NEW YORK — Competitive eater Joey “Jaws” Chestnut will take his hot dog-downing talents to an army base in Texas for America’s Independence Day this year after a falling out with organizers of the event that made him famous, the annual 4th of July eating contest in Brooklyn’s Coney Island. Chestnut, a former San Jose and Vallejo resident who now lives in Indiana, will compete against soldiers in Fort Bliss, in El Paso, in a 5-minute hot dog eating contest. That’s instead of the 10-minute Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July hot dog eating contest, where he competed against the world’s top competitive eaters since 2005 and hadn’t lost since 2015.
In 2021 he set the current record of 76 hot dogs, in 10 minutes. Organizers of that event initially said he couldn’t attend , which Chestnut said involved a deal with Impossible Foods, which makes plant-based hot dogs. Chestnut said he was “gutted” he couldn’t compete in the event in Coney Island, where he said he loved the atmosphere and the sometimes-sweltering crowds.
“Those people have been sitting in the sun, waiting. They know what to expect. And they’re not shocked.
They’re cheering and yelling and pushing me,” Chestnut said Thursday in a phone interview. But Chestnut says he’s not going to sit home and do nothing. And he’s hopeful the soldiers will push him to perform.
Fearful of being “lazy” in competition with amateurs, the perennial world champion will try to out-eat four soldiers, pittin.