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Joey Chestnut says he will participate in the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest after 2024 ban

Joey Chestnut says he will participate in the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest after 2024 ban

Yahoo20 hours ago

The Michael Jordan of hot-dog eating is making his return to the biggest stage after a brief hiatus. Joey Chestnut announced he will return to take part in the 2025 Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest after he was banned from the event in 2024.
Chestnut made the announcement on Instagram, saying he was "thrilled" to be back at the event.
Chestnut is the biggest and most dominant name in the hot-dog eating game. He won the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest every year from 2016 to 2023.
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He was all set to dominate the event again in 2014, but a partnership with Impossible Foods resulted in Chestnut being banned from the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest. Nathan's does not allow competitors to endorse rival brands, which resulted in Chestnut's ban.
While it appears Chestnut's partnerships could have threatened his participation in the event in 2025, Chestnut said he was "able to find common ground" with Nathan's. He explained that while he's paired with plant-based companies in the past, "those relationships were never a conflict with my love for hot dogs."
With Chestnut out of the picture in 2024, Patrick Bertoletti won the event after eating 58 hot dogs. The last time Chestnut consumed fewer than 58 hot dogs at the Nathan's event came all the way back in 2010, when he won the event with 54.
The Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest takes place on July 4 every year. The event started in 1972, per Nathan's website. Jason Schechter won the first official competition on the men's side, eating 14 hot dogs. That figure has ballooned in recent years, with Chestnut eating a record 76 hot dogs at the event in 2021.
While Chestnut did not take part in the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest in 2024, he remained active in the food game. Chestnut participated in a head-to-head hot-dog eating contest with former Nathan's champion Takeru Kobayashi in 2024. Chestnut won the contest — which aired on Netflix — after eating 83 hot dogs.

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Robin Wright on Fighting for Equal Pay on ‘House of Cards': They Said, ‘We Can't Pay You the Same' as Kevin Spacey ‘Because You Didn't Win an Academy Award'

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In ‘The Waterfront,' ‘Dawson's Creek' creator Kevin Williamson returns to his gritty roots
In ‘The Waterfront,' ‘Dawson's Creek' creator Kevin Williamson returns to his gritty roots

Los Angeles Times

time34 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

In ‘The Waterfront,' ‘Dawson's Creek' creator Kevin Williamson returns to his gritty roots

Fifty years ago, Kevin Williamson's mother gave him a typewriter. It was a very good gift for a 10-year-old boy who loved writing stories. Only, he didn't know how to use it and promptly slid it aside in favor of his trusty spiral notebooks. Pen in hand, he crafted his own sequels to 'Jaws' and 'The Towering Inferno,' along with a series of imagined episodes for 'The Six Million Dollar Man.' By the time he got to high school in Pamlico County, N.C., Williamson's scribbled stories were getting him in trouble. One particularly macabre tale about a date rape and a quarterback who got his arm severed landed Williamson in the counselor's office. 'It was a little provocative for the classroom,' he conceded, decades later. 'I was ahead of my time.' That love of horror would pulse through Williamson's screenplays in the early days of his career for the '90s high-school slashers 'Scream' and 'I Know What You Did Last Summer.' 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And when the network asked him to expand the 'Dawson's' ensemble in Season 2, Williamson was ready to introduce Jack McPhee (Kerr Smith), a character who was initially closeted and dated Joey before coming out as gay; later, he shared a groundbreaking on-screen kiss with another man. 'I remember watching the scene with [Jack coming out to] his dad and crying,' Holmes said. 'I was just so proud of the work that they did and the writing that Kevin did. I loved it like a fan.' Fast forward 2½ decades, and 'The Waterfront' features a suave, queer character named Shawn who gets a job as a bartender at the Buckleys' seafood restaurant. Shawn is played by out actor Rafael L. Silva, but the character's sexuality is only noted in passing, and his relationship with his boyfriend is a nonentity. 'Thank goodness we're at a place in storytelling where being gay isn't a big deal,' Williamson said. 'Everything's not a coming out story. The bigger issue is, why is Shawn there? Who is he to his family? That's the bigger issue, which has nothing to do with being gay.' Still, Williamson became visibly moved while discussing the impact his work has had on younger generations of queer fans. 'There are so many people that have come up to me and said, 'I'm a writer because of you,' ' he said, choking back tears. 'I've had so many inspirations, so if I can be part of that to someone else, I'm all for it.' Actors who have worked with Williamson over the years often praise his collaborative nature and down-to-earth approachability, on and off set. Holmes was only 18 when she was cast as Joey, the snarky girl next door on 'Dawson's Creek.' She recalled Williamson being 'very protective' of her and her co-stars as they navigated their early fame, making sure they got home safely when they traveled for events and listening to their ideas for their characters between takes. 'He cared so much, and he still cares so much,' Holmes said. 'That was probably part of what people felt when they watched the show, that we really cared about each other, and Kevin set that precedent.' Tackling the 'elevated psychobabble' that Williamson wrote for the 'Dawson's' teens, which quickly became a signature of the series, proved more of a challenge. 'I mispronounced words in every single read-through, and I was usually mortified,' Holmes said, laughing. 'It still traumatizes me at read-throughs. I'm like, oh my God, oh my God, please don't mess up a word. It was a good training ground.' Although the executives at Sony had insisted Williamson re-set 'Dawson's Creek' in Massachusetts ('I think there was some concern that it might limit the appeal of the show if it was too Southern,' Williamson said), 'Dawson's' was still shot around the coastal North Carolina town of Wilmington, where the EUE/Screen Gems studios (now CineSpace studios) were based. It meant that even as the young cast landed magazine covers and racked up Teen Choice Award nominations, they were mostly sheltered from the limelight and temptations of fame while shooting 20-plus-episode seasons. 'I often joke that Wilmington is the reason none of us ended up in jail,' Van Der Beek said. 'We were not around any of the elements of Hollywood that sink so many souls. Instead, we were riding jet skis to Masonboro Island and hanging out with the crew on the weekends. You could act like a privileged jerk, technically, but you were going to be lonely on the weekends if you did.' For the 'Waterfront' cast, Williamson's legacy in Wilmington and its surrounds was ever present. Posters of his past projects still proudly hang in downtown shops, and the local tourism website offers a self-guided tour of 'Dawson's' filming locations. Benoist, known for her roles on 'Supergirl' and 'Glee,' grew up watching 'Dawson's Creek' and had harbored a childhood crush on Van Der Beek. While playing Bree on 'The Waterfront,' she worked on some of the same soundstages that once housed the 'Dawson's' sets and stood on the very sites where iconic 'Dawson's' moments once occurred. 'It became very clear, very quickly, that Kevin kind of runs the city,' she said. 'It's so synonymous with him.' These days, Williamson is mulling retirement. But not seriously. He recently directed the upcoming 'Scream 7' — his first time helming an installment of the franchise he created. As part of the overall deal he and his production company, Outerbanks Entertainment, have with Universal Television, he's also got series adaptations of the films 'Rear Window' and 'The Game,' as well as of Ruth Ware's novel 'The It Girl,' in the works. Some bucket list items remain unchecked. Williamson, who lives in Los Angeles with his husband, actor Victor Turpin, has yet to meet his filmmaking idol, Spielberg. 'I sat behind him at a movie premiere once. I'm very familiar with the back of his head,' Williamson said. 'He's God to me, and, you know, you don't want to meet God until God wants to meet you.' And then there's the crime drama that Williamson is itching to write based on another real-life family incident involving his mom and what he described as a 'domestic murder.' 'I still have so many stories I want to tell,' he said. 'I just have to figure out how to do them.'

