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Stephanie Buttermore's Cheat Day videos

Stephanie Buttermore and her layered social media personality give us insight into how influencers construct a widely desired body image. Her "Fantasy Cheat Days" make us wonder about the nature of such content and what it reflects.

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The Health and Fitness Industry and the social Influencers are a perfect social media match, as we know. Studies have proved that people think they can bring the concepts that influencers talk about to their own life (Noonan, M. 2018). In this way, promoting lifestyles, which people can be inspired and motivated by their everyday content on social media, have been working and bringing millions of followers to many YouTubers. Showing diets, what they eat on a normal day, recipes, exercises and also frequently updates of how their bodies look like are the main topics about healthy lifestyle videos on Youtube.

To get more attention, most of the Influencers often create their own challenges or ask their followers what they want to see in their next video. The whole fitness lifestyle turns out to be relationship between what people want to see and the response from the YouTuber to that.  

Followers' opinion and requests became so important on social media meaning that some influencers' profiles began to change their videos in order to get their attention. Some changes in the healthy lifestyle profiles, for example, question the real purpose of those channels.

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Who is Stephanie Buttermore?

Stephanie Buttermore is a Ph.D. in Biomedical Sciences, Pathology & Cell Biology from South Florida University and also a fitness YouTuber, with 634,125 subscribers. In her channel, Stephanie defines "Science, fitness and lifestyle" as her main topics. Her videos vary from "What I eat in a day", What I Eat Pre & Post Workout, New training goals to Physique updates. In most of them, Stephanie shows to her followers what she is eating, which workouts she is doing, how to do it and how it is changing her body. It is also possible to see some videos about her Ph.D. but however, the number of views is much lower in comparison to the other contents.

It is also known that most of the modern structures have the body image as the main point. It is about the way you look and how to get there, and social media has been playing a quite important role in pthis idea. Having the perfect body is not enough anymore, because you have to share it: with pictures on Instagram or Facebook and videos on Youtube. The one that achieves the perfect body, becomes the modern influencer, telling others how to get the same body, eating the same things they did and doing the same exercises. However, influencers like Stephanie are about combining the extreme body control, with the right food and the perfect workout, with some transgressions in eating behavior, mostly known to us as the Cheat Day

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Fantasy Cheat Day

From cancer research scientist to fitness educator, Stephanie's website promotes her Women’s Specialization Program, which is designed for women who wish to maximize their overall muscular development and shape. The Program consists of one ebook, written by her and Jeff Nippard, that can be bought in her website, and promises to increase overall strength, focusing on developing the glutes, shoulders, abs and back for an aesthetical, balanced physique. As she self defines, with her use in social media she wants to entertain her followers, "but most importantly, educate on the scientific principles of training and nutrition". Her channel on YouTube is also responsible for demonstrating the importance of balance for a happier life.

Even though being famous for the fitness lifestyle, diets, workout videos, and all the body pictures on Instagram, the most popular tool on YouTube leads Stephanie's channel to content which is completely different to what she describes in her bio: the F

 

On her channel, Stephanie promotes a healthy lifestyle and uses her body to demonstrate the results of hard workouts and healthy diets. Nevertheless, at predetermined times she also enjoys fast food and candy, just like other people do. Once in a month, she uploads a ‘Fantasy Cheat Day’ Video in which she is eating everything she wants and as much as she can, all day long. It is not a surprise that the food appearing in these videos is indeed what most people would consider unhealthy.

The trend has been inspired by a previous one which originated in 2014 in South Korea. Mukbang, the actual name of it, is an online broadcast by ordinary people which film how they eat massive amounts of food while talking about all the things they have in mind.

On 14 of December 2017, Stephanie uploaded her first ‘Fantasy Cheat Day’ Video claiming she just wants to eat everything she wants because tracking what she eats for the healthy diets felt exhausting. The complete focus in the video is on the food. Where she is getting it from, what it is and how it tastes. In the majority of the video, we see her eating and enjoying the food, while also adding the number of calories every time she eats something.

After a while, the ‘Fantasy Cheat Day’ developed into a challenge of eating 10.000 calories in a day, which is mostly possible to achieve with fast and processed food. It is a strong contrast to the main topic of her channel which makes us wonder what really is the content on her channel? Since she is the creator of the channel, she gives it a name: ‘Science, Fitness, Lifestyle’.

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What is the Topic?

Stephanie obtained a Ph.D. in Pathology and Cell Biology, so it is to expect that she whas some videos regarding the matter. Sadly they are not as well viewed as other topics and this may also be the reason there are just a few videos about that. Still, it is clear that she is very proud of the Ph.D. and brings it out even in the channel description. What may be presumed from this is that her degree makes her content more reliable especially because it is in the biology area. People would tend to trust someone who creates content about fitness and a healthy lifestyle more solely because the creator has knowledge in biology. Her body is the alleged proof of that.

Fitness seems indeed to be the main subject she is focusing on. There are plenty of videos about workouts, how to grow muscles and what type of training you can try out. She is following some trends in the exercise community to show how it works for her and if this may be fitting for others.

