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GeneChing
10-10-2012, 01:25 PM
Death of ****roach-eating contest winner in Florida puzzles experts (http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/10/10/14343815-death-of-****roach-eating-contest-winner-in-florida-puzzles-experts?lite)
Sarah Bernard / AP
http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/MSNBC/Components/Photo/_new/121010-archbold-8a.photoblog600.jpg
This frame grab made from video on Oct. 5 shows Edward Archbold competing in a roach-eating contest at Ben Siegel Reptile Store in Deerfield Beach, Fla.
By NBC News staff and wire services

It could be weeks before autopsy results can determine why a 32-year-old Florida man collapsed and died after winning a ****roach-eating contest.

Insect experts say the mere act of eating roaches, while repulsive to many, shouldn’t have killed Edward Archbold. Some theorize Archbold may have had an allergic reaction.

Archbold ate more than 60 grams of meal worms, 35 three-inch-long “super worms” and part of a bucket full of discoid roaches to win the “Midnight Madness” bug-eating competition Friday night at Ben Siegel Reptiles in Deerfield Beach, about 40 miles north of Miami, according to The Miami Herald. The take-home grand prize was a python from the reptile shop.

Shortly after winning the contest, Archbold became ill and began to vomit, the Broward County Sheriff’s Office said. He collapsed in front of the store and was later pronounced dead at a hospital.

The medical examiner's office said Tuesday that it has sent samples of Archbold's remains for testing, but results are not expected for another week or two.

“We know ****roaches shed a lot of allergens, but they’re not toxic in and of themselves,” Bill Kern, a professor of entomology at the University of Florida, told The Miami Herald. “Very few [human] cultures tend to eat ****roaches because they store large amounts of uric acid and nitrogenous waste. And they tend to be scavengers and feed on things most people wouldn’t consider to be desirable.”

Mike Tringale, vice president of external affairs at the Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, told The Associated Press it's possible that Archbold "hit his tolerance level to ****roach allergens" and went into anaphylactic shock.

Tringale said that such a severe reaction to ****roaches is "probably rare," however.

Coby Schal, a North Carolina State University entomologist, also surmised that the death was likely an allergic response, "but there is always a possibility that ****roaches do carry bacteria, but the response won't be immediate. It would take time for bacteria to be a problem."

Michael Adams, professor of entomology at the University of California at Riverside, says he's never heard of someone dying after consuming roaches. "Unless the roaches were contaminated with some bacteria or other pathogens, I don't think that ****roaches would be unsafe to eat," Adams told the AP. "Some people do have allergies to roaches, but there are no toxins in roaches or related insects."

The Broward County medical examiner's office said Tuesday it has sent samples of Archbold's remains for testing, but results are not expected for another week or two.

All the contestants in the bug-eating competition had signed a waiver acknowledging the risks of illness, adverse reactions and injury associated with eating live insects, the store said.

The live discoid roaches were brought out for the final round of the contest. Luke Lirot, an attorney representing Ben Siegel, the store’s owner, told the Herald that the roaches, which are sold as reptile feed, are “raised in a sterile container from the time they’re little critters" and are perfectly safe to eat.

One contestant, Matthew Karwacki, 26, who won a lesser platinum ball python in the cricket-eating contest, said he ate one roach before tapping out. “The taste did not suit me, but the texture for sure was the worst part,” Karwacki told the Herald. “If you could look inside a dirty gutter and scoop up what’s in there, that’s what went through my head. All the other contestants kept eating roaches, but I had to look away.”

Sarah Bernard, an entomology student at the University of Florida, shot cellphone video of Archbold during the competition. Bernard said she did not see Archbold immediately after the competition ended. She recalled that an announcer said "the winner was vomiting somewhere, and we'll congratulate him when he comes back," according to the AP.

Ben Siegel Reptile Store said the prize python, reportedly worth $850, will go to Archbold's estate.

