Digital Side Dishes: An Antidote to Loneliness for Today’s Youth?
Foodthink’s Perspective
However, the story of “digital side-dishes” goes far beyond this. In this edition of Foodthink’s “Eat Well” column, our readers’ descriptions of these digital accompaniments are richer and more vivid, and at times, even conflicted.
Some readers expressed that it is precisely because they want to enjoy their meal that they need “digital side-dishes” to give the experience more “flavour”. Others, however, feel that these digital distractions do not necessarily help eliminate negative emotions; instead, they can make one’s state of mind worse and may even lead to the actual taste of the food being ignored.
Others argue that we should not be too critical of this dependency, as it is closely linked to changes in lifestyle and emotional states. They also shared how it feels to dine without such distractions in more positive settings. This echoes the views of some readers in the second issue of “Eat Well” regarding “how to eat without relying on takeaways”.
Whether a dependency on “digital side-dishes” is a problem may not seem urgent. However, research teams have already found that becoming absorbed in electronic devices during meals can increase total calorie intake by 15% and may lead to gastric dysfunction, indigestion, and nutritional imbalances. Perhaps we should now use the phenomenon of “digital side-dishes” as a starting point to seriously consider: in a modern society where loneliness and acceleration coexist, what does it truly mean to “eat well”? And how can we actually achieve it?

The Solitary Diners
@Xiao Zhao: I usually watch for half an hour to an hour—dramas, variety shows, or Bilibili. Just eating is a bit boring; I need some audio and visual stimulation. Moreover, for someone like me who lives alone, it makes the room feel less empty.

@Shanshan: Digital side-dishes make the details of dining and living alone much richer. When I find a particularly good one, it feels like pure bliss.
@YeYe: I watch movie and TV recaps. If there’s a show I’m currently following, I’ll watch that—at least forty minutes. It generally feels like a treat; I feel accompanied, and eating becomes a happy experience that I look forward to. Sometimes at lunch in the dorm, everyone is excited to get their takeaways and then they spend time picking their “meal-time videos” before eating in companionable silence.
@LTT: Whether I use digital side-dishes depends on whether I’m eating alone. When I’m by myself, I eat incredibly fast, wolfing it down as if I were an animal (though I technically am one). Sometimes I spend two hours carefully preparing a meal, only to eat it in ten minutes; eating too fast makes me feel quite uncomfortable. Digital side-dishes force me to slow down. An episode of a drama is usually 40-odd minutes long, so I’m forced to eat for at least 30.
@Under the Lamp: When I’m home for the holidays, I eat with my family, but at school, I have to eat alone. If the food meets my expectations and I’m in a good headspace, I won’t look at my phone; otherwise, I need my digital side-dishes.
@Kandy: I certainly don’t need digital side-dishes if I’m eating with family, colleagues, or my boss, but I almost always need them for lunch and dinner when I’m alone. It’s about half reading and half watching; I just follow the Bilibili algorithm and watch whatever interests me, usually something light and simple. I just find eating alone too boring, so I watch videos to pass the time.
@Flower Garden: It relieves loneliness and provides entertainment. Also, digital side-dishes are the fastest shortcut for me to connect with the world while I eat.

When the Tyranny of Efficiency Invades Mealtime

@辞镜: I mainly feel like I want to save time by using my meals to do things I’m actually interested in.
@KL: If I’m just eating, I feel an inexplicable sense of “emptiness”. A big part of this is that I’ve become accustomed to a fast-paced lifestyle; I’m often multitasking. Plus, I’m actually a very fast eater—if I’m alone, a meal can be finished in five or ten minutes. Every time I finish, I get this nervous feeling of “right, what’s the next thing I should be doing”. Watching videos while eating stretches out the mealtime and gives my brain fresh stimulation; it feels like I’ve gained something extra.
@青梦: I dislike the low-quality, fast-paced content on Weibo, TikTok, and Kuaishou, so I filter for specific variety shows, films, series, documentaries, and podcasts, mainly on platforms like iQIYI, Mango TV, and Bilibili. I also choose content based on my mood (especially during period pain or when I’m feeling unwell physically or mentally, I’ll pick comedies to balance things out). I think consuming “digital pickles” is an efficient use of fragmented time, a process of broad absorption and selective extraction to build a foundation of knowledge. Those two or three hours are a brief adjustment to gather information and keep life entertaining, and it doesn’t stop me from engaging in deep reading or connecting with people offline for long, heart-to-heart conversations.
@Teresa: I follow a few specific creators and just shuffle through their videos, regardless of whether I’ve seen them before. I need background noise. I feel that if I don’t watch videos while eating, I won’t have any other time for leisure and entertainment.
@糟糟: For anime, I usually go for the “healing” kind without intense fighting; it’s similar for movies and series. I tend to prefer things that are interesting, fantastical, or have deep meaning. For a while, I watched *Family Guy* consistently during meals. Eating alone is a bit boring; it’s as if there’s a vacant slot for pleasure in terms of time and intensity, so I fill it. Or perhaps when focusing solely on eating, the lack of input creates an anxiety that is magnified by the idleness, making it unbearable?
@Hodel: I usually watch specific channels and creators, mainly content about the countryside, gardening, and food tours. The videos are short, simply to allow for a brief escape from a tedious and dull job.

