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The Problem with Food Porn Tourism

Nadeau, Barbie Latza . The Daily Beast ; New York [New York]26 Mar 2014.

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ABSTRACT
 
According to their 2013 statistics, over 39 million leisure travelers are considered "deliberate culinary travelers,"
which means they choose their destination based on its cuisine, and their tours often include cooking lessons,
wine tastings, or other food-related activities. The research shows that an additional 35 million leisure travelers are
"opportunistic," which means they may choose a destination based on its artistic or cultural offerings, but eating
well is also a priority.

FULL TEXT
 
We've all seen them. The waiter plops a gorgeous plate of sumptuous food on the table but, rather than taking out
a fork and knife to tuck in, they grab their cellphone and snap a photo. Within minutes, it has been hashtagged
#foodporn or #cameraeatsfirst and posted to Tubmlr, Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. By the time they've shared
their gourmet delight with the world, the food is cold, and the chef is grumpy. The phenomenon of photographing
food is known as food porn, and just like the "other" porn, it is highly addictive.

Gastronomic tourism is one of the fastest growing travel sectors among the traveling class, according to the World
Food Traveler, which conducts research on culinary tourism. According to their 2013 statistics, over 39 million
leisure travelers are considered "deliberate culinary travelers," which means they choose their destination based on
its cuisine, and their tours often include cooking lessons, wine tastings, or other food-related activities. The
research shows that an additional 35 million leisure travelers are "opportunistic," which means they may choose a
destination based on its artistic or cultural offerings, but eating well is also a priority. Thousands more are
"accidental" culinary tourists, who get caught up in the local cuisine without even trying. No matter their category,
these travelers all have one thing in common: they take pictures. And despite the fact that they may be in gorgeous
cities like Rome, Florence, or Paris, their holiday photos are of plates of spaghetti and foie gras, not the Coliseum
and the Eiffel Tower.

Luckily for the culinary tourist, there are plenty of social websites where they can boast about their adventures.
One of the first food porn sites on the Internet was Taste Spotting, which was founded in 2007 based "on the idea
that we eat first with our eyes." The site bills itself as an "obsessive, compulsive collection of eye-catching images
that link to something deliciously interesting on the other side. Think of TasteSpotting as a highly visual potluck of
recipes, references, experiences, stories, articles, products, and anything else that inspires exquisite taste." Scores
more sites have followed, including the popular Food Porn Daily and Pintrist's Food and Drink section.

But not everyone likes the idea of sending digital postcards from the table. At the Pappacarbone restaurant on
Italy's Amalfi Coast near Salerno, chef Rocco Iannone is one of a growing number of restaurateurs across Italy who
is gently instituting a "no food photo" policy. His cuisine, which is creatively photogenic, "is meant to be eaten, not
bastardized by a badly-lit photo." He has been a leading activist against the food porn phenomenon in Italy, which

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he says is both an infringement of intellectual property and often insulting. If an amateur photographer takes a
photo with a smartphone, it is rarely going to do the plate justice, he says. "I want control over my image, and if
someone publicizes a smudged plate or an inaccurate portrayal, that's like defaming my name."

A select number of restaurants in France have also started banning amateur food photography. Chef Alexandre
Gauthier, of La Grenouillere in La Madelaine-sous-Montreuil, told AFP that the experience is not only disruptive to
the nearby clientele, it also takes away from the diner's experience. "Before they used to take photos of their family,
of their grandmother, but now it's photos of dishes," he said. "We are trying to give our clients a break in their lives.
For that, you need to turn off your mobile."

Those who write and blog about food for a living say the best policy is to ask first and don't assume every chef will
be flattered by his or her creations being labeled as food porn. Elizabeth Minchilli, a Rome-based food writer and
author of the best selling apps, Eat Rome, Eat Florence, and Eat Venice, says taking photographs of every dish can
be horribly annoying, which is why she always asks ahead of time before snapping. "In general, I'm with the chefs
on this one," she told The Daily Beast. "I think if you're in their restaurant, they have the right to either grant, or
deny, permission to photograph. I always ask ahead of time, just in case I'm annoying anyone else in the room.
Most chefs are happy to have me photograph their dishes, but then again, I'm not an amateur and my photographs
are always flattering--or else why post them in the first place?"

Just because the food looks good enough to eat on the plate doesn't mean it will always look just as good in a
picture.

DETAILS

Subject: Restaurants; Food; Cooking; Photographs

Location: Italy

Publication title: The Daily Beast; New York

Publication year: 2014

Publication date: Mar 26, 2014

Section: Travel

Publisher: The Newsweek/Daily Beast Company LLC

Place of publication: New York

Country of publication: United States, New York

Publication subject: General Interest Periodicals--United States

Source type: Newspapers

Language of publication: Engli sh

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Document type: News

ProQuest document ID: 1648981720

Document URL: https://search.proquest.com/docview/1648981720?accountid=145163

Copyright: ©2014 The Daily Beast Company LLC Usage: May not be sold, electronically stored,
or reproduced in any form without prior written permission of Newsweek Inc. All
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Last updated: 2017-11-22

Database: ProQuest Central

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