Archbold's co-workers at Busch Canvas, which does canvas work for yachts and restaurants, have set up a fund for his daughter, who will turn 7 years old next week, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Archbold’s death has officials at Six Flags Great America in Chicago reviewing whether to continue with its “Friday Night Feast,” a weekly contest that invites guests to eat five Madagascar hissing ****roaches, the Chicago-Sun-Times reported.

“We were sorry to learn about the unfortunate incident at the reptile store in Florida and our hearts go out to the gentleman’s friends and family,” park officials said Tuesday, according to the Sun-Times. “We are confident our eating contests are safe as the insects we use are raised specifically for human consumption. Insects are considered a delicacy in many cultures; however, even though this appears to be an isolated incident, we are reviewing the eating contests at our parks to ensure we maintain a safe environment for our guests.”

NBC News' James Eng and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
What a way to go.

I've always abhorred eating contests. I stand with the notion that gluttony is a sin.

Sima Rong
10-10-2012, 01:44 PM
Yep, I have the same feeling Gene, but also about 'All you can eat buffets'. Many people can eat quite well, but then when they get lots of different crap food, they eat like a wolf that doesn't know when it will get its next meal.


I don't think the ****roaches are to blame here. Hell, he could have choked on a carapace. Still, it's horrible to hear about, and that he had a daughter who had to find out the news, and who has to live with this happening.

Syn7
10-10-2012, 02:35 PM
It is very unhealthy. These people have elastic stomachs that stretch more than average and it is not good if you do it alot.

GeneChing
10-11-2012, 11:41 AM
How could it not?

In the 'someone-should-have-told-this-guy' (http://ezine.kungfumagazine.com/forum/showthread.php?p=1187887#post1187887) news:

Bacon-Eating Contests Banned as Shortage Looms (http://www.cnbc.com/id/49192757)
Published: Thursday, 27 Sep 2012 | 9:33 AM ET
By: Cindy Perman CNBC.com Staff Writer

After one pig industry group predicted a bacon shortage, the guys over at Major League Eating reacted swiftly, issuing a ban on all bacon-eating contests. This is getting serious!

For the uninitiated, Major League Eating is the league governing professional eating, much like the MLB is the league that governs professional baseball. The MLE puts on more than 80 professional eating contests each year, including the famous Coney Island Hot Dog-Eating Contest and the Hooters World Chicken Wing Championship. Its founders, the Shea brothers, are like the P.T. Barnums of professional eating.

They issued a statement, announcing a suspension “indefinitely” on all bacon-eating contests and urged all professional eaters, including the No. 1 ranked Joey Chestnut, who has won the Coney Island hot-dog contest for six years in a row, to cut back on eating bacon in their personal lives, as well.

“We cannot, in good conscience, allow Joey Chestnut to eat bacon during a global pork shortage,” said MLE President Richard Shea. “We estimate that Joey alone could eat 20 pounds of bacon in 10 minutes of competition.”

“I’m a huge bacon lover and an informal poll of our members [eaters] shows that 96 percent are bacon enthusiasts,” said George Shea, the chairman of MLE. “We thought there would be less bacon at higher costs next year and we realized we had to make a statement.”

By encouraging professional eaters to cut back on personal bacon consumption, George said he thinks it helps raise awareness for the issue — much like when celebrities come out for a cause.

“It will allow bacon consumers to consider whether or not they should cut back on their own consumption,” George said. “This is a pro-bacon move. We want to see bacon for the long haul.”

There is one exception to the bacon-eating contest ban: bacon-wrapped scallops.

That’s because bacon-wrapped scallops are “just really delicious” and “mostly scallop anyway,” Richard explained.

George said depending on how long the bacon shortage goes on, they would consider modifying their contests.

"We would obviously be able to do a turkey bacon or a Sizzlean kind of eating contest," George said.

All is not lost for breakfast lovers, however — there is no pancake shortage predicted, so the Wild Eggs National Pancake Eating Championship is still scheduled to hit the pan in Louisville on Saturday.

For a full list of eating contests and the rankings of professional eaters, including day-trader-turned-professional eater Tim Janus, check out www.ifoce.com. Follow that link above. It opens up the world of eating contests...:rolleyes: