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Showing posts with label champion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label champion. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

'So You Think You Can Dance' crowns champion (AP)

By DERRIK J. LANG, AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang, Ap Entertainment Writer – Fri Aug 12, 12:06 am ET

LOS ANGELES – Melanie Moore easily clinched the grand prize on "So You Think You Can Dance."

Viewer votes overwhelmingly awarded the pixie-haired 19-year-old college student from Marietta, Ga., the title of "America's Favorite Dancer" and the $250,000 cash prize. Moore bested fierce runner-up Sasha Mallory, 23, of Bakersfield, Calif., and powerful third-place finisher Marko Germar, 22, of Los Angeles.

"Thank you," Moore told viewers while weeping under a confetti storm during the Fox dancing contest's finale Thursday.

Moore picked up an impressive 47 percent of viewer votes, according to host Cat Deeley. The spirited contemporary dancer was long considered the eighth season's front-runner, dominating the competition by mastering artful contemporary routines set to tunes such as Bonnie Tyler's "Total Eclipse of the Heart" and Ingrid Michaelson's "Turn to Stone."

The show's judges never put Moore at the bottom of the pack.

For the first half of the final rounds, Moore was teamed with Germar. The duo impressed as dancing statues and grabbed attention with a smooch during a hip-hop routine.

Moore later wowed the panel on her own when she was paired with various veteran dancers during the second part of the finals.

"I would push myself to the front of the line to work with you," director Kenny Ortega told her Wednesday.

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Fox is a unit of News Corp.

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Online:

http://www.fox.com/dance/


Yahoo! News

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Perennial champion again wins hot dog eating contest (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Holding aloft a trophy in one hand and a bottle of Pepto-Bismol in the other, Joey Chestnut on Monday was top dog once again.

Chestnut was declared world champion for the fifth year running at the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest at New York's Coney Island after stuffing 62 hot dogs down his throat in 10 minutes.

Chestnut, a 220-pound 27-year-old engineering student from San Jose, California, bested 16 other competitors including three who had flown in from China, according to George Shea, the competition's exuberant master of ceremonies.

Chestnut palpated his belly in preparation for the contest. After a countdown, ten minutes began ticking down on the clock as the men went the job furiously, side-by-side, cheek to jowl, to the cheers of hundreds of spectators.

"It's almost like he's bending the hot dogs in his mouth like oral origami," Shea said of Chestnut, who periodically shook his stomach vigorously in what fans said has become his trademark move.

"He's an artist. The hot dogs submit to him. Matter bends to his will. He has God's username and password and he's using it to his advantage," Shea told the boisterous crowd on a warm afternoon.

Dripping with sweat, Chestnut was later draped in a U.S. flag and handed the mustard-yellow belt of the champion -- along with a winner's check for $10,000.

What was he doing to do now he had 62 hot dogs inside him?

"I'm going to take a big nap," he said.

Winner in the women's division was Sonya "The Black Widow" Thomas, a 5-foot 5-inch, 105-pound 42-year-old from Alexandria, Virginia.

Thomas, dressed in bright pink shorts and a white baseball cap, bested eight competitors by downing 40 hot dogs -- one shy of her personal record, she said.

Juliet Lee, the runner-up, managed only 29, which she blamed on the fact that she was missing her daughter, who was in China. Another loser said she got a catastrophic bout of hiccups mid-competition.

"She eats with a cloven tongue -- it is the mark of Cain," Shea said, describing Thomas. "Her stomach is a cauldron. Her mouth is like a vise."

Many contestants jerked their heads back as they ate, as if to minimize the curve of throats that might otherwise hinder the passage of half-chewed food. The more accomplished were able to make a hot dog disappear within three or four seconds.

Thomas said she liked to soften the buns with splashes from her water cup, so it might be "swallowed like a soup."

"It's just very efficient eating," Shea said. "It leaves an enormous amount of time to pursue other interests."

Thomas also took home a $10,000 winner's check.

"How do you feel, baby?" Shea asked Thomas as he handed her the trophy.

Thomas just made a wordless sound somewhere between a cheer and a groan.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen. Editing by Peter Bohan)


Yahoo! News

Perennial champion again wins hot dog eating contest (Reuters)

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Holding aloft a trophy in one hand and a bottle of Pepto-Bismol in the other, Joey Chestnut on Monday was top dog once again.

Chestnut was declared world champion for the fifth year running at the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest at New York's Coney Island after stuffing 62 hot dogs down his throat in 10 minutes.

Chestnut, a 220-pound 27-year-old engineering student from San Jose, California, bested 16 other competitors including three who had flown in from China, according to George Shea, the competition's exuberant master of ceremonies.

