. Creators usually select videos with extreme elements like massive portions, unusual food combinations, intense spice levels, or exaggerated ASMR sounds.

2

Record your reaction. Film yourself watching the clip with a picture-in-picture or side-by-side layout so viewers see both the original content and your face.

3

Provide commentary. Most creators narrate their thoughts, ask rhetorical questions ("How is she still eating?"), and react to key moments with visible surprise or disgust.

4

Optional: try the food yourself. Some creators pair their reaction with their own attempt at the same meal or challenge, similar to what Korean Englishman did with fire noodle challenges.

Create Your Own

Cultural Impact

Mukbang reaction content played a role in globalizing Korean food culture during the mid-to-late 2010s. Channels like Korean Englishman moved beyond YouTube fame into real-world cultural diplomacy. Carrott, Kendal, and Carrott's wife Gabriela Kook were invited to Buckingham Palace twice, speaking with King Charles III on both occasions. The second visit was a British-Korean state dinner featuring South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol, where the trio sat at the same table as Blackpink members Jisoo, Jennie, and Rosé.

The spicy food reaction subset became its own micro-genre. The "Fire Noodle Challenge" that Korean Englishman kicked off in 2014 spread across YouTube as a standalone challenge format, with thousands of creators filming themselves attempting Samyang's ultra-spicy ramen.

Fun Facts

Josh Carrott's paternal grandmother was ethnically Chinese, and he first encountered Korean culture through South Korean expat students at an international school in Qingdao, China, where his family moved when he was 12.

Ollie Kendal was pursuing a master's degree in biblical studies when he and Carrott incorporated their production company Kendal & Carrott in the UK in November 2013.

On Carrott's 32nd birthday, Kendal published a partially fictitious autobiography ghostwritten by Carrott's friends, with proceeds donated to Carrot Land Adventure Park in New Zealand.

Derivatives & Variations

Fire Noodle Challenge:

Spun off from Korean Englishman's 2014 video introducing fire noodles to British friends, this became a standalone challenge format copied by thousands of creators worldwide[1].

Celebrity food reaction collaborations:

The format expanded to include professional athletes and actors trying Korean food on camera, as seen in Korean Englishman's collaborations with Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers players[1].

ASMR mukbang reactions:

A sub-variant focused specifically on reacting to the sound design of ASMR eating videos rather than the quantity of food.

Frequently Asked Questions

References (1)

  1. 1
    Korean Englishmanencyclopedia