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Matthew Kai Stonie (born 1991 or 1992) [2] [3] [4] is an American competitive eater and YouTuber.Stonie won the 2015 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest, besting 8-time defending champion Joey Chestnut among others. [5]
Following his exit from Chalmers, his parents refused to financially support him, [15] so he funded his early videos by working as a harbor captain, selling prints of his Photoshop art, and working at a hot dog stand. [‡ 3] [17] Kjellberg stated that the ability to make videos was more important to him than a prestigious career. [17]
The slogan dates back to 1965, and has been used since then as a means to market the product to Jews and non-Jews as a superior product. [2] Some of the campaign's earliest television advertisements, created by Scali, McCabe, Sloves in 1972, featured Uncle Sam preparing to consume a hot dog that includes the additives and fillers permitted under federal regulations, while an ethereal narrator ...
For hot dogs sold without casings, the outer casing is removed after cooking, leaving the smooth, uniform hot dog surface. 7. Step Seven: Packaging the Hot Dogs
Sabrett/Background: Rawin Tanpin/EyeEm/Getty Images. TOTAL: 90/100 These dogs will have you singing “New York, New York” at first bite. They’re just like the ones you get (with the works ...
Hot Ones is an American YouTube talk show, created by Christopher Schonberger and Sean Evans and produced by First We Feast and Complex Media. [1] Its basic premise involves celebrities being interviewed by Evans over a platter of increasingly spicy chicken wings.
A hot dog or Polish sausage in a white bun topped with cream cheese and grilled onions. [13] [23] Sonoran hot dog: Arizona [13] A hot dog wrapped in bacon and grilled, served on a bolillo-style hot dog bun, and topped with pinto beans, onions, tomatoes, and a variety of additional condiments, sometimes including mayonnaise, mustard, and ...
The chorus of "Hot dog, jumping frog, Albuquerque" has been interpreted by some as lyrics from the washed-up character's hit. [4] [5] In a 2019 interview with BBC Newsnight, McAloon described the words as "haiku without the syllabic law" and said the line "hasn’t got any sense other than this vaguely American feeling to it". [6]