Over the last 11 years, the Los Angeles YouTuber's \"making\" videos that feature her eating her meals from everything scrambled eggs to giant buckets of chicken have captivated millions around the world. She has earned ad revenue from her videos, and and says that her \"mukbang\" posts are now her main income.
\"Mukbang,\" which is a term that originated in South Korea and translates to \"eating shows,\" involves content creators posting videos, sometimes more than an hour long, of themselves eating mostly junk food. In some instances, they take on exorbitant amounts.
\"I do think there's a significant amount of pressure for these creators who are sitting there eating day after day and have millions of views and followers to actually replicate that behavior,\" nutritionist Maya Feller told ABC News. \"And that, in my opinion, is more where the danger lies, is that they've got to do it over and over again.\"
\"We need a lot more sensitivity in online spaces that really allow people to not look at themselves in relationship to a content creator,\" she said. \"That is an area for people who have a history of eating disorders or who have active eating disorders that it can be really triggering and confusing.\"
\"I did the 10,000 calorie challenge wrong. So then like redo it, then I did it right then like, okay, do the 20,000 calorie challenge, do the 100 nugget challenge, and you just feel so much pressure because you just want to keep one-upping yourself,\" she said.
Trisha Paytas (/ˈpeɪtəs/;[2] born May 8, 1988) is an American YouTuber, singer, and media personality. Her[a] YouTube channel consists of a wide variety of content including lifestyle-oriented vlogs, music videos, and mukbangs. As of July 2022, she has accumulated roughly 5 million subscribers and almost 1 billion lifetime views.
Paytas was born on May 8, 1988,[3] in Riverside, California, before moving to Freeport, Illinois at age 3.[4] She has two siblings; an older brother and a younger, maternal half-sister. At age 15, Paytas moved back to California and was enrolled in a Catholic online school program. She returned to Illinois to live with her mother at age 16, attending high school in Pecatonica, Illinois.[5]
After moving to Los Angeles to pursue acting, Paytas began doing professional lingerie modeling and worked as a stripper and an escort to support herself.[6] She was featured on various television shows, attempting and failing to break the fastest-talker record on Guinness World Records Unleashed, and appearing on The Greg Behrendt Show, The Ellen Show,[7] and Who Wants to Be a Superhero?.[8]
Paytas registered her YouTube channel in 2007.[9] It was originally dedicated to movie director Quentin Tarantino, whom Paytas idolized, but soon after being created, Paytas began to focus on other types of videos. On the channel, Paytas primarily gives fashion, beauty, and relationship advice.[6]
In 2010, Paytas appeared in an episode of My Strange Addiction as a self-admitted tanning addict, despite being aware of the high chances of developing skin cancer,[10] among others. Paytas appeared in several music videos by various artists including Eminem, Amy Winehouse, and The All-American Rejects.[11][12]
From 2013 to 2017, Paytas made a number of trolling videos, which she told Business Insider were a way to "dumb [her]self down" in order to get more attention and views. This involved videos claiming that dogs do not have brains, or that she was voting for the 2012 Republican candidate for President of the United States, Mitt Romney.[13][14] In 2014, Paytas began posting widely-viewed mukbang sessions and eating-challenge videos.[6] In September 2014, Paytas competed in an episode of the television game show Celebrity Name Game, along with her mother.[15]
In 2017, Paytas became a housemate on Celebrity Big Brother 20.[19] She left the show after 11 days of participation[20][21] and proceeded to make disparaging comments about fellow participants, including accusations of drug use.[22]
In September 2020, Paytas started the YouTube podcast Frenemies with fellow YouTuber Ethan Klein.[24] The show discussed recent events in the social media world. Paytas and Klein were cohosts on Frenemies until June 2021, when Paytas left Frenemies, and the show ended.[25][26][27]
In July 2023, Paytas began hosting her own YouTube podcast titled Just Trish Podcast. Co-hosted by Oscar Gracey, the podcast sees Paytas commenting on current pop culture topics.[29] Originally planned as a weekly series, Just Trish gained significant YouTube viewership, which inspired Paytas to publish two episodes a week and invite various guests to talk on the podcast. The August 2023 episode featuring Tana Mongeau was the first episode of Just Trish to reach over one million YouTube views. As of March 2024, Just Trish attracted a total of approximately 30 million YouTube views through more than 50 episodes, making it one of the most successful projects of Paytas' career.
Paytas has had several public long-term relationships. She dated American YouTuber Jason Nash from 2017 to 2019.[30] In 2020, she started dating Israeli artist Moses Hacmon. The pair got engaged that same year[31] and married in 2021.[32] In February 2022, Paytas announced that she was expecting her first child with Hacmon. She had previously been told by her doctors that she would not be able to conceive a child naturally.[33] In September 2022, she gave birth to a daughter, naming her Malibu Barbie.[34] In November 2023, Paytas announced she is expecting her second child with Hacmon.[35]
Paytas has suffered from mental health problems, having been diagnosed with borderline personality disorder.[37] In an interview on the H3 Podcast, Paytas stated she used to have substance abuse problems and was once hospitalized after a methamphetamine overdose.[30][38] Paytas has stated that her main addiction was to prescription pills.[36][39]
In October 2019, Paytas came out as a trans man online, but denied wanting to change her pronouns. She received criticism for this due to having previously self-identified as a chicken nugget, ostensibly in a facetious manner.[40] In a March 2021 interview, she said that when she came out as transgender in 2019, she "didn't have the vocabulary to describe it at the time".[41] In April 2021, Paytas released a video on her main YouTube channel, in which she discussed her previous gender confusion and reaffirmed her non-binary identity.[42][9] She has since updated her pronouns to she/they.[43]
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