Netflix and Chew: How Binge Watching Affects Our Eating Habits

Sumsita Baral, NPR
January 4, 2016

Researchers have been studying the links between TV viewing and mindless eating for years. The news isn’t good for our waistlines.

Bingeing has become many people’s favorite way to consume television. But marathon-viewing doesn’t just change how we watch, it also affects how we eat.

While the culture of the Netflix all-nighter is relatively recent, researchers have been studying the links between TV viewing and mindless eating for years. And the news isn’t good for our waistlines.

“There’s convincing evidence in adults that the more television they watch, the more likely they are to gain weight or become overweight or obese,” says Lilian Chueng, director of health promotion and communication at Harvard School of Public Health and author of SAVOR: Mindful Eating, Mindful Life.

She says the sedentary nature of prolonged viewing as just one contributing factor: “TV viewing may also promote poor dietary behavior due to frequent exposure to unhealthy food and beverage marketing, as well as providing more opportunities for unhealthy snacking, and interfering with adequate sleep.”