I'm not sure I understand what you're saying. There are lots of examples that could be used to illustrate the transition from modernity to hypermodernity or to "postmodernity."
Your example of food is quite consistent with my thesis. Have you heard of food porn, the glamorous presentation of food in photos, such as on Instagram? Once again, we have a hyperabundance of a good thing, such as YouTube tutorials on how to prepare all kinds of food, but somehow we take it for granted and feel inadequate. We see others creating all this food, but we rarely challenge ourselves by trying something new. We "get off" just on watching others (the so-called influencers) do so.
It's the same with journalism. Of course the internet has impacted journalism. When you say it's 100% bogus, the fact is that younger people still get most of their news from Facebook, not by watching the evening news or reading a newspaper.
I could easily make the same point about music and movies. Lots of critics have pointed out that rock stars and movies stars are dead, because the medium of digital streaming no longer sustains any mystique. It's a question of oversaturation. Music itself isn't irrelevant, but it's a disposable commodity, like anything else that's digital.