I just picked my summer binge watch — and Hulu has all 128 episodes of 'Dawson's Creek'
I just picked my summer binge watch — and Hulu has all 128 episodes of 'Dawson's Creek'

Tom's Guide

timean hour ago

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I just picked my summer binge watch — and Hulu has all 128 episodes of 'Dawson's Creek'

This week sees the premiere of the latest project from Kevin Williamson, the screenwriter-director of such popular TV shows as "The Vampire Diaries," "The Following" and "Tell Me a Story" and '90s horror movie favorites like "I Know What You Did Last Summer," "The Faculty" and the "Scream" franchise. But with its coastal setting (Wilmington, North Carolina, and yes, that's a hint) and family-focused melodrama (this one's about a once-mighty fishing dynasty fighting to stay on top), the TV icon's new series "The Waterfront" — set to premiere on Netflix on Thursday, June 19 — is reminding us of another great Williamson title from way back when: "Dawson's Creek." Across six seasons, the late '90s classic chronicles the lives and relationships of the titular Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek) and his close-knit group of friends in a waterfront New England town, beginning in high school and continuing into college. With 128 hourlong episodes of saucy storylines and witty humor, coming-of-age character-building and one of TV's best love triangles, "Dawson's Creek" is a great summertime binge — here's why you should add it to your warm-weather watch list. Long before there was "The Summer I Turned Pretty," "Outer Banks" or "Euphoria", there was "Dawson's Creek,' the seminal '90s teen soap. The Kevin Williamson-created WB drama, which ran for six seasons from 1998 to 2003, focused on four teenagers navigating adolescence and the challenges of growing up in the fictional New England town of Capeside, Massachusetts: aspiring filmmaker Dawson Leery (James Van Der Beek), sarcastic tomboy Joey Potter (Katie Holmes), charming slacker Pacey Witter (Joshua Jackson) and new girl in town Jen Lindley (Michelle Williams). Couplings between the core four — particularly the angst-filled, ongoing love triangle between Dawson, Joey and Pacey — as well as latter additions like Jack McPhee (Kerr Smith) and Audrey Liddell (Busy Philipps), provide the bulk of the show's romantic messiness, but there's plenty of family drama, too, from an infidelity that rocks the Leery household to the legal issues of Joey's imprisoned dad. Get instant access to breaking news, the hottest reviews, great deals and helpful tips. Though it paved the way for countless teen dramas over the decades, "Dawson's Creek" differed from previous youth-focused programming thanks to both the provocative storylines and thoughtful writing it afforded its young characters. Over the course of 128 episodes, Dawson and the rest of the precocious, preternaturally articulate Capeside kiddos dealt with love and loss, divorce and depression, addiction and attraction — topics that were usually reserved for adult shows only. And whether you're revisiting the "Creek" or watching it for the first time — all six seasons are available to stream on both Hulu and Disney Plus, BTW — there's a quaint thrill is seeing the early days of not only Kevin Williamson's TV work but also the acting careers of now-staples like Joshua Jackson (currently the star and executive producer of "Doctor Odyssey"), Katie Holmes (who recently popped up on season 2 of Peacock's "Poker Face") and Michelle Williams (excellent in Hulu's limited series "Dying for Sex"). Altogether, "Dawson's Creek" is a nostalgic, engrossing watch, one packed with enough break-ups and make-ups, relatable characters and groundbreaking storylines to last you until Labor Day. Watch "Dawson's Creek" on Hulu now

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