Eating Contests- ultimate slap to hungry people?
Posted: Thu Jul 05, 2007 5:40 am
I have always had a problem with eating contests. Not only do I think they're stupid in their own right but when I hear about people scarfing 50 weiners to win a prize or a title, it seems like a total insult to all the people in the world who go without food because they have to.
I see it as extreme gluttony. In the US, we have a lot of all you can eat buffets and you'd be sick at the amount of food that goes in the garbage because people get greedy and take too much.
I'd rather see someone get some food to Africa or even to hungry people in our own country and get acknowledgement for that rather than be crowned for cramming a waste of food down their gullet.
What do you think about this?
July 4, 2007
23-Year-Old Eats His Way to Hot Dog Title
By KEN BELSON
The top dog is top dog no longer.
For 12 grueling minutes, Takeru Kobayashi pounded hot dog after hot dog into his mouth, defying the pain in his jaw that might have humbled other men.
It was a script out of a “Rocky movie, with an upstart trying to fell the champion. And just as in those movies, the upstart and the champion embraced in the end, knowing that a sequel was inevitable.
That was how it went after Joey Chestnut, a 23-year-old engineering student from California, ate a world-record 66 hot dogs to unseat the six-time champ, Mr. Kobayashi, at the Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest in Coney Island.
Chants of “U.S.A. and “Joey! Joey! rose from the crowd when Mr. Chestnut hoisted the mustard-yellow champion’s belt.
Mr. Kobayashi bowed and was characteristically humble in defeat. But he also pointed straight at Mr. Chestnut and yelled, “I will definitely beat him next year.
Though there were enough patriots in the crowd for an American to win the belt for the first time this decade and be cheerfully welcomed, Mr. Kobayashi clearly has established a following. Fans flooded the stage in search of autographs after Mr. Kobayashi lost the championship this year by three hot dogs.
One fan carried a sign in Japanese that read, “If we get married, I’ll make you hot dogs every day.
The outcome was unclear until the end, the rivals being neck and neck throughout the competition. After both men appeared to finish with 63 hot dogs eaten, the judges spent several minutes in a somewhat bizarre recount. To determine a winner, the judges counted the scraps left on the plates.
The closeness of the contest made it more than live up to expectations. In June, Mr. Chestnut broke Mr. Kobayashi’s world record by six hot dogs, stuffing down 59 and a bite in 12 minutes. Beyond that, Mr. Kobayashi reported on his Web site in late June that he had an unexplained ailment that limited the motion of his jaw, so that he could open his mouth no wider than a fingertip, and even that with pain.
As recently as last week, he appeared to be unable to eat anything more substantial than yogurt and rice porridge, making it unclear whether he could compete at all today. But a few hours before the event, Mr. Kobayashi went to an acupuncturist to relieve his pain.
“I lost, but since I couldn’t do my best, it’s a good thing that there’s a new champion, Mr. Kobayashi said.
I see it as extreme gluttony. In the US, we have a lot of all you can eat buffets and you'd be sick at the amount of food that goes in the garbage because people get greedy and take too much.
I'd rather see someone get some food to Africa or even to hungry people in our own country and get acknowledgement for that rather than be crowned for cramming a waste of food down their gullet.
What do you think about this?
July 4, 2007
23-Year-Old Eats His Way to Hot Dog Title
By KEN BELSON
The top dog is top dog no longer.
For 12 grueling minutes, Takeru Kobayashi pounded hot dog after hot dog into his mouth, defying the pain in his jaw that might have humbled other men.
It was a script out of a “Rocky movie, with an upstart trying to fell the champion. And just as in those movies, the upstart and the champion embraced in the end, knowing that a sequel was inevitable.
That was how it went after Joey Chestnut, a 23-year-old engineering student from California, ate a world-record 66 hot dogs to unseat the six-time champ, Mr. Kobayashi, at the Nathan’s Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest in Coney Island.
Chants of “U.S.A. and “Joey! Joey! rose from the crowd when Mr. Chestnut hoisted the mustard-yellow champion’s belt.
Mr. Kobayashi bowed and was characteristically humble in defeat. But he also pointed straight at Mr. Chestnut and yelled, “I will definitely beat him next year.
Though there were enough patriots in the crowd for an American to win the belt for the first time this decade and be cheerfully welcomed, Mr. Kobayashi clearly has established a following. Fans flooded the stage in search of autographs after Mr. Kobayashi lost the championship this year by three hot dogs.
One fan carried a sign in Japanese that read, “If we get married, I’ll make you hot dogs every day.
The outcome was unclear until the end, the rivals being neck and neck throughout the competition. After both men appeared to finish with 63 hot dogs eaten, the judges spent several minutes in a somewhat bizarre recount. To determine a winner, the judges counted the scraps left on the plates.
The closeness of the contest made it more than live up to expectations. In June, Mr. Chestnut broke Mr. Kobayashi’s world record by six hot dogs, stuffing down 59 and a bite in 12 minutes. Beyond that, Mr. Kobayashi reported on his Web site in late June that he had an unexplained ailment that limited the motion of his jaw, so that he could open his mouth no wider than a fingertip, and even that with pain.
As recently as last week, he appeared to be unable to eat anything more substantial than yogurt and rice porridge, making it unclear whether he could compete at all today. But a few hours before the event, Mr. Kobayashi went to an acupuncturist to relieve his pain.
“I lost, but since I couldn’t do my best, it’s a good thing that there’s a new champion, Mr. Kobayashi said.