The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz - PTFO - “Fifty Shades of Brown”: The Ins and Outs of Competitive Eating, with Joey Chestnut
Episode Date: August 24, 2024Competitive eating is a sport. That’s the belief of Joey Chestnut, the greatest eater of all time — and man, do we agree with the 16-time Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest champion now. A...head of his Labor Day duel against rival Takeru Kobayashi, Joey reveals everything we ever wanted to know about jaw exercises, coffee enemas, and what he refuses to eat. Also: chokeholds, milk chugging, the danger of endorsing veganism, and inadvertent excrement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Pablo Torre Finds Out. I am Pablo Torre and today we're going to find out what this sound is.
50 Shades of Brown, brother. 50 Shades of Brown.
Right after this ad.
You're listening to Giraffe King's Network.
How vividly do you remember the 2006 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest? I was 22 years old and that was the year I lost.
That is the voice of Joey Chestnut, the greatest competitive eater of all time.
Also, the very first person I ever interviewed
as a Sports Illustrated intern, 18 years ago.
I'd been doing good in practice going into it, and I just, I got nervous.
Keep an eye on the one to score for as we approach the halfway point. I just, I got nervous. I was sitting 10 feet away from you, watching you on stage. Joey Chestnut doing everything he can,
continuing with his style, continuing to juggle it down.
Somewhat, somewhat maniacal jaw movement,
but Kobayashi again realizing that he has a little bit of a lead
and it's all about the wins.
Obviously not looking to prove something.
He lost by two.
I want to say 54, and I did 52.
Four, three, two, one, Bunga Yunga!
And Kobayashi takes it again.
Unbelievable, but Joey Chestnut.
Dude, do you remember just the emotions you felt
after you realized that you were two
HDBs hot dogs plus buns short. I
Remember eating next to him and feeling like oh my god. I'm not catching him. It's a terrible feeling knowing that
Like you're just not you don't have it that day. I
Know I should be eating faster and I'm other athletes, whether they're runners or whether they're pitchers, where they're throwing a ball, it is just not going where they want it to go.
My swallows weren't working right.
I mean, everything was pouring out of you in some form,
I assume as soon as this thing was over, but just tears.
I just remember seeing your face.
The pain seemed emotional as opposed to the physical one that I might have assumed,
having never seen a thing like this before.
It's something that I have to remember also.
I don't want to get complacent.
Just because I'm breaking records in practice doesn't mean that my competitor isn't.
And he's going to be pushing hard too.
I have to keep pushing hard.
It's actually really good to remember the times where my body didn't cooperate.
So I need to reinforce all the things be aware that in the years since I watched Joey Chestnut compete
at that Nathan's Hot Dog contest back in 2006, the guy has achieved a truly horrifying level of gastrointestinal
dominance.
In 2007, for instance, the very next year, Joey dethroned the incumbent champion, his
rival, the legendary Takeru Kobayashi of Japan, and then he proceeded to break 55 different
world eating records.
But on July 4th of this year, as you may have noticed, neither Joey nor Kobayashi was in
the Nathan's Contest in their usual place on the corner of Surf and Stillwell Avenues
in Coney Island.
The whole controversy being a thing we'll get into in a bit here. But what you should know right now is that both men have agreed to a duel – a hot dog
eat-off live on Netflix this Labor Day, one-on-one, September 2nd – which has had the effect
of reviving another, even older form of controversy about whether major league eaters
are even athletes at all. And so what I wanted to do here as the host of a Technically Sports show
is begin by finding out how Joey Chestnut, who's now 40 years old and now weighing in at a jarringly normal 230 pounds, made this his
full-time job in the first place.
When I fell in love with it, I did the first contest and I didn't even want to do the
first contest.
I was shy about eating in front of people.
I was trying to get an engineering degree and it was never my goal to be in the public
eye.
So when I started, I was like a deer in headlights.
What was scary about it to you back then?
Well, my whole life, like you're, you're talked to kind of hold back.
You gotta eat with manners.
I remember growing up, I'd almost get in trouble for eating too quick or being
the first one to finish.
Or when I was in college, I'd be like,
all right, don't make a fool of myself.
Don't be the first one to finish and get seconds.
And I was conscious of it.
It was weird, like the first contest, it was like,
I loved it.
I didn't have to hold back.
