I honestly didn’t expect this to be the most dangerous record Jonathan and I have attempted to date. We sliced 41 apples in one minute while juggling 3 knives. We’ve sliced kiwis with a samurai sword while standing on a swiss exercise ball.
This one left me bleeding more than any other.
This record was for the most eggs caught with the mouth in one minute. The previous record was 17.
We had to stand 2 meters apart and the eggs were thrown one at a time. I then had to catch them with my mouth and set them aside. In the end, we had to carefully inspect all the eggs to ensure none were cracked and broken.
There were a bunch of eggs that were cracked and broken. If I didn’t have teeth I think this record would be a lot easier. These cheap medium white eggs cracked every time they even knicked my teeth. I had to wrap my lips around my teeth and stick my tongue out to have a chance at catching the eggs unbroken, and even then, lots of them cracked.
On the official attempt, my upper lip cracked as well. Halfway through the attempt, the eggs all came out pretty bloody. Fortunately, I was able to keep my composure and finish the attempt.
In one minute, Jonathan threw 36 eggs, I caught 24 in my mouth, and 18 of them were uncraked and unbroken after the attempt.
The previous record of 17 was broken. My lip was as well, but I’ll heal and the world record is ours.
This is one of the few “impossible” records I’ve broken. I rank the records I break on an easy, medium, hard, impossible scale. Easy means there may be someone else in the room who could break this right now, medium means anyone could break this record with some practice, hard means it takes an expert in the field with dedicated practice to break, and impossible means I may be the one person in the world who can break this record right now.
I have held this record for most juggling catches in one minute with three objects (blindfolded) continuously since I first broke it in March of 2016 with 364 catches. I’m also the only record holder since it was a new record for Guinness at the time.
I then attempted to break it again live on the TODAY show in September 2016. That didn’t go nearly as well as I practiced. I did break it in 2017 at the FIRST Robotics nationals competition in St. Louis with 428 catches in one minute tying the overall speed juggling record at the time. I’ve since gone on to get 502 catches in a minute with the cascade juggling patter and now Guinness accepts the shower pattern with 586 still pending Guinness approval from last December.
Today I bested my own mark with 454 catches in a minute bringing this one over 7.5 catches per second for the first time. If no one challengers me this time, I may have to break revisit this mark again in another 3 years :).
Here’s another one that might start with: “but why?”
It’s also a medium to hard one to pull off. I’ve had this one on my list to break for well over a year. I’m also proficient in catching things in my mouth.
I practiced on and off for over a year but have had a table tennis ball next to my practice spot on the wall in my kitchen ready to go for months. I pick it up, go for it for a bit, and then put it back.
I decided to get serious about this over the past few weeks while buckling down for my 29-mile joggling run that I did a couple of weeks ago since this wasn’t as physically straining as that one and thus paired up nicely.
I did have to wash that corner of the floor extra good with Lysol a few times since I didn’t like all the stuff the ball would get on it when it drops on the floor ;).
The previous record was 34 times to bounce a table tennis ball off the wall and catch it back in the mouth in 30 seconds. When I first started practicing the record I thought it was for one minute and thought it was going to be a piece of cake to beat. Then I realized my mistake.
Thousdands up on thousands of bounces off the wall later, I strung together 44 consecutive bounces off the wall caught back in my mouth from a meter away. Slow motion video review showed the 44th ball didn’t leave my mouth until 30.08 seconds so it wad disqualified.
The final result was 43 in 30 seconds which I’m pretty happy about.
What I’m not so happy with is how flattering I look in the video.
I ran my first ultramarathon. I did it while juggling. I also had a couple extra rules that made it a little more difficult.
1) If I drop a ball, the attempt is over (no pressure)
2) No stopping allowed or the attempt is over (don’t get a cramp)
3) The support crew cannot help with anything (make sure your shoes are tied well)
4) You are not allowed to be given food or water by an assistant, even if you’re still moving and juggling (have to take it with you!)
It was a pleasantly cool October morning with clouds in the sky when I took off at 9:35 AM. I ran a little too fast 9:03 first mile but then hovered around just under 10-minute miles until I broke the record 2 hours 32 minutes and 15.5 miles later. I wanted to run slow since I was going for distance instead of time which is why I was nearly 30 minutes slower at the half marathon than my juggling half best, and the marathon was over 50 minutes slower than my first (and only) marathon (also juggling, and over 5 years ago).
