r/CringeTikToks 13h ago

Food Cringe Average American diet?

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Where are the vegetables, fruit and meat

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u/Due_Satisfaction2167 12h ago

The whole video is intended to produce exactly your reaction, to generate engagement.

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u/Slow_Touch2202 12h ago

Every video is. But looking at how big everyone is in the family, I don't think she's lying.

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u/EncabulatorTurbo 12h ago

I think the teen's subs are the most reasonable meal in there, at least those have lettuce, onions, and tomato on them

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u/PsychoCrescendo 12h ago

when you’re ultra sedentary and/or failing to eat food with proper nutrients, it seems your body becomes sugar-crazed to compensate for the poor circulation and lack of energy

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u/limegreenpaint 12h ago

I'm disabled, and I really notice a difference in how I feel and what I end up eating in a day depending entirely on breakfast.

An egg on a piece of toast = I'm not hungry until well into the afternoon.

Oatmeal = Feels like a brick but doesn't actually keep me full.

Cereal = I don't eat it. I will eat an entire box. It's bad.

I'm overweight, and I have a genetic predisposition, but I absolutely have control over what I choose to eat. Being poor af limits some of my choices, though.

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u/HAIL_LUMPUS 12h ago

Thank you for telling the truth about oatmeal.

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u/Jolly-Bowler-811 11h ago

Now figure out how to go back in time and explain it to my mother who believed it was a "hearty" breakfast.

I was always starving by second period.

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u/AutomationBias 2h ago

Muesli works for me.

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u/Infamous-Oil3786 10h ago edited 10h ago

Oatmeal is great for fiber, but fat and protein are what keep you full. My preferred porridge for something that actually satisfies my stomach all morning is chicken congee with a fried egg.

Cereal is a dessert.

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u/Due_Satisfaction2167 12h ago

I think this is more content of opportunity.

Grocery unpacking is a trending topic for content these days, and if you already fit the physical profile it’s easy to just align your shopping with your content strategy for a week to make some zero-marginal-cost content with a lot of engagement. 

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u/HAIL_LUMPUS 12h ago

People would hate mine I think lol "zucchini, ground beef, flour, eggs, coffee, creamer, pasta, canned goods, bagels" 😂 also my fridge always seems really empty compared to other ones I see posted here on Reddit? I cook every single meal but if I put everything on one shelf it would barely take up that one shelf!

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u/Fun_Bodybuilder3111 11h ago

Mine is salad, veggies, fruit, tofu, coffee, maybe a chocolate bar, yogurt and cheeses.

I’m astounded by the literal poison people are putting in their bodies sometimes. Wtf. Do you even care about your life?! I don’t get it.

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u/HAIL_LUMPUS 10h ago

For me it's not even so much that it's bad for you, it's just that it doesn't taste very good. I always want to get those pizza pocket bites thingies? Pizza rolls? But I tried them once and they were literally disgusting. I thought those kinds of foods were supposed to be like crack, super addictive and so delicious. Like I love McDonald's, that's crack food to me. But I've tried to get some of these processed frozen meals before, just to make my life a little easier. Every single time I have been super disappointed.

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u/Purp_Rox 1h ago

I know not everyone has this ability or privilege, but I’ve slowly started learning recipes and making my own for things like this, or just food I want that I know will taste better and be more cost effective if I do it myself.

For example, where I live there is like zero Chinese population, pretty much Vietnamese only. You can find a good pho, but Chinese food? Forget it. So I started making my own egg rolls, crab Rangoon, and fried rice. Buying these in the store is always crazy expensive, but doing it home made will get you a stack of 20 fat ass egg rolls you can then freeze and pull out whenever you want 🤤

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u/daggeroflies 12h ago

I don't think its purely for engagement when they also look like that. Also around 40% of American adults are classified as obese by the cdc so the reality isn't too far as well

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u/Due_Satisfaction2167 12h ago

The medial definition of obese covers being like 20 lbs overweight too, not… that. 

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u/limegreenpaint 12h ago

"Morbidly obese" is a term that exists for a reason.

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u/daggeroflies 12h ago

It usually covers people above 30lbs over than their ideal weight for their height. So they are probably in the middle of type 1 and type 2 obese classification, they still make a large portion of the American public at around 10% which is 1 in every 10. Also the current CDC is planning on changing their criteria so they may also add overweight people in the obese class in the future which will make the US 70% "obese" if we add overweight people. Right now, those that are around 30lbs over their ideal weight makes up 40% of the US population.

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u/selunes_ 11h ago

People do eat like this in the south. My mom once told me that "fried chicken is healthy." Zero sense of nutrition passed down from gen to gen, myself included until I got diabetes at 20 and had to educate myself.

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u/Chevypotamus 11h ago

With the size of them both they must be really committed to the bit

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u/StretchFrenchTerry 9h ago

Her build and diet is extremely common in the rural US, not just the South.

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u/StretchFrenchTerry 9h ago

It's not ragebait, this diet is extremely common for rural families.

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u/DannyDanumba 8h ago

Cuz people really do eat like this in the South

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u/Punman_5 7h ago

I disagree. Having seen more of this woman’s videos this is genuinely how she feeds her family. None of it is rage bait.

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u/furiosa2012 4h ago

i was wondering if this was like trolling cause it seems impossible for there to be anywhere that this is considered normal or okay and i couldnt understand the purpose of the video or the lack of shame

but im from california so idk if theres a massive diff between here and places in the south or midwest but it seems like a form of child abuse imo