My little brother signed me up for my first contest
when I was 21, and it just kind of snowballed.
I was like, oh my God, they're paying me to eat.
I didn't even win the first contest, the lobster eating contest. I typed the third and I was like,
oh, I knew I loved it. And two weeks later there was an asparagus contest
and I put some thought into it and I got the win. I was a weekend warrior. I continued school and
I started working construction management.
I'd leave work early on Fridays, eat on Saturday, go back home on Sunday, then get back to a
normal day job.
And eventually eating just grew to a point where I was able to make it my jobby job.
Can you name off the top of your head all of the foods you've competitively eaten?
There's a World Chili Eating Contest.
9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Stop, stop, stop.
Two and a quarter gallons of chili.
Jesus Christ.
There's bagel, bagelmania.
5, 4, 3, two, one.
Put down your bagels.
Put down your bagels.
Put down your bagels.
They were actually really big bagels.
I only think I did 11 or 12 of those bagels in eight minutes.
There's hot dogs.
They're waiting to see if he finishes it off
and does it again.
Looking to become a four times 70 dog consumer.
Unbelievable.
Nobody has done it better.
Nobody has done it with greater consumption.
Nobody's stomach has lasted as long as Joey's.
It's a dirty dozen for Chestnut, number 12 at Nathan's.
Katz's Deli.
I think it was an eight minute contest and I did, Number 12 at Nathan's. Katz's Deli.
I think it was an eight minute contest and I did, I want to say, equivalent to like 14 of their whole sandwiches. Which are, oh they're my own sandwiches.
Oh, so wait, so this is, okay, so immediately though I'm wondering like, how often are you doing a competitive eating contest and thinking to yourself, this tastes
good.
Oh, that's the best.
It's so much better.
Like I naturally love hot dogs.
I love an all beef hot dog.
The hardest part for me in that contest is having to dunk the bun in water.
Oh, it's so hard.
And chili, good chili is good.
Like some of yours with the chili contest, they have those like kind of a weird chili
where they put cinnamon in it.
And that would never agree with me.
And I was never breaking a record on those years.
But when it's good chili, I definitely dominate.
Good food is always easier to eat.
I hear that people like,
people like, oh, do you even taste the food?
I was like, of course I tasted it.
But if I, if they're,
it's like a race car driver in a bad road, if the road is bad,
everything there, it's going to, they're going to hit a bump and it's going to be even worse.
And like, if there's a bad taste, I'm going to be hitting it again and again.
And it's going to, it's going to irritate me.
Okay.
So as the engineer and you is sort of assessing why you are so good at all of this.
How much of it do you think is psychological, mental versus some
physical gift that you can't quite explain?
How do you sort of see that pie chart?
Yeah, there's, there's definitely a little bit of a physical gift.
I've always been a big eater.
I I'm really good at solving problems and I am competitive and
I've gotten a lot
better over the over the years. I've run into competitive eaters who have amazing, absolutely
amazing raw natural talent. But competitive eating is a smaller thing. There's no books
written about it. There's no trainers who can give you a wealth of knowledge. And I
give people hints right now and then, like how to push
themselves and just find that right rhythm. You have to be able to control all your breathing
through your nose, little breaths. And also like block breathing, just because you exhale,
doesn't mean you have to inhale right away. You can exhale and then your lungs are empty. So then
it's easier to swallow what's in your mouth.
And then you sneak in a breath through your nose and you find that rhythm of the swallows
and bites in between these breaths and you can keep this amazing rhythm up for quite
a while.
Same way as runners.
Runners count their breaths in between their steps.
It's silly just to eat, eat, eat,
until you run out of breath and then breathe.
I remember watching a YouTube video about,
I don't know if you've seen them, but like throat singers,
people who are like using their breathing
and also like alternating the ability to make sounds
with their like throat muscles,
while also doing like this very strange
circular breathing technique.
I'm realizing that like, I think you might just have been on your own parallel
path to that, except instead of like music and song, it's crystal hamburgers.
Yeah, I used to play trumpet and circular breathing. You could use almost use your
throat. You could use your throat to hold a little bit of air and then use your throat to push it out while breathing in through your nose. I had to perfect everything. Swallowing,
going from empty to full. I'm almost embarrassed how much thought I put into eating.
