Joey Chestnut won the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest again yesterday, and if there's a more purely American narrative than that I've yet to see it. A humble lad from Westfield, In., gaining fame and fortune for stuffing his face?
Why, it's the stars-and-stripes, the rocket's red glare and Lee Greenwood singing, "And I'm proud to be an American, where at least I know I'm full."
(Or maybe it's "free." I forget.)
Either way, the point pertains: Nothin' says "America" like gluttony, excess and crass spectacle. And Joey Chestnut inhaling 70.5 dogs and buns in 10 minutes is all three wrapped up with a red-white-and-blue bow.
That's what he did to win his 17th Mustard Belt (yes, there's actually a title belt, as if Joey were Sugar Ray Leonard or Muhammad Ali re-imagined), and it was something to see, if not entirely describable. I mean, have you ever watched a guy eat 70.5 hot dogs in 10 minutes? It's kinda gross, actually.
Every time I see clips of it, I'm reminded of one of Carla's wisecracks from "Cheers", where she's describing something disgusting. "It was like watchin' old people eat," Carla opines.
Or watchin' Joey Chestnut eat, had Carla and "Cheers" come along 30 or so years later.
And, look, this is not to disparage Joey and his mandibles o' death. More likely, it's the Blob's tendency to look at the world sideways and backward, and to find weirdness in virtually everything. And seeing how fast you can wolf down hot dogs or shrimp or, I don't know, Twinkies or Ho-Hos, is weirder than whatever odd notion poor addled Uncle Donny is floating from the White House today.
(His latest: To commemorate the nation's 250th birthday next summer, he wants to stage an MMA fight on the White House lawn. And, no, I'm not making that up, to issue the standard disclaimer. As crass spectacles go, it might challenge cramming hot dogs down one's gullet for the world championship, if not for the suspicion that Teddy Roosevelt would be all in on the idea.)
Anyway ... chowin' down as a sport is not much of a sport by the Blob's lights, although it might be more of a sport than, say, juggling hand grenades. The mortality rate is much lower, for one thing. Plus no one wants flying body parts in their spectacles.
Still, that wouldn't be as brashly in-your-face as people eating at warp speed while half the world goes hungry. That, too, seems to be as American as America gets these days, regrettably.
Which is why my favorite eating contest is not the Fourth of July hot dog contest. It's one that actually doesn't exist.
It's the pie-eating contest Gordy dreams up in "Stand By Me", in which a fat kid his town calls Lard-Ass gets his revenge by chugging castor oil before taking his place at the Big Table. He proceeds to buzzsaw his way through five blueberry pies before the inevitable happens: It all comes rumbling back up the other way.
Which of course sets off a chain reaction of symbiotic upchucking -- or, as Gordy puts it, a "complete and total Barf-O-Rama."
Now that's a Fourth of July extravaganza, by golly.