
- Hey! Foie Terrine! Over here! Hey!
You were enjoying a meal out with a friend. The pleasant atmosphere had relaxed you, the food was very good, and the conversation engaging. Then:
A few minutes later, as a server walked past with a plate of foie gras terrine, 18 food bloggers aimed their cameras and prepared to fire anew. “This is the game we all now play,” chef and owner Ludo Lefebvre said through gritted teeth. “We cook, we smile โ and the people, they don’t eat. They get their cameras.”
On the heels of a New York Times article addressing the issue of people who photograph their food, P.J. Huffstutter of the LA Times has also decided to grapple with the subject. But the focus isnโt just on those who snap pictures of dishes theyโve made at home, itโs aimed at a more pernicious shutterbug: the โfood paparazzi.โ
Digital cameras are now being sold with โfoodโ settings; Flickr is rife with snapshots of long digested dinners; a meal in Portland without a flash or three is becoming increasingly rare. Whatโs to do, if anything?
When I first started this gig, two years ago, I almost never saw people taking pictures of their food. These days itโs more likely Iโll see someone taking multiple pictures of every plate that hits the table. It annoys me to no end. It must have something to do with the flash, and the sense of miss-placed priorities. The flash is distracting to say the least, but the miss-placed priorities (eat the fucking thing!) are simply grating.
Donโt tell that to this LA food pap:
“I’m sharing my experiences with my friends,” said Hong Pham, 33, a Los Angeles radiologist who runs the food blog Ravenous Couple. “Why shouldn’t I share what inspires me?”
To paraphrase Christian Bale: โYou got any fucking idea about, hey, itโs fucking distracting having somebody taking a picture in the middle of the fucking dinner service? Give me a fucking answer! What donโt you get about it?โ
Ahem. I am not in any way a saint when it comes to this issue. There have been very rare occasions when deadline pressure forces me to take photos of my own meal to run in the Mercury. In these situations I feel incredibly conspicuous, and more than a little sheepish. I also feel like thereโs a distinct possibility Iโm jarring my fellow diners from the enjoyment of their meal.
Yes, the Mercury does send out food photographers. Generally, knowing theyโll make a scene, they shoot the food during off hours (to get help from staff) and during the day (to get better light). In that way, their impact to a restaurantโs atmosphere is minimized.
For some reason, the food-paparazzi thing feels more like a break in the social contract. I consider it as rude as texting in a movie. But restaurants are funny places when it comes to this kind of behavior. Iโve dined beside plenty of tables where someoneโs decided the newest overwhelming horse-sweat-and-lilac Calvin Klein fragrance was just the thing to pair with a delicate pasta dish, or that a romantic dinner was the best place to have an emotionally raw and awkward break-up.
Iโm in complete agreement with Huffstutter :
In some ways, the culinary world brought this on itself. As public interest in fine dining has grown, more restaurants have been catering to those appetites in settings far more casual than those of their predecessors. Yet for all that was gained with such expansion, something also was lost: civility.
I really donโt have anything against photographing your food. Hell, if you take a look at my own Twitter feed youโll find dozens of porny food photos Iโve taken of various meals. However, they were meals I made myselfโฆ At home. And thatโs where I wish the food paparazzi would leave their cameras. How about you?

I’ve been doing it for years and it still weirds me out. I make a point to wait until the waiter/waitress turns their back.
If they can go without a flash I have no objection as its the flash that tends to impinge on everyone around them.
Also folks should avoid this in general at places with shared table space (clyde common or the like).
On the one hand, I’ve been guilty of this… if I’m eating something/somewhere really fantastic and special, I might snap a picture with my iPhone and brag about… *ahem*… “share” it on FB.
On the other hand, it’s annoying as hell when people haul in their cameras to restaurants with the primary goal of photographing their meal for… whatever. This is especially annoying in family-style seating scenarios (ie: when diners are seated not at individual tables, but rather long communal tables). Both times I’ve had dinner at Clyde Common, the people sitting across from us hauled in their cameras… and I’m not talking about little digital things. These were good-sized cameras with flashes. When their food would arrive, they proceeded to fuss over and position their plates at interesting angles, fuck around with focus, and even collect candles from around the table for “the right lighting.”
I’m not saying I wolf down my food without appreciating the visual aspects of it, but it’s not necessarily something I need to record for posterity.
I don’t know, I kinda like seeing that plate of fries that Kiala and Graham are sharing from different angles on Twitter.
These days, a lot of people think the minutia of their life is interesting, when it’s really really not.
@DJ: Thanks! We do it for the fans. And also the lulz. Always for the lulz.
Food Dude just wrote about this, too: http://www.portlandfoodanddrink.com/2010/0…
Next up: Stool Paparazzi.
Those fries were DELICIOUS.
@tsw: I have long wanted to photograph my every bowel movement. I think this is my chance to do so. Now I know what do with my tumblr account.