The strategy, the methodology, the training for all of this, you mentioned full and empty
and just the way that you sort of strategize.
Can you explain that in a sort of like competitive eating 101 way to me? Like what do you mean
by full and empty and all that stuff?
Empty means that not only is there no food in my stomach, but there's like no food in
my whole digestive tract. I've done a cleanse for about a day and a half and I can suck
in my stomach and like, oh yeah, things are going to settle deep
and it's easier when you're absolutely empty. It's weird like these muscles do get tired.
Your throat muscles.
The muscles in the throat and esophagus, these are the peristalsis muscles that move the food
from your mouth to your stomach. When they're slow like that year 2006, there's nothing you can do about it.
Even if you have the tolerance, you have the capacity, if these muscles are just not working
for you, you're out of luck. So it takes a long time to figure out how to train those muscles
to be able to move 15, 16, 17 pounds of food in eight or 10 minutes.
Whereas like a normal meal is about a pound and a half, two pounds
with water and people eat that over 30 minutes.
During the contest, I have to change the way I'm eating to certain muscles get tired.
And I can't eat the same way I did in minute one, like minute eight,
I'm not eating the same way as I did in minute one.
So I have to practice when I'm changing certain things, when I'm taking smaller bites,
when I'm swallowing a little bit less, when I'm leaning on the water, taking a little bit more
water in. I've been really lucky that I love it. It's like solving a problem and I enjoy pushing it.
How do you learn all of the things you just described?
Is that trial and error?
Is that just like testing?
Writing it down.
Yeah, and for a long, long time I kept the food journal.
And I'll still, when I start training,
I start writing down my whole daily routine
and my weight, how I'm feeling, what I'm eating, and the jaw and throat exercises I'm doing.
Sometimes I try things and they don't help. And sometimes they help. So there are different
exercises over the years I've learned that help quite a bit. And I'm a believer in practice.
I don't leave it up to chance. I break records in practice. I enjoy every bit of it.
Everything from the fasting, the cleanse beforehand,
to the actual practice, to the being bloated afterwards
and feeling like, I don't know, I wouldn't say,
I don't know, I enjoy it.
I enjoy being gross and disgusting afterwards.
Yeah, what are you putting in your body
during like normal times between contests?
What are you eating?
Yeah.
As soon as I can eat after practice, I'm a, it's super high fiber.
I have lettuce, cucumber, lemon dressing, and it's pretty, it'll change, but it's very,
very low carb, no sugar.
And then I'll introduce protein.
I can do a practice about every six or seven days,
maybe five if I lose the weight,
if things are moving great.
Some days I'll have a normal day of eating at all.
But so then I just go back into cleansing mode.
Cleansing mode, it's just lemon juice with water.
And there's a little bit of protein supplement.
But I do crazy detoxes and where I do coffee enemas and weird s***.
Like instead to make sure that my body is getting rid of things.
I put a lot of stuff in my body.
So I put in some work to make sure that I'm getting rid of it.
And then your doctors say that
oh those things don't do anything. I was like well I've seen things come out clearly, clearly
weren't coming out on their own. And so I think you have to be willing to think outside the box
a little bit. So I'm just going to jump in here to officially posit something, which is that no normal person
should be willing to think outside the box like Joey Chestnut does.
I mean, look, if it wasn't clear already, great competitive eaters strategically adopt
what amounts to an inadvisable cycle of extreme eating disorders.
Even beyond all of the throat muscle workouts and the hours upon hours upon hours of deeply
methodical practice, this degree of self-endangerment actually speaks directly to the debate that
I mentioned at the outset of this episode.
Because you may refuse to view competitive eating as a sport,
and you are by no means alone.
But Joey Chestnut made a very intentional choice to go the other way.
In order to put that much time into it, I had to consider a sport.
Not a hobby, not just something that I was having fun with.
In order to put that much time into it, I had to consider a sport.
And when I did, it paid off.
Just like a football player, they go into a game. They're going in and no one
they're going to get hurt. They're going to finish that game and be in pain. Eventually
baseball player. They know their arm is going to be sore after the game. They go in knowing
there's going to be pain. A lot of people go into these eating contests thinking they're
going to eat. It'll be fun. Like now, I go in knowing I'm going to be uncomfortable.
I'm going to be bloated.
I'm going to be paying for it for days.