I had a couple of near drops at about 10 miles that would have cost me a shot at the record but was able to recover. After that, I didn’t have many issues. About 4 hours in, it did start raining with some wind gusts which didn’t make it pleasant on the witnesses, but it helped keep me cool. It made the juggling balls a little sticky, but nothing that would seriously hinder me.
I didn’t have any issues (other than slowing down) until I dropped a ball 116 laps + 300 meters after 5 hours 21 minutes and 23 seconds of continuous juggling and running.
The Camelback ironically is what slows me down the most. Without it, I run a good 1-1:30 minutes per mile faster. But with it, I have to keep my bouncing down so my cadence has to be slower and smoother. But without it, I don’t know that I could have gone more than 20 miles with no access to water, calories, or electrolytes. As it was, I drank a little over 2 liters of a mix of Gatorade, G2, and electrolytes.
By the numbers:
Laps run: 116.75
Miles run: 29
Throws: 60,000
Catches: 59,999
Ball weight: 135g
Total weight thrown: >17,000 lbs
Average mile pace: 11 minutes 9 seconds
Thanks to the team!
Credits
Ken Hosac – Witness, clipboard, interview
Josh Hamilton – Witness, cameras
Michael Gilmore – Witness, cameras, clipboard
Scott Smith – Witness, cameras
Seth Lemons – Witness, cameras, interview
Jennifer Rush – Moral support, videos
J&P Moral – support, competition
Mike Rush – Moral support
Hollywood Hannon – Didn’t do a darn lick
Thanks also to Centennial High School for hosting me!
This is the real life fruit ninja. Slicing fruit while juggling 3 knives.
Jonathan threw the apples (which turned out to be a much more critical component to this record than I though) and I juggled the knives.
The knives have to switch hands left-right-left-right every throw except when an apple is being sliced and then you can have a single throw that lands back in the same hand.
I’ve been a serious juggler since college in 2004 (i.e. 5+ balls and shows for audiences) but it still took me about 1.5 years of casual training and a few weeks of serious preparation to break this record. It also took over 400 pounds of (crab) apples. Once we got got the motion and timing down, it came down to a little luck since an errant apple slice often hits the knife in the air making it impossible to catch.
Jonathan and I had a cadence that every time I caught a knife in my right hand, he’d throw an apple, and I’d slice it. This is the fastest way to execute the record and we didn’t miss a beat. He threw 41 apples in the minute, I missed only one, and sliced the other 40 into 2 pieces each (if it wasn’t completely separated, it didn’t count).
We used the crab apples from Jonathan’s tree so we didn’t waste any food for this record. It would have been easier if we’d used larger apples, but I was able to get my slices precise enough to only miss a single one.
The obvious difficult parts of this record are juggling. I have to execute a double spin left-hand throw to the left hand while using the right to catch the knife, swing back, and slice an apple that’s flying through the air without being able to focus on either. (It’s also frowned upon to catch the knives by the non-handle end…) On top of that, I have to rotate the knife after the catch to hit the apple straight on with the blade instead of just hitting is broadside.
I’m glad Jonathan had a crab apple tree in his yard that yielded over 400 lbs of apples because we had to practice a lot before we could finish a full minute of apple slice juggling with only a single miss.
But then I watched Oreo towers fall over time after time after time. Maybe even 50 times. If I caught the tower as it fell I could usually reuse all the Oreos. If it fell before I could catch it I’d have some that would break or chip and I had to discard (*eat) them… fortunatly i didn’t have to eat them at the pace I damaged them.
The final tally was 38 stacked in 30 seconds (I placed a 39th one just after time expired).
I only missed once. I got 27 shots off in 1 minute on a single load NERF gun, and I only missed once. The target did get so full that 2 shots bounced off other darts so they didn’t count, but I’m almost more proud that I only had 1 shot off target than I broke my previous Guinness World Record mark by over 25%.
I broke this record for the first time in 2018 with 16 hits. Ashrita took it back. I broke it again in 2019 with 19 hits. This time, I’m trying to put it out of reach.
I’m in the middle of some pretty strenuous training for some physically demanding record attempts (i.e 125+ miles run already in September alone), but I want to keep breaking other records that don’t take as much physical stamina. That’s not to say this record is easy to break. When I first found it at 14 hits in a minute, it took me months of practice to get to a point where I could break it. It’s a good thing this is a fun record to practice.
