All posts by davidrush@gmail.com

Flying Food

It was another successful Guinness World Record attempt at the annual Cradlepoint partner conference. This one wasn’t quite as hard as last year (most juggling backcrosses in one minute), but it wasn’t nearly as easy as I expected. It turns out that the force of throwing a hot dog sausage 100 feet is enough to destroy a typical hot dog bun.

Open Bun Waiting
Jake Letting the Dog Fly

Fortunately, Jake Smith and I spend the morning practicing throwing and catching hot dogs in buns in sunny San Diego (rather unsuccessfully, I might add, much to the delight of the hovering seagulls). I made a trip to the store to Trader Joes to secure studier buns and Michelle O. made sure the dogs were provided (thank you!).

Getting into Position

The previous record was just shy of 69 feet. We broke it on our very first try much to our surprise. We market it out and decided we’d see if we could beat it. About 10 throws later we got our best result at 105 feet 4 inches! It had to be a clean catch and not touch anything except the bun after leaving Jake’s hand.

Catching the Dog

It also had to be cooked, be over 5.5 inches (and less than 7), and take place on level ground.

I hope Mark Brunell doesn’t mind losing this record (I doubt it as he has a Super Bowl ring…) It was great to hear world champion surfer Shaun Tompson today and have him at the event.

World champion surfer, keynote speaker, author, entrepreneur, and engaging conversationalist – Shaun Tompson
High Five with Jake!

Thank you to all who made this possible including Jake Smith (congrats on your first GWR!), Stoney, Mary, Chris, Mauricio, Ken, Eric, Michelle, Jessica, Jen, Alex, Cradlepoint, and several more!

Spitting Mad

I spit a table tennis ball.

This is not unusual (for me). I often spit table tennis balls but usually, I try to catch them in my mouth again. In this case, I tried to spit it as far as I possibly could. I was pleased with my result. The ball traveled 58 feet 7.75 inches in the air before landing in the raked sand at the Hobble Creek Park softball field.

It was a bit cold but my two year old had fun helping me rake and measuring the start line. It had to be a flat surface with sand so the ball would make a mark when it landed.

Stacked

I had to try this record attempt a few times. The first time was a the Kymeta dinner at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain with several influencers in the mobile industry. I got nervous which is detrimental to grabbing small chips and carefully and quickly placing them precisely on a different stack of chips. but on the first attempt I tied the current record of 188 chips stacked in 5 minutes (1 at a time). I decided I wanted to beat the record which took a couple more tries. I finally got 189 and we called it a night.

Dinner attempt

I went to upload the evidence the next day and discovered the current record had been updated to 200 chips stacked in 5 minutes since I had left for Spain. I took my chips to the dinner the next night at Tapas but the restaurant I was at didn’t realize I was with a group of 8 people who had ordered 40 plates of food and felt that I wasn’t worth the 2-foot by 2-foot table space I was taking.

The stack

The next night our group wandered around looking for a place to get drinks for an hour before we settled for a bar with no table space for the record so I packed up and gave up on breaking a record in Spain.

Ready to start

I took the supplies to Germany and broke the record there instead. It was in Buchloe 45 minutes southwest of Munich. Again, I got nervous, but not quite as nervous and stacked 204 chips in one minute (in the practice right before I got a lot more). On my 2nd try the stack fell down so we stuck with 204 as the official number.

Chips falling off

Notable Achievement

Today I had a multi-repeat record. I broke the record for longest duration balancing a guitar on the forehead for the second time and I also performed at the Kid’s Fair at Expo Idaho for the second time.

I originally set this record at Porter Pickups a bit over a year ago at 10 minutes but Ashrita Furman took it back with a run of over 11 minutes. I was signed up for the 10-10:30 AM slot and decided to use as much of it as I could for the record.

I balanced the guitar for 25 minutes 33 seconds more than doubling it. If Ashrita wants it back he can have it but he’s going to have to earn it. My neck was gettnig pretty sore by the 10-minute mark and I nearly fell off the stage at 25 minutes since I didn’t realize I was walking forward!

I ended the attempt by trying to sit down on the ground (successful), lean back (successful), and do a sit up (fell off on the way up).

Thanks to everyone who helped: Jennifer, Robbie, Matthew, Isaac, Ashton, Allison, Cumulus Media, the Kid’s Fair, and many others!

Flying Saucers

My sons just see a UFO. Remember when CD’s replaced the Iomega drives and held 7x the data? Now there are only two things left to do with them: throw them into a bucket, and use them as chew toys.

The annual BSU Science and Engineering Festival was held today with thousands of kids and their parents flocking to the campus for presentations, live demos, hands-on activities, free giveaways and a whole lot more. It’s my 4th year giving a presentation. Three years ago was my 2nd ever Guinness World Record attempt. Today I was going for my 80th-something.