@麻花: I love Western sitcoms, mostly series I’ve seen many times. I rarely watch new series while eating, although I do watch very long ones like *Law & Order*. I avoid watching anything with obvious ideological biases that make me feel offended during meals (for example, many early Western shows have a clear colonialist tone or are centered on the “white male gaze”); I prefer “harmless fluff”. I basically never watch anything that requires serious thought while eating; mealtimes are a rare chance to zone out.
“Quenching Thirst with Imaginary Plums”
@花果园子: Music, movies, novels—anything goes. When I’m feeling low, I’ll listen to high-energy music; it’s like a shot of adrenaline that brings me back to life. When I have no appetite, I’ll look at exquisite food, which helps me eat a few more bites.
@KL: I like watching mukbangs, roast videos, or reality shows—things that are light and pleasant. Watching food videos acts more like “quenching thirst with imaginary plums”; it’s like a digital cheat meal. While watching, it feels like my mind is in one place and my mouth in another, haha.

Eating Has Become Merely Chewing
@王定一: Sometimes digital pickles can make your food feel completely tasteless.
@zoe: I mostly watch sitcoms like *The IT Crowd* and *Modern Family*. It’s mainly because my own cooking isn’t very good, so there’s no need to savour the flavour. Eating while watching a show distracts me from the taste of my own food; the plot is engaging, but it doesn’t make the dish taste any better.
@梦: Videos usually make us ignore the taste experience; before you know it, you’ve finished the meal.
@王维: When I have lunch and look around, almost everyone is scrolling through their phones, watching short dramas. They seem happy, as if this is a rare moment of relaxation, but I feel these videos make them completely forget the taste of their food. Eating becomes just a subconscious action. It’s only about chewing; it’s quite impolite to the food.
@山山: Watching videos while eating provides an immersive happiness and helps release the pressures of life. Although it doesn’t make the food taste better, I’m still very dependent on it.
“I Feel Like I Might Be a Bit Dead”

@梦: I can’t seem to do both at once. I either get so absorbed in the video that I forget to eat, or I’m so focused on the food that I miss details in the video. Either way, it leaves me feeling unsettled. I’ve noticed my husband sometimes watches short videos while eating—mostly light topics, like sudden weather updates or clips of cats and dogs. If a video is too emotionally intense, complex, or long, he swipes away. I can tell he’s not actually relaxing; it’s more like he’s being anaesthetised, drained by them.
@山山: Being in a relationship once helped me quit my ‘digital pickles’. We agreed not to be that kind of couple who just eat with their heads down, each staring at their own phone, and we actually managed it. When eating out, we’d chat; at home, we’d share shows we liked. But then we split up, and I went back to eating with ‘digital pickles’—I’ve even reached the point where if I can’t find something to watch, I choose not to eat, searching until I find something.
Do you want to quit your ‘digital pickles’?
@灯下: I try to control it by stopping my meal whenever I pick up my phone to scroll through messages, and only resuming eating once the phone is down. This helps me ignore the taste of the food and the boredom of eating alone. But sometimes it makes it hard to focus on the video content and extends the length of the meal, which then makes me feel irritable.

