Food has taken over Facebook. Literally. With the dawn of autoplay, these 30- to 60-second videos are all that we see on our Facebook newsfeed. Honestly, I'm not complaining, as these videos offer a short and entertaining insight into the gastronomy of the millennial generation.
Whether the meals prepared actually look appetizing, or just feed into our society's current obsession with cheese, butter, sugar, and bacon, there is without a doubt a more interesting aspect of those videos: the comment section. As with anything and everything published online, there is always someone who deems themselves an expert and several other people who either agree with that person or vehemently disagrees.
These videos attract food professionals with their "LITERAL professional opinion" as well as people who don't care for the "expert's" opinion.
I won't lie, a sushi burrito does not sound good at all.
Who knew frying an avocado would enrage so many people?
Still waiting for the verdict of what lava cake actually is.
As far as I'm concerned, these Facebook foodie arguments are hilarious. Everyone is a critic. Clearly, you simply cannot please everyone. Tasty, Tastemade, and all the other "Facebook food creators" clearly don't care for the haters, as they keep making these interesting creations.














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