I had to look at it like other, other athletes.
And once, once you go in knowing it's going to be uncomfortable, you
can push yourself a little bit harder.
What won't you eat at this point?
What things are you like?
I'm not doing that.
That's that's too gross for me.
If they do it in a weird way, like I'll eat, I'll eat something.
Like just recently, somebody wanted me to do a spam eating contest.
It'll like, how do you, how do you serve in spam?
Like they just wanted to see like canned, like it's all gelatinous spam.
It's wet, wet spam.
Yeah.
Like if they try to make it a gross contest, that's not fun.
I did a brain taco eating contest and the way they cooked them up, they didn't taste
that bad.
But they looked like brains, so it was a little bit rough.
The most disgusting thing you regret having competed in food wise is what?
So I love ribs.
I did this rib eating contest.
The ribs were dry.
I couldn't tell if it was going to be bone and meat.
And it tasted like an ashtray.
So I hate to be picky, but yeah, when there's a food I naturally love, I hold the record for ribs, like 13 pounds of meat.
Right, help me help you is what you're thinking to yourself.
I love to eat and I love to push myself,
but why would you give us garbage food?
I didn't realize I hate to be picky
would be a thing that you would say
when talking about your eating strategy, but it makes sense. It makes sense that you would say when talking about your eating strategy.
But it makes sense.
It makes sense that you would have standards.
How dare I suppose that you're just down to just prove that you can do any of this no
matter how it tastes.
It's just a little bit of thought.
You watch the Olympics, their conditions have a effect on everything.
The food is a condition that if it's good food,
those are good conditions.
How often are you done with the contest and you physically feel unwell?
These days I'm well, like my body's rejecting the food,
and then there's something wrong.
When was the last time I was physically unwell?
It was a smaller contest where it was hottest tech outside, but
it was about three years ago.
What was the food?
It was a mutton sliders or mutton sandwiches.
And I didn't even break the record.
It happens.
And you try to figure out what it is.
Like whether it was the heat, the water,
tolerance for the food.
But these days with hot dogs and any major food,
I have enough of a tolerance.
And I'm so regimented with making sure
that I'm hydrated enough that it's not even a risk anymore.
I need to be able to push harder.
So speaking of pushing, Joey Chestnut, tell me about your poop.
Oh my God.
Which ones?
What comes to mind?
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So the day after, is it the day after?
Is it the night after the contest?
How long does it take?
You're smiling and laughing already at my naivete as to how
this all works inside of you.
Oh my God. We're going to get, we're going to get censored for this.
No, this is, this is a free speech platform.
Sometimes the first urge, I'm like, oh my God, I pushed one out. It's coming now.
I wasn't as empty as I thought I was. And I'm standing up and usually like the greasier the food is, the more that grease is running
through you.
I'm drinking warm water during the event and that's to help things keep moving.
About five hours later, that's contest is working and it's going to come in waves.
And your body, then that's part of the whole, wouldn't say trick, but being
absolutely empty makes it easier to move.
And then also your body can only absorb so many calories.
It's without getting graphic.
And then slowly things settle down and it's more and more normal.
I like how you attempted to be discreet by saying, without being graphic,
I'm here to be graphic.
Is your post-contest life just hanging around the toilet?
Like when do you regain the ability to move freely around the cabin as it were?
And it's about eight hours later, I'm starting to feel better.
And, and it is, and when I say feeling better, I'm still bloated.
I'm still lethargic.
I'm still going to get a look in the eye and like, Oh, I got to run.
And there's about four hours after then the four hours after that, that are,
you know, every athlete, when you're pushing into
the limit, there's a little ugliness.
If you see the marathon runners after the marathon, they look like they're dead.
And my mind, my afterwards is a little bit a little rough as well.
Do you ever just like look down at the bowl and feel impressed with what you've just done?
Oh, Pablo, there have been times where I feel so good afterwards.
I'm like, wow.
It feels too damn good.
I believe it at that.
I do want to just follow up though on the first thing you said, which is I believe you said that sometimes you're mid contest and you realize I have just pooped while standing
up.
No, no, no.
I didn't say that.
Did I?
I think I said-
Kind of sounded like you did.
I said at the end of the contest, then the first feeling I have is to take s***.
It's a... There's nothing wrong with that.