@KL: I do want to break free from ‘digital pickles’ because I often leave a mess on the table after eating and put off tidying up, which disrupts the rest of my schedule and leads to a cycle of rushing and regret. When I’m not busy, a single meal accompanied by a video can take over two hours—far beyond a normal mealtime. By the time I finish, the food has long passed its peak flavour, which is terrible. But so far, I haven’t tried any concrete methods to stop.
@辞镜: I don’t feel the need to quit. For someone eating alone, it’s a useful tool for emotional regulation, unless it actually impacts physical health. ‘Digital pickles’ are perhaps just a placebo for how we spend our time. Only something more important or meaningful can replace them.
@王定一: I hadn’t thought about it before, but I later realised that the intense continuity of these ‘digital pickles’ makes me reluctant to leave the ‘virtual’ world after eating, delaying my studies or housework. Now, I consciously try to limit my intake. I’ve tried controlling the time I spend watching videos, but I still find it hard to resist the instant dopamine hit from variety shows like *Taohuawu*.
Sometimes, the problem isn’t the ‘digital pickles’ themselves, but whether your life is rich enough. My most memorable experience was in Guantang New Village in Chengdu. I sat by the fields eating; through the gaps in the fine-leaved grass, I could glimpse the mountains, forests, and plains. In that moment, the phone was useless; the experience brought by the new surroundings was, in itself, a most delicious ‘pickle’.
@Teresa: I’ve thought about it, especially after realising I’ve developed a habit of needing to watch or listen to something at all times. Video content constantly swirls in my head, leaving me unable to think for myself, or to focus on recalling and forming my own opinions on things I’ve just learned or seen.
@糟糟: I’m not sure, but I’ve actually stopped enjoying videos while eating lately. Perhaps it’s because I’ve been feeling unwell and was diagnosed with a lung nodule, which has made me more health-conscious. I feel that eating mindfully is very important for health, and even quite pleasant. When I feel unwell, I close my eyes and meditate to feel my body; I also rely on intuition and appetite to discover that sometimes I genuinely prefer more vegetables and less meat.
Rebuilding the ‘Nearby’ through Food
@KL:When dining with friends, there is absolutely no time to look at a phone. Another case is when the place has a beautiful view; eating alone while taking in the scenery feels very peaceful. Oh, and then there’s the case where there’s local gossip—whether it’s about people or little animals. Fresh events happening right in front of me are far more interesting than a phone at that moment.
@梦:I think if I’m eating alone, or with friends watching a slow-paced long-form video together, it’s a pleasant experience. However, if my husband is eating with me but scrolling through short videos at the same time, I’ll put up with it for a while and then express my dissatisfaction, because I feel ignored. I’ll try to find common ground and attempt to counter the pull of the phone through conversation. Sometimes I succeed, especially when I’m telling an interesting story; other times I fail, usually when he’s not in a great headspace that day.
@Hina:When I eat with my family, I don’t pick up my phone. I don’t get much time with my parents, so mealtime is our time to be together.

@LTT:Does having someone sitting opposite you at the table automatically mean you stop using digital sides? Sometimes, people are less appealing than digital sides. As a child, I always saw TV dramas where the whole family chatted happily at the dinner table, but my family was the exact opposite—cooking could take two hours, but eating took only ten minutes. My parents were silent, the meal ended quickly, and we all dispersed to do our own thing. So, I always fantasised about how it would feel to share the day’s news with my family at the table after finishing work. Now that I have my own small family, work brings nothing but helplessness and pressure; talking about it at the table only reinforces those memories, plunging the brain into negative emotions.
@耶耶:With my family, I focus entirely on the meal; I feel very happy eating together.
@山山:In professional settings, I put my phone away, forced to do so for basic social etiquette. In truth, I really dislike eating with most people from work; every waking moment I want to take out my phone and escape the world. But when eating with people who are close to me—people who can truly “see” me—I naturally don’t watch videos. Because my inner needs are met, I can listen properly and be listened to.
@楠崽:When eating with others in a social setting, there are times when everyone just looks at their own phone; it’s quite cold.
@Road:Generally, when I go out to eat with friends, I don’t look at my phone, because with good friends there are always plenty of new things or viewpoints to share and hear, which far outweighs the attraction of digital sides. When eating with my partner, we often watch a series, but not to save the emotional energy we owe each other; rather, it actually makes our communication tighter and warms our relationship. The most obvious sign is that we have more shared inside jokes, and the language we use in daily conversation becomes richer, allowing us to convey more complex things. For example, lines from *My Own Swordsman* often appear in our conversations.
“Cooking is a form of self-healing”

@梦:When my husband needs digital sides, I suspect it’s because he feels the meal is exactly the same as always and lacks enough attraction. But when he puts all his effort into cooking a meal himself, he doesn’t need any accompanying videos; he focuses entirely on the food.
@小梅:I remember when I was little, my mother worked hard to make a meal; she loved seeing me enjoy the food and didn’t like it when I was distracted by the television. Now that I’ve started cooking for myself, I also hope my family or friends can give some reaction to my cooking—perhaps a comment or showing that they really like it—rather than scrolling through short videos. I sometimes can’t even tolerate it when they just chat amongst themselves. Because this meal isn’t a takeaway delivered at the touch of a button; it contains the energy and heart I’ve put into it. Whether I eat it myself or with others, I hope to simply savour the process; that makes me feel fulfilled.
Editing: Yuyang