I had one of my better presentations with a bit of new material on the educational front, the juggling front, and the balancing front. It culminated with a Guinness World Record Attempt for Most CDs thrown into a target in one minute.

The target was a bucket 3 metes away, less than 30 cm in diameter, and the CDs had to be thrown one at a time. The previous record was 25. To start, I gave 5 kids and 5 CDs each to throw and one of them made a single CD into the bucket. You might think it was just the kids trying – but my first attempt I only got 2 CDs into the bucket! Today I had both speed and accuracy throwing 84 discs and making 42. When I got home I saw that one was a ricochet so 41 will be the new record.

I practiced for a couple months with some serious crunch-time training. I gave it 4 attempts on stage today and broke the record every time.

Knock Your Socks Off

Today I made my second attempt at “Most Socks Removed in One Minute (Blindfolded)”. The Gemalto Global IoT Summit in Athens was the perfect event.

I was honored to give the corporate version of a Growth Mindset talk with juggling, balancing, personal stories, and we topped it off with a group Guinness World Record Attempt. I had 42 sock-wearing volunteers and other crew of about 10 helping with logistics.

We spent a lot of time, cleaning, dying, and prepping the feet with Gold Bond Powder to ensure the socks didn’t stick to the feet and the volunteers were great.

I made one practice run with my eyes open. A preliminary run blindfolded in which I removed 66 socks and the final attempt resulted in 70 socks removed. It turns out taking off 2 at a time is faster than taking off one at a time with 2 hands.

Check back soon for a video of the attempt!

Removing Socks

Stacking Your Chips

Today I decided to try one I haven’t practiced a whole lot. I stacked 10 chips on my forehead on 10.33 seconds. They had to be placed 1 at a time and remain there for 5 seconds without falling. The previous record was 11.06 seconds. I practiced a good 50 times today before the attempt and it took me 5 or 6 tries since the stack kept falling off.

Dan Cox took took a shot at it after I was done.

Dan giving it a shot

World’s Fastest 1 finger typing

Today I became the fastest 1-finger typist in the world (at least according to Guinness World Records). I typed “Guinness World Records has challenged me to type this sentence using one finger in the fastest time” in 24.27 seconds besting the previous mark of 28 seconds by well over 10%. With 99 characters, that comes out to 49 words per minute… with 1 finger! That’s faster than I could type with 10 fingers until high school. (And it doesn’t account for the capital letters which take 3 keystrokes each!)

I practiced casually over a few months period but got serious on the flights from Boise down to Dallas. The seatmate next to me on the plane never said anything about my extended frantic 1-finger typing but I’m pretty sure they must have at least read the sentence I typed over and over again and figured out what I was doing.

It took me two tries (on the first I had 2 typos even if it was a bit faster). I’m pretty excited to break 25 seconds even if I think I could go just a little bit faster. Here’s to setting records all over the country and the world!

Air time

I broke my second Guinness World Record’s title of the year by keeping 3 balloons in the air for more than 11 minute 8 seconds (previous record).

I was in Las Gatos, CA at the Cradlepoint office after a hard day of 5G workshoping and then raised my arms in the air. This record looks deceptively easy but turns out be a quite tricky. I was also in an enclosed space which ended up being my downfall. At 15 minutes 34 seconds the balloon hit the door ending the attempt.

I had several kicks to keep the balloons up when one got away and I didn’t have time to get my hands under it. After breaking the record I started goofing off and tried it with one hand for a while, I also headed balloons, jumped up to hit them and smacked them a lot higher than necessary to keep them afloat before the yellow one hit the door after an errant kick.

After I was done a couple fellow Cradlepoint employees tried and lasted about 10 seconds each. By the end I was dripping sweat and the next day my arms were so sore I could barely reach them above my head.

The record was originally created by Buzzfeed and the broken by Josh Horton.

Bounce Into the New Year

What better way to kick off the new year than to break a world record in Costa Rica with my family and the flight crew from KLM (based out of Holland).

At the famous El Avion Restaurant in Manuel Antonio in Costa Rica I broke the record for the fastest time to bounce 5 ping pong balls into 5 glasses. The previous record was 5.09 seconds and I nailed it in under 3.5 seconds. The hardest part may have been tracking down glasses that were exactly 16 ounces but I found some in a Houston restaurant on our layover on the way down to Costa Rica.

It took several attempts once I got set up at the restaurant but the KLM crew, a guide from Costa Rica, and a man from Spain acted as timers, witnesses, and videographers while the rest and my family cheered me on.

KLM crew on New Year’s Eve
El Avion Restaurant
Me and my copilot