Hold on. There is nothing wrong with any of this. This is a judgment-free zone. I
merely want to inquire whether when you are getting the mustard yellow belt
placed atop your body, you simultaneously are thinking, I need to take a f*** right now.
I mean, we're adults. Just because we can take a s*** doesn't mean you have to take a right now. I mean, we're adults.
Just because we can take it doesn't mean you have to take it.
Just because you are tired doesn't mean you take it.
You need to take a nap.
You know what I mean?
I go back to run a lot.
You think their bodies tell them to keep running?
No, their body is telling them to stop.
They're in control of their body.
They're making it right.
We're talking little things in the body.
I just got to ignore certain feelings.
You had, I don't know if you still have a roommate.
No, no, I have three dogs now and a fiance.
Okay, fantastic.
Not really a roommate.
Well, technically, technically,
the most intimate of roommates.
How would you say it's like to be your roommate?
Whether it was back in the day or now with your fiance, what's it like to be around you
in the aftermath?
I feel bad for him.
I feel bad for him. I feel bad for him. I must have some redeeming qualities
because they put up with a lot. What's the worst part of being cohabitating with Joey Chestnut
after he has just won yet another title? We've talked about a little bit of the big one, but
yeah, everything like when I'm on a crazy diet, I don't, I
don't have to keep any bread in the house and no sugars.
I can't have it in the house.
Otherwise I'll eat it.
You know, the thing that was most shocking to me when I first saw you and Kobayashi
to Carol Kobayashi, of course, on that stage in Oh six surfing still well, Nathan's
hot dog eating contest, Coney Island.
on that stage in 06, surfing still well, Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, Coney Island.
It was that you guys looked just in terms of stature,
like fairly normal, if not fit people.
And the sport trends that way?
When did it get that way?
Are you, who's responsible for that?
Like it's just one of the more surprising things
if you've never seen competitive eating before
that guys look like you and Kobayashi,
and which is to say you have like muscles,
you're working out, you're like.
Yeah, Kobayashi is whipped right now.
Dude, he's the one who made it like,
oh, it's not just the 400 pound guys.
And it's not the 500 pound guys.
You have to be able to push yourself.
You have to be healthy. I mean, I've never been super healthy. I love to eat too much.
I'm fit enough to push myself to need it. Not too much else. But over the last decade,
you'll look at the other top guys, their former bodybuilders, their CrossFit guys.
Jeff Asbury used to be a power lifter. They enjoy pushing themselves. They enjoy
making their body work for them. This year at Nathan's, I wasn't there,
but I think there were three guys who did over 50 hot dogs.
And so now we arrive at the point where we should probably explain why Joey Chestnut,
of all people, was not at Nathan's last month, despite being the reigning champion, and despite
having 16 mustard yellow belts to his name.
And the reason is because Joey Chestnut was exiled.
Allegedly exiled by Nathan's and Major League Eating and its chairman slash master of ceremonies, George Shea.
All because Joey Chestnut had done the unthinkable. He had signed an endorsement deal with the brand Impossible Foods, a maker of vegan hot
dogs.
Last night on X, Chestnut said he was gutted to learn that after 19 years he has been banned
from the contest.
To set the record straight, I do not have a contract with Major League Eating or Nathan's
and they are looking to change the rules from past years as it relates to other partners I can work with," he wrote.
All of which left Joey with this terrible mutton sandwich level taste in his mouth.
And so neither he nor his archrival, Takeru Kobayashi, was in attendance at this event
that they, more than anybody else ever, made
famous.
Kobayashi, by the way, has had his own famously fractured business relationship with Major
League Eating.
Earlier this year, in fact, Kobayashi had announced his retirement from the sport due
to what he called health concerns. But as for the whereabouts of Joey Chestnut
on July 4th, 2024, it is safe to say that he had
a different set of concerns.
I didn't watch it.
I was in Texas getting ready for a contest against some soldiers.
So there were four soldiers versus me.
That is 16-time champion of the nation's famous hot dog eating contest, Joey Chestnut.
But he was at Fort Bliss in El Paso for this event last night.
Joey, the Jaws chestnut, was doing what he does in El Paso for this event last night. Joey the
Jaws chestnut was doing what he does best and that is eating hot dogs. He
downed a whopping 57, 57 in just five and a half minutes. That's like half of the
time that he normally does it with the Nathan's eating contest and get this he
beat out a team of four soldiers, a team of them who could only stomach a combined
total of 49 hot dogs themselves.