Chestnut palpated his belly in preparation for the contest. After a countdown, ten minutes began ticking down on the clock as the men went the job furiously, side-by-side, cheek to jowl, to the cheers of hundreds of spectators.

"It's almost like he's bending the hot dogs in his mouth like oral origami," Shea said of Chestnut, who periodically shook his stomach vigorously in what fans said has become his trademark move.

"He's an artist. The hot dogs submit to him. Matter bends to his will. He has God's username and password and he's using it to his advantage," Shea told the boisterous crowd on a warm afternoon.

Dripping with sweat, Chestnut was later draped in a U.S. flag and handed the mustard-yellow belt of the champion -- along with a winner's check for $10,000.

What was he doing to do now he had 62 hot dogs inside him?

"I'm going to take a big nap," he said.

Winner in the women's division was Sonya "The Black Widow" Thomas, a 5-foot 5-inch, 105-pound 42-year-old from Alexandria, Virginia.

Thomas, dressed in bright pink shorts and a white baseball cap, bested eight competitors by downing 40 hot dogs -- one shy of her personal record, she said.

Juliet Lee, the runner-up, managed only 29, which she blamed on the fact that she was missing her daughter, who was in China. Another loser said she got a catastrophic bout of hiccups mid-competition.

"She eats with a cloven tongue -- it is the mark of Cain," Shea said, describing Thomas. "Her stomach is a cauldron. Her mouth is like a vise."

Many contestants jerked their heads back as they ate, as if to minimize the curve of throats that might otherwise hinder the passage of half-chewed food. The more accomplished were able to make a hot dog disappear within three or four seconds.

Thomas said she liked to soften the buns with splashes from her water cup, so it might be "swallowed like a soup."

"It's just very efficient eating," Shea said. "It leaves an enormous amount of time to pursue other interests."

Thomas also took home a $10,000 winner's check.

"How do you feel, baby?" Shea asked Thomas as he handed her the trophy.

Thomas just made a wordless sound somewhere between a cheer and a groan.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen. Editing by Peter Bohan)


Yahoo! News

Monday, May 16, 2011

Kenya's Olympic marathon champion dies after fall (Reuters)

NYAHURURU, Kenya (Reuters) – Kenyan Olympic marathon champion Samuel Wanjiru died late Sunday after jumping from the first-floor balcony of his home in the Rift Valley, police told Reuters.

Regional police chief Jaspher Ombati said Wanjiru, 24, appeared to have suffered internal injuries after the fall and was confirmed dead by doctors at a nearby hospital.

"I can confirm that Wanjiru is dead. It is not yet clear whether it was a suicide or if he jumped out of rage, or what caused him to fall to the ground," Ombati told reporters.

"He jumped from his first-floor balcony to the ground. He was bleeding from the nose and the mouth, and may have suffered internal injuries," the police chief added.

Video footage showed police looking at blood stains on the ground below the balcony of Wanjiru's house in Nyahururu, a town in the Rift Valley some 150 km (94 miles) northwest of the capital Nairobi.

"Wanjiru's death is not only a loss to his family and friends but to Kenya as a whole and the entire world athletics fraternity," Prime Minister Raila Odinga said in a statement.

"As an athletics nation, we looked forward to a sterling performance in the Olympic Games in London next year. Mr Wanjiru was one of our sure bets for gold in the upcoming contest. His death is therefore a big blow to our dreams," Odinga said.

LOVE TRIANGLE

Ombati said police were investigating a possible love triangle that could have been behind the death of Wanjiru, the first Kenyan to win Olympic marathon gold at Beijing in 2008 and a former winner of the Chicago and London marathons.

Ombati said Wanjiru's wife, Triza Njeri, had come home to find the runner in bed with another woman, locked the couple in the bedroom and ran outside.

Wanjiru then leapt from the balcony, the police chief said.

Police said Njeri and Wanjiru's female companion were assisting with the investigation.

Last December, Wanjiru was charged with threatening to kill Njeri and the illegal possession of an AK-47 assault rifle.

Njeri later withdrew her accusation of attempted murder against him in court, saying the couple had reconciled.

Wanjiru also suffered minor injuries from a car crash in January when he swerved to avoid an oncoming truck, hit a pot hole and rolled his vehicle.

The runner defied the heat of Beijing in 2008 to triumph in an Olympic record time of two hours, six minutes and 32 seconds at the games held in China.

Wanjiru moved to Japan in 2002 as a young man to attend high school after winning a cross country selection trial in Kenya.

(Additional reporting by James Macharia in Nairobi; Editing by David Clarke and John O'Brien)


Yahoo! News


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