Exactly 463 years ago, a balding, bearded, nearly-90-year-old Venetian nobleman kicked off one of the world’s most controversial TikTok trends. In 1558, Renaissance writer Luigi Cornaro published several tracts detailing how a strict diet could lead to a long life. “First, bread; then, bread soup or light broth with an egg,” reads a 1917 English translation of Cornaro’s The Art Of Living Long, “Of meats, I eat veal, kid and mutton; I eat fowls of all kinds.” Skip forward to today – the TikTok tag #WhatIEatInADay has accumulated over 6.9 billion views.
TikTok’s ‘What I Eat In A Day’ & Our Obsession With What Other People Eat - Refinery29
Read More
Rechercher dans ce blog
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
22 Easy Ways to Eat More Veggies This Year - Self
It’s an all-too-familiar cycle: You stock up on loads of tasty-looking veggies at the store—only to have them wilt, rot, or go soggy by th...
-
Calgary foodies, rejoice! Avenue is proud to present the return of the Best Things to Eat and Drink Market, sponsored by Section 23 and ...
-
The Curator independently decides what topics and products we feature. When you purchase an item through our links, we may earn a commission...
-
The videos are all the same: A thin, conventionally attractive person poses in front of a mirror before the screen cuts to a beautifully st...
No comments:
Post a Comment