Finally, there are the food videos, the Fantasy Cheat Day, which according to Youtube, are her most popular videos. Some of her food videos are about what she eats in a day while others help to stay fit and support muscle growth.  The best and most viewed of those videos are the ‘Fantasy Cheat Day’ ones. People are enjoying them and even giving recommendations of what else she could eat. It seems like the people watching these videos aim to see what and how other people eat things which they wouldn’t or couldn’t eat themselves. A replacement for their own deprivation. It leads us to the question, why someone who supposedly aims to promote a fit and healthy lifestyle is trying to eat 10.000 calories in a day and is satisfying such desires.



On the photo above we can see Stephanie Buttermore's YouTube channel sorted by most popular videos. Unquestionably, 11 out of her 12 most popular videos are about the 'Cheat Day'. 

Obviously, it is about the views. Those videos are the most viewed and often recommended, and also attract new subscribers to see her other content. But what was it again? Food, Fitness and a bit of science, all the good things which are creating her appearance to the outside world, but show very less of who the person ‘Stephanie Buttermore’ is. There are almost no ‘follow me around’ or personal talk videos. Maybe she prefers to keep it more professional. But since she is promoting her Ph.D., it is strange that there is a lack of information about nutrition and deeper explanations about the body, fitness, and health on her channel.

A look on her other social media gives us a better insight to what might really be driving Stephanie. On Instagram, she has two accounts. On one (her main account) she is presenting herself and her body but not fitness while on the second one, she is showing everything ‘unhealthy’ she is eating. On this account, we can only see pictures of food. It is hard for us not to get the idea, that she is in conflict with herself. There is a continuous pressure on her from her subscribers to stay put and to look a certain way. The ‘fantasy cheat day’ allows her to escape and promote her channel at the same time. The enigma is what kind of audience she is actually attracting with this content.

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Fitness or unhealthy content?

Cheat days can have a positive or a negative effect on the human mind as well, not just on the body. Just like the process itself, the impact is mostly dependent on the individual that takes part in it. Many people perceive consuming food in different ways which would indicate that they also perceive cheat days differently. Some state that 'cheat days' help them with following their strict diet because it makes it easier for them to stop food craving on other days. Nonetheless, others consider cheat days as more harmful rather than beneficial. When we think about it, the term 'cheat' itself has a negative connotation which instantly makes us think of it as a bad thing to do. It makes people focus more on the cheat day rather than the diet they are following so the only thing they can think about is when their next cheat day is going to be. This unhealthy behavior can ultimately lead to an eating disorder.

The followers' comments also show that, even in other topic videos, Cheat Day also appears as a request. 

On the other hand, if we consider experts and their opinions on cheat days, we may see some contrasting opinions. Some experts say those cheat days are necessary for a person maintaining sanity, while others think that they are not as necessary and lead to the destruction of the fitness goals or the whole 'healthy mindset' they are trying to achieve. Consuming large amounts of foods which are known as unhealthy may be satisfying at the moment you are doing it but the feeling of guilt or regret are most often present after this 'cheating' is over.

If you tell someone they can’t have something, they want it even more. Especially if they consider it being a reward for their healthy eating, they tend to binge under the feeling like they deserve it.

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Cheat days becoming a trend

Taking into consideration the internet and social media platforms such as YouTube, a thing such as a 'cheat day' can escalate really quickly and turn into a trend. At that point, something is mostly seen as an 'offline thing', turns into a spectacle in the 'online world' which people enjoy watching and participating in.

Cheat days have been taken as the base or excuse of creating trends such as "Fantasy Cheat Day", "10.000 calorie challenge" and etc. Many YouTube channels focus solely on creating this kind of content, while others use these trends as a way to gain more views and popularity, even though their channel is not based on this sort of content. They use the benefits of a trend which occurs at the moment in order to enlarge their audience on social media. Most of them find it easy to create these videos because they consist of filming yourself while eating large amounts of junk food. By doing this, they do not just feed themselves, but they feed the needs of the audience as well. 

Even though such a trend is at times considered bizarre, it stills creates an audience which keeps it alive. In this way, the trend creates a new group of people that base their connection in enjoying watching the same trend. Furthermore, a niche based on the trend is created.

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References

Buttermore, S. (2019). Personal Webpage 

Buttermore, S. (2019). YouTube Channel Stephanie Buttermore, (2019, May 17). 

Groome, I. (2017, January 12). Mukbangs show vloggers feasting on screen – but do they help or trigger people with eating problems?

Groome, I. (2017, February 2). What is the 10,000 calorie challenge? Fanatics film themselves gorging on food. 

Mr Porter. (2019). How Do Trends Happen

Nelson, J. (2016, Oktober 31). YouTubers Are Recording Themselves Eating 10,000 Calories And We Can’t Look Away.

Noona, M. (2018). Social Media Fitness Influencers: Innovators and Motivators. Thesis, University of Iowa 

The psychology behind cheat meals. (2018, September 18). 

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