You defeated America's military,
their combined might, demolishing them, eating hot dogs.
But the feeling of not being there must have been strange.
I look at it as a loss almost,
than what I lost in 2015, I came back, I annihilated everybody.
I broke records.
And that's the way I'm looking at this contest with Kobayashi.
I'm just super angry that I couldn't go and I'm gonna take it out on this contest.
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The emotion that you have in talking about this
is unsurprising to me, given that I saw
you 18 years ago crying after that first loss.
And now, when I sort of get a sense of how deeply you care about this, I just wonder
how this has sort of shaped your relationship with Kobayashi.
Because it's been almost 20 years of rivalry and I imagine the relationship has sort of
evolved over time.
Where is it now?
We're not as friendly as you'd expect.
Tell me more.
There's a language barrier.
He holds a grudge. He holds a grudge.
I hold a grudge.
There's no real communication.
There's social media.
He's blocked me.
When did Takeru Kobayashi block you?
Years ago.
Years ago.
What did you do?
I was probably saying not nice things.
I wasn't young and competitive. But he blocked me. What did you do? I was probably saying not nice things.
I was going to get competitive, but he blocked me.
I think it's good.
If he was my friend, I probably wouldn't be pushing myself as hard.
You know, I'm thinking back to, I guess this was 2010 now.
And just one of the things you may have said to Kobayashi or about Kobayashi, you may have
bothered Kobayashi or about Kobayashi, that may have bothered Kobayashi, it was when he did not appear in the contest.
And you're smiling already, you maybe remember this quote,
if he were a man, he'd be here now, end quote.
And the reason, of course, Joey, as you continue to grin,
is that the reason he wasn't there was because he was banned by the contest,
by George Shea, by Major League Eating,
because he refused to sign this exclusivity deal. And now, who would have thunk it? You and him
14 years later, you kind of have seen exactly what he was going through.
I probably shouldn't have questioned his masculinity or manhood.
I was young.
I went back and watched the video.
Yo, that was crazy, though.
It was insane.
So for people who don't remember, can you remind people, Joey, what happened with him in the crowd and then what happened from there?
After the contest, the year so in the year he didn't compete.
2010. Yeah, 2010. He tries to get on stage. and then what happened from there? After the contest, the year, so the year he didn't compete, uh... 2010?
Yeah, 2010.
He tries to get on stage.
They're like, no, you can't get on stage.
And like the cops are like, say, no, get off stage.
He's like holding on.
He has this crazy look in his eye.
He goes like, oh, I thought the cops were gonna tase him or something.
And they ended up arresting him.
He got arrested. He was charged with like a multitude of things because he refused to loosen his grip on like the fence.
It was one of the most surreal things I've ever seen.
He had the crazy eye though. And I respect that. I get the crazy eye.
I didn't realize that both of you were this crazy.
Oh, dude, did you see when that protester came on the stage?
Oh, I had the crazy eye when I grabbed him by the neck.
Chestnut briefly choked an animal rights protester who got up on stage during the
contest and shoved him while he was in the middle of downing hot dogs.
Seconds later, Chestnut resumes, like nothing even happened.
Then I was like, what?
Now I gotta go back to eating.
The craziest part was that you were like mid-chew.
Like you were still like, eating.
I still had hot dogs in my left hand.
Now I don't like being aggressive.
I felt bad about that.
But the crazy eye took over.
I just had to keep going.
George Shea in all of this, you know, I remember marveling at his introductions of you guys.
It's the voice that you hear at the top of every Nathan's contest.
The champion of the Fourth of July!
And he will fight until he is the last man standing on the dirt-covered surface of the
earth.
For his cause is the cause of victory.
His cause is the cause of one nation under God indivisible.
And I just wonder, all these years later, Dow, having gone through all of this, how
do you feel about that guy at this point?
He does an amazing job on microphone.
His goal when he's on that stage is to convince everybody watching that there's,
they're watching something amazing.
Look on his works, ye mighty and despair. He has surpassed the kings of Egypt.
There is nothing in this earth
that is not now a monument to this man
with 71 hot dogs and buns.
12 victories in Coney Island.
The champion of the world, Joey Chesna!
