The short version.
WIEIAD is a content format where a creator films a day's worth of food. The popular versions skew restrictive — 500–1,200 calories shown as 'eating clean,' 'macros,' or 'discipline.' Most do not disclose actual calorie counts; the visual implication does the work. Teen girls are the target audience and the most affected, mimicking the eating patterns of creators much smaller and more disordered than the videos let on.
The platforms and contexts.
TikTok, Instagram Reels, YouTube Shorts. Often paired with workout or 'morning routine' content.
The timeline.
WIEIAD evolved from earlier food-diary blogging (2010s). The restrictive TikTok form took off around 2021 and has been a steady share of teen-girl content since.
The core facts a parent needs.
- An active adolescent girl needs 2,000–2,400 calories a day. Many viral WIEIAD videos show 800–1,200.
- The format normalizes 'I just don't eat that' as a personality trait rather than a clinical concern.
- Creators are often themselves in disordered eating, sometimes deeply — but the algorithm presents them as 'wellness' authorities.
What's actually at stake.
- Restriction modeling: teens directly try to match what they see, often in secret.
- Erosion of normal hunger cues — eating becomes a moral question rather than a physiological one.
- Eating disorders developing under cover of 'just being healthy.'
Concrete next steps.
- Show the math. With a quick calculator (e.g., a TDEE calculator) you can show your teen that a 1,000-calorie day is half what her body needs.
- Eat together without commentary. Family meals with no weight or food-quality talk are the most studied protective factor for adolescent eating.
- If her actual eating starts to resemble the videos: don't wait for visible weight loss. Talk to a pediatric provider with eating-disorder familiarity.
Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline, 24/7) · Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line) · Find a child psychiatrist at aacap.org · For immediate danger, call 911.