If you watched the news on Sunday, you were likely as surprised as I
to find that there is, in fact, an organization afoot that promotes
abuse of the intestinal tract. The fine folks at Major League Eating
held their annual hot-dog eating contest at Coney Island in NYC and
well, let's put it this way: The World Cup of hot dog consumption is
safely in American hands for now and for the foreseeable future. The
only way to wrest that cup from the sweaty hands of four-time winner
Joey Chestnut would be to offer him something else to eat.
From the press release offered by proud MLE brass:
Number-one-ranked
eater Joey Chestnut won his fourth straight title by winning the
Nathan's Famous Fourth of July Hot Dog-Eating Contest in Coney Island,
downing 54 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes in oppressive heat to retain
possession of the Coveted Musted Yellow Belt.
In second place was Eater X of New York City with 45 HDBs and in third
was Patrick Bertoletti of Chicago with 37. The 100-pound Sonya Thomas
ate 36 and Bob Shoudt consumed 34.
Erik The Red Denmark consumed 32, Gravy Brown ate 31, Allen Goldstein
28, Ben Monson and Juliet Lee 27, Sean Gorden 26.5, Pete Devekos and
Badlands Booker 24, Crazy Legs Conti 27, Bryan Beard 16.5 and Kris Adams
11.
It would seem that in their haste to be a
true major-league sport, and also to separate themselves from lowly
amateur overeaters, these folks have come up with their own jargon.
So
whereas one sportswriter might be able to write that Nick Markakis had 3
RBIs one shimmering Sunday afternoon, the scribe assigned to this
competition is given the acronym HDBs to work with, as in "In second place was Eater X of New York City with 45 HDBs." That's
45 hot dogs and buns, if you're scoring at home. And if you've eaten
45 hot dogs and buns, chances are, you will not be scoring at home.
It
would also appear that the writer of this press release is so deeply
imbued in the speech patterns of New York City that he or she spelled
"mustard" as it must sound to one from Gotham: "musted." That's why
it's still so funny to me that a headwaiter from up there once called a
buddy of mine a "stooopid baaaasted."
There's one more
sad thing about how our love for shoving far too much food down our
necks has gone too commercial. These guys learned from the folks in
tennis and NASCAR: if there is an available square inch of skin or
metal, cover it with advertising and make more money. Thus, MLE has an
official antacid, and winner Chestnut was seeing hoisting a pink bottle
of Pepto-Bismol moments after his stomach-turning accomplishment.
Good idea, Joey.
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