South Dakota humorist Dorothy Rosby doesn’t have the stomach for the “wurst” way to spend the 4th of July
It was the 4th of July a few years ago. I was having lunch with my husband in one of those restaurants that has giant TV screens on every wall so that all the diners can watch different games and not have to talk to each other.
The screen I faced featured hot dogs grilling. I was hungry and they looked good. But when the scene changed from grilling hot dogs to eating hot dogs I lost my appetite faster than you can say, “I’ll have mustard with that.”
Actually “eating” doesn’t begin to describe what was happening. Several men wearing matching T-shirts were cramming hot dogs down their gullets like pelicans at a fish hatchery.
I had a lot of questions at that moment, the main one being why? Eating is one of life’s greatest pleasures. It seems like force feeding yourself hot dogs would make it hard to…uh…relish them. Sorry.
Let me pause here to apologize to anyone who has the wherewithal to make it to the end of this essay. Almost nothing lends itself to bad puns more than hot dogs. Except maybe chickens. And I’ll get to those too.
Anyway, $10,000 is why. And a bejeweled mustard-yellow belt and all the hot dogs you can eat. Turns out I was watching Nathan’s Famous International Hot Dog Eating Contest, which is so famous I’d never heard of it. Apparently it’s held annually on the Fourth of July at Coney Island and thousands of people attend to cheer on behavior they’d find repugnant at their own dinner tables.
Thankfully the contest is mercifully short. Ten minutes and it was all over but the bellyache. And I did bellyache. I told my husband that if the purpose of the contest is to promote hot dogs, it didn’t work on me. I said it would be a long time before I could even look at a hot dog again, let alone eat one. And I told him watching people stuff themselves with hot dogs is no way to spend Independence Day, though I imagine stuffing yourself with them would be even…wurst.
He said, “nice hit” and clapped for the baseball game on the screen behind me.
The winner in the men’s division downed 62 hot dogs. And the winner in the women’s division packed in 39 dogs while her competitors played ketchup. You are what you eat though, so everyone’s a wiener. I’m sorry. I just can’t stop myself.
I won’t be watching the competition this year but you can if you have the stomach for it. It’s broadcast by ESPN—you know, the sports channel—which seems odd. Nobody thinks it’s sport when I have two pieces of pumpkin pie on Thanksgiving or eat the sharing size of peanut M&M’S all by myself.
There’s NFL, MLB and the MLE, the Major League Eating Federation. I’m not making that up. The MLE hosts around fifty eating contests every year—tamales in Louisville, oysters in New Orleans and wings in Buffalo, to name a few. Their mission, in part, is to “…publicize and execute eating events in a wide variety of food disciplines. I realize “discipline” isn’t normally the word that comes to my mind when someone overeats anything, including hot dogs. But let me be…frank. I think discipline is exactly what it would take to keep 62 of them down until the contest is over.
I shouldn’t judge. I engaged in my share of eating competitions with my younger brother when I was growing up, including one every year at our annual July 4 neighborhood picnic. It wasn’t based on winning a cash prize though. We both really loved my mother’s fried chicken and the drumsticks were our favorites. Even combined we never ate close to 62 drumsticks though, but only because my mom didn’t fry that many chickens.
And I never won either. My brother had the appetite of a hockey team and he was a much faster eater than I was so he always got more drumsticks. That still sticks in my craw.
I told you I’d get to chickens.
Dorothy Rosby of Rapid City is a syndicated humor columnist and the author of several humor books including Alexa’s a Spy and Other Things to be Ticked Off About: Humorous Essays on the Hassles of our Time. Contact her at drosby@rushmore.com
Photo: public domain, wikimedia commons
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