Yeah, I have nothing but respect for the way he announces contests.
That's a very specific scouting report, of course, because he does not simply announce contests.
He seems to also be a very prominent hand in the business of Major League Eating, no?
I don't know.
I mean, his name's on a lot of things, but there, there's other people involved.
I don't, I really don't think he's a bad guy.
Uh, I, I didn't contract issues. Sometimes there's probably ways I could have done things different and he could
have done things different or, or other, or Nathan's or other, other parties.
But I don't, I don't, he's not evil by any means,
but he's a business man.
There are a few signs more, more convincing
that competitive eating has become a real sport.
And the fact that you have all of these business now,
stalemates, stare downs, conflicts,
like that is the sign that this is real business now, Joey.
And it feels like you starting a thing with Netflix as an alternate business opportunity.
It all feels like the product of what you've been working really hard for.
I wonder if it feels that way to you.
I don't.
It was never a goal.
And the way I look at it is like I got on this weird wave.
And I loved it.
It's been a fun, fun ride.
I didn't know where it was going to take me.
I didn't know the wave got bigger and sometimes it got smaller, but I've been on this crazy
wave and I've been really, really lucky.
The whole thing is nuts.
Before we let Joey Chestnut go here, there was yet another impossible controversy, you might say, that I needed to find out about.
This was a controversy that I believe Joey Chestnut is singularly qualified to fact check.
Because while substitute hosting the Dan Levitart show last month, I had the occasion to wonder aloud about a very prominent
scientific theory. Is it actually possible to drink a gallon of milk in an hour without vomiting?
No, it's impossible. And the guy who very immediately said no there, with a noticeable degree of pretty personal
conviction happens to be a former Florida Marlins batboy named Nick Cirillo.
And what you should know about Nick Cirillo is that in 2005, Nick Cirillo was fired by
former Marlins president and noted friend of PTFO, David Sampson. All because
former Marlins pitcher Brad Penny bet Nick Cirillo $500 that the bad boy could not drink a gallon of
milk in an hour without throwing up. So the kitchen was tiny. It couldn't have been any more
throwing up.
Please try.
And so what I wanted to do was ask the greatest competitive eater of all time whether former
Marlins bad boy Nick Cirillo was in, correct in his estimation that winning that bet is
impossible.
I can do it.
I can do it in like 11 seconds.
I can probably do two gallons.
One gallon, you can digest it pretty easily, for me at least, because my stomach is big
enough and holds onto it and can produce enough of the acid to digest it.
But a lot of people, they got those little baby stomachs.
We had a person we interviewed here who was a bad boy for the Florida Marlins as they
were known back then.
57 minutes-ish and I threw up all over the place.
He was fired because he barfed all over the Marlins clubhouse.
Just pure white and like just super, super strong vomit stream.
Projectile, I believe is the term.
So I don't know if your advice to him is gonna sort of make him feel any better.
He's a...
He's got to stay calm.
You know, your body's saying things, you're like, no, no, no, you can do it.
No negative energy.
The biggest thing is to stay calm. He did not stay calm.
Truly the last question, and I'll get out of your life.
The happiest you've ever been is?
Oh my gosh. The happiest I've ever been. Probably my first date with my fiance.
Did she know what she was in for on that first date? She didn't know what she was in for. No, not at all. It's like the first contest.
My love at first bite. The first time I did the
lobster contest, like, oh my God, I love this. I was made for this. And then with Bre, first day,
you're like, oh my God, we're connecting. Hey, we're fitting together. I was made for this.
And those days stand out.
There aren't too many times in your life
where you feel like you're made for something or somebody.
I believe that that is the most romantic comparison
to a lobster eating contest in human history.
Yeah.
Joey Chestnut, thank you for letting me inside of your house, your intestines, and also your
heart.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Great to talk to you again.
Likewise, man. Pablo Torre Finds Out is produced by Michael Antonucci, Walter Averoma, Ryan Cortez, Sam
Dawig, Juan Galindo, Patrick Kim, Nealey Lohman, Rob McRae, Rachel Miller Howard, Ethan Schreier,
Carl Scott, Matt Sullivan, Chris Tuminello, and Juliet Warren.
C2 Engineering by RG Systems, Sound Design by NGW Post, our theme song by John Bravo. See you in the next one.