View attachment 1011896
So are mukbangs considered advertiser friendly? Surely Chantal's particular brand of content - talking about shit while binging on fast food at 450 pounds - is controversial and not advertiser friendly, right?
(It's sixcarbchiligorl btw. Lost my pw.)
Mukbangs could be advertiser-friendly, but not in the way Chantal does them. A human-sized person with decent manners, eating a reasonable quantity of food while discussing it, engaging with their followers, and including other topics of conversation that are actually interesting without being too controversial, wouldn't be a bad thing, and I could see advertisers being okay with that.
But the way Chantal (and other deathpigs) do mukbangs? Fuck no. Nobody would want their products associated with these disgusting sows. And who watches them? Feeders, hatewatchers, and a few sad, fat, middle-aged women. What do you even market to that kind of audience?
Leggings and obese people just don’t mix. I’m always amazed how many morbidly obese people choose the worst clothes for their body type. Anything that’s slim fit, skinny fit, or god-forbid skin-tight should be an obvious no no. Those clothes are designed to accentuate the natural shape of the body, which obviously works amazingly well when the person is fit or skinny. Not quite so well when the person is covered in weirdly shaped lumps of fat. They get squeezed by the fabric and distort it into a chaos of shapeless mountains and valleys of lard.
Fatties don't wear leggings because they're in any way flattering; they do so because they're cheap, easily available even in the biggest sizes, and require zero effort. They also wear leggings to prevent chafing (the dreaded "chub rub"), and because there isn't any extra fabric to bunch up in their own creases and folds.
Leggings also don't add any further bulk, and can help give an illusion that one's cottage-cheesey thighs are smoother than they are, which, somehow, still seems to matter to women who have eaten their way far past 200 lbs and show no signs of stopping. Vanity still crops up in strange, illogical ways, even among women who are actively killing themselves, and even when the efforts made are utterly futile. Humans are weird like that.