Tens of thousands of shots later, I know how the dart is going to fly. Loading the dart is almost more important that aiming to fire. The slowest part of this record is getting the next foam dart in the chamber and cocking it. If you move too fast, it’s easy to start pushing on the dart before it’s perfectly lined up with the hole. If that happens the dart bends and won’t fire strait, or if it’s bad, it won’t even reach the target. I’ve learned to feel for the slight bend in the dart as I push it in to aim just a little up, down, left, or right to make sure it hits its mark.
By the end of the attempt there are usually groupings of darts that I need to aim away from, otherwise there’s a higher chance it’ll hit a dart already on the board and bounce off. This happened to me twice.
In the end, I got 24 hits that were still on the target 5 seconds after the minute expired qualifying me for another Guinness World Records title.
I participated in the Guinness World Records – Try this at home challenge again (after they took a month break) and won for the second time. This was for the Fastest Time to Eat a Cream Filled Biscuit.
I was on vacation at Yellowstone National Park with my wife and 2 boys when the challenge was issued so had to find a store with a “cream filled biscuit”. Guinness doesn’t use brand names in their records, but Oreo’s would the the most likely candidate. I found these others at the discount store I stopped in at.
The rules were as such: Place the cookie in front of you. Don’t touch the cream-filled cookie until time starts. Put it on the forehead above the eyebrows. Move it down using only the face (must be touching the face at all times). Eat the cookie. Show the mouth open and empty.
I completed it in 8.8 seconds with a lot of help from my son. He was so cute. He called 3,2,1, go! (several times!), told me to eat the cookie (during the official attempt I used), stuck his tongue like me (so cute! even if I’m forming bad habits), and called out “come on” (like I do most times when I break a record)!
There was a little controversy in the online forums that my “cream filled biscuit” was a little smaller than the typical Oreo (no rules about the size). There was also another competitor that ate it a little faster than me, but he was DQ’d. It appears it flipped on the way down (not allowed) and that there was cookie left in his mouth (also not allowed) so I don’t feel too bad at being awarded the title (even if it required less practice than most).
Finally, an eating record that I enjoyed attempting (DQ’d due to opening the mouth just a smidge slow at the end).. The last two were horrific.
This record is more speed and precision than it is Joey Chestnut. It comes after my poker chip speed stacking which is related, but it still requires also requires fast-food consumption. I practiced that with corn kernels, peas, and beans as well. Blueberries are all much tastier.
It’s still COVID-19 social distancing and you may hear my kids fighting, my 2-year old smiling at my record success, and my wife laughing at me (all during the official record attempt) but that’s all fair game at this point.
The previous record was 96 blueberries eaten in one minute (each one had to be picked up and eaten one at a time). I was able to achieve 107. I then took 3 more seconds to finish chewing and swallowing and showed my mouth empty at the end.
I first broke this record in July 2018. It was harder this time.
The Bob and Tom‘s job show contacted me in July 2019 asking me if I wanted to attempt to break a world record by popping balloons with them on it. I said that would be great, how about we print your faces on the balloons and I threw chopsticks out them to pop them.
They decided they go with their logo instead.
I have thrown several thousand chopsticks in preparation for these recent chopsticks throwing records. A few weeks ago I broke the Guinness World Records title for the most chopsticks thrown in the target in one minute. That was 4 meters away, this was 2.
When I first broke this record I popped 28 balloons with chopsticks in one minute breaking the previous record of 24. It was broken recently with the run of 36 popped in one minute (50% than when I first broke it) so it was time to go after it again, but a lot more practice was required.
The longest part of getting prepped for this record was all the prep work: putting up all the cardboard, blowing up all the balloons, and taping both on the wall. We used hand pumps to pump up all the blooms instead of our mouths to ensure they were COVID-19-free. It took well over an hour for setup.
After a 3-2-1 go I started throwing the aluminum chopsticks from over 2 meters away. My first two throws missed. I should have stopped right there and restarted. I can only throw a little over 60 chopsticks per minute I need to make over 60% count. After 30 seconds I was just barely on pace to beat the record. I started panicking because I didn’t want to have us blow up that many more balloons for another try. We were already over schedule. But I calmed my body down, threw the chopsticks a little faster, and dialed in my throws to end up with 40 balloons burst in one minute, with one chopstick allowed to burst one balloon only and only one chopstick allowed to be thrown at a time.
Thanks so much for the help Summer, Gary, Sean, Christian! I couldn’t have done it without you! And for the record – you were all way better at throwing chopsticks than I made you look in the video (except that last shot at the end… that was just as impressive as it looked).
Promoting STEM education through my story and juggling