วันพฤหัสบดีที่ 8 ตุลาคม พ.ศ. 2558

Eating for feature or Eating for pleasure - กินเพื่ออวด หรือกินเพื่ออร่อย


In this 21st century where Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) was adopted by the world’s leaders at the UN General Assembly as a new set of global goals for development, access to telecommunication technology is made easy for almost every human beings especially access to all kinds of social media through smartphones which its starting price comes as cheap as a few thousand Baht. The mobile phone service providers also promote the use of high-speed internet via their affordable monthly package enabling people to easily surf on Facebook, Instagram, Youtube and Twitter with just a tip of their fingers. 21st Century lifestyles, especially in Thailand and Asia, have changed heavily as a result of this handy technology. It started from posting on the social media some photos of friends and family with whom we did some activities together (eating or traveling) and tag them in those pictures so that we keep those as our online diary for that particular memorable moment, it then mutated to be posting photos to share and bluff those who weren’t there in those activities with you, so that they could get funnily jealous and now it becomes posting picture in the online platform to get as much ‘Likes’ or ‘followers’ as possible even though they are from completely strangers. Popularity among human friends is sometimes more difficult to get than popularity among online friends. This occasionally leads to a pretentious lifestyle to show off things that you don’t really have nor really do. Getting online attention and seeing number of likes as well as followers could make some people happier than spending quality time with a person in front of them. Truth and honesty is something very rare in the online world.

Food in the online world is in the same situation. I’ve been reviewing food and restaurant by myself for over a year and have some 10K followers in Instagram account @FoodSpace and trust me, though there’s not much trust in the online world, I have been to many places and have eaten and drunk all kind of culinary ranging from street food, homemade delivery clean food to the high-end five-star hotel food in and outside of Thailand. From what I have seen, people in late generation X and all of generation Y in Asia love to take pictures of two things, the first one is a selfie (both on their own and as a group selfie) and the second one is a picture of food & drinks. As long as they spend their own money and make no trouble to others, that’s absolutely fine because I usually do the same thing. Ha Ha. 
 
However, there is one big point that I just don’t get it which is the Food Bloggers ethics. Does it exist? If the food that you’re reviewing is not at all tasty, why wouldn’t you say so? Why did you write a misleading positive review? Some of the beautiful restaurants with gorgeously garnished dishes usually overprices their menu especially those in Siam or Thonglor area in Bangkok. These restaurants’ food photo will look fantastically mouth- watering and a number of food bloggers went there to make over-rated reviews with exaggerated comments. In reality, most of those dishes are not tasty, some are nearly not eatable and when you compare food taste and quality to the price, some dishes could be rated as awful. Many of those restaurants are so not good that you will not go back there and pay for your meal out of your own pocket. Free meals and review fee should not be generators of high points in the review for Food Blogger with integrity.

I feel sorry for the consumers who were misguided by this fake reviews and follow to try out those dishes and for many times, they found nothing but disappointment. To be fair, at least the consumers got a chance to check in and post their selfie picture online but that’s basically a waste of time and money. A splendid meal with decent ingredient could cost ten thousand baht and that, for me, is reasonable but a tasteless dish costs less than one hundred baht is, for me, not at all acceptable. I understand very well that some yummy dishes doesn’t look great and if you post its photo in Instagram, you might not get so much likes. Nonetheless, we should not care about the number of likes so much that we ignore the fact how that dish really taste like. Lying online is as sinful as lying face-to-face.

If it is a beautiful, yummy and good-service restaurant, I will definitely cheer them up and write an excellent review with perfect score for them. Do you know some of these type of ideal restaurant to recommend me to check it out?

More info, please visit;

Instagram: @FoodSpace
Facebook: FoodSpace Thailand & Beyond
YouTube: FoodSpace Thailand & Beyond



 

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