100 Balloons vs 2 Feet

The balloons were no match for my feet… other than it took two tries to break this record. Setup is time -consuming so it’s good that the major mishap that required me to restart the attempt happened early in the first attempt and we only had to replace the first dozen balloons or so.

The record was for the fastest time to pop 100 balloons with the feet. The balloons were required to be in a single straight line and only the bare feet could be used to pop them. The balloons were also required to have a minimum 20 cm diameter (~8 inches).

Checking to ensure all 100 are larger in diameter than reference balloon pumped to smallest size

Before the attempt, I spoke to the youth group about the power of having a growth mindset and some of the failures and setbacks I’ve faced in life and how I overcame some of them.

I thankfully had plenty of help blowing up balloons and taping them to the floor since it takes a lot of time. Unfortunately, I did most of the taping and didn’t do a very good job (ok, so the tape was pretty weak). That led to the first big mishap on the first official attempt. About 10 balloons in one didn’t pop and bounced out of the line. I tried to step on it while it was in the air and that just bounced it off the ground and even higher into the air. I did it again with an even worse result. I had the frame of mind to stop there, setup the line again replacing only the first dozen balloons, and have another layer of tape added to all 100 balloons. It almost worked. On the second try I made it 80% of the way through before a balloon bounced off the line. I let it settle on the ground before trying to step on it, poped it that time, and raced back to the line to complete the attempt.

100 balloons ready to go

I wasn’t sure if I’d done it. The first time I tried to break the record for the fastest time to burst 200 balloons with a nail, I had balloons coming off the wall and wasted too much time trying to pop them and came up a few seconds slow. Fortunately, this time I broke the record of 29.7 seconds with a run of 23.69 seconds.

The one that almost got away

Thanks to everyone who helped with the attempt!

Lots of help from so many people in this picture and more
Celebrating when I realized I had broken the Guinness World Record

2,000 Pounds Moved in 14.62 Seconds

I broke a Guinness World Records Title at the Boise State University Science and Engineering Festival for the 5th year in a row. Four years ago I broke my second ever Guinness World Record here and have been back every year since to show that if you set your mind to a goal, believe in yourself, and pursue it with a passion, you can accomplish anything (if you don’t let all the pesky failures in the interim get in the way).

I had a 20-pound kettlebell that I had to pass hand to hand 100 times. The previous record was 24.62 seconds. The hard part isn’t necessarily passing the weight hand to hand that fast, it’s doing it that fast without ever letting both hands touch the weight at the same time. If I have 99 passes as speed and 1 bad one, the whole thing is disqualified. I had to film the entire attempt in 240 fps and even after stepping through frame-by-frame I had 3 transfers I used other angles to double-check they were all good.

I had a very supportive audience who stuck with me for several attempts (I went ahead and made my warmup attempts official in case I got it) and the aspiring scientists and engineers were amazing.

Celebrating
Panorama view
Gathering around

Thanks to the team!

Fastest Frisbee Relay

There were four serious ultimate players in this attempt and then myself. We were trying to challenge the Guinness World Records title for the fastest 20-meter flying disc relay and I knew I had to bring out the big guns.

The previous record was 8.74 seconds. We marked out 20 meters and every 5 meters in-between. After a few warmup runs we landed on a final try of 6.83 seconds and called it a night.

Thanks to Mike and Becky, Dusty, and Chris for putting in the years of practice at ultimate and showing up prepared to make this one happen.

Becky clamping down
Dusty sending it
Celebrating
The crew

2173 Behind the Back Catches

This is my last post of the year. Goal complete: 52 Guinness World Records in 52 weeks (with quite a bit of buffer 🙂 )!

This record was with Mike Beacham for the most behind the back frisbee catches in one hour. The mark to beat was 1,400. We didn’t create the record, but whoever did was never able to successfully challenge it.

We broke the 1-minute variety of this record last year with 51 catches in a minute. Before that, the record was 37. We averaged 36.2 catches per minute for the entire hour, so we’re feeling pretty good.

Published in the news: https://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2019/12/31/Idaho-man-makes-2173-behind-the-back-disc-catches-in-1-hour/4831577825993

Mike launched 42 discs a minute for an entire hour – most with amazing accuracy honed by years of competitive frisbee catching and dumping 🙂

Mike threw about 2,520 frisbees in the hour and I caught 2,173 of them for an 86.2% catch rate. That’s a B+ in my book. While not good enough in school, that’s good enough to beat the Guinness mark by over 50%. We crossed 1,400 catches in just over 39 minutes giving us over 20 minutes to pad the stats.

Catching them behind my back. 2,173 successfully

The tips of my fingers were bloodied by the end with the (wisely trimmed) fingers nails smashed in. We had several stretches of great throws and Mike was spot on most of the time. With over 2,500 throws through, he gave me a few changes to make the highlight reel and you can catch a few of them in the video above.

Thanks to the team

Thanks to the team: Mike, Mark, Chris, Dusty, Kathi, Jennifer, Becky, and the kids! The frisbee collectors (Dusty and Kathi) may have had the most strenuous jobs and the witnesses had to stay laser-focused to keep count.

Catch Your Balance

I had less than 400 milliseconds on average between each ball that came my way. That’s the same amount of time it takes a 100MPH pitch to reach home plate from the pitcher’s hand. Fortunately, Jonathan wasn’t throwing them quite that fast, but he was throwing them that frequently.

Watch it on YouTube! (Don’t forget to let us know who did the better intro: David or Jonathan)

The record was for the most catches in 30 seconds while standing on a balance board. The previous record was 46. Did we think we could beat over 1.5 per second? You bet.

It takes balance, speed, agility, and strength… and then there’s the guy on the left who doesn’t really do much.

Beyond the obvious, there were a couple of extra things that made this one tricky: 1) the catching hand has to alternate, otherwise the attempt ends immediately. This isn’t so bad if you catch every ball. If you miss one, there are only milliseconds to adjust and catch the next ball with the same hand instead of the other one. 2) the legs have to remain straight for the duration of the attempt. I’m not sure why Guinness has this rule, but it’s way easier to adjust the balance on a balance board with bent knees, and 3) it was a live audience and show so the pressure was on.

On stage

On the first try, we had a bad start and I think I may have bent my knee so we stopped early. On the second try, we did much better but the throw speed was a little inconsistent. Jonathan would throw a slow one that arched and then a fast one right behind it and I had 2 arrive at the same time a couple of times. We still broke the record but went at it one more time for good measure.

ITF regulation tennis balls

There were 79 throws, 68 catches, 11 misses, and one caught after 30 seconds expired for a new Guinness World Record’s Title of 67 catches in 30 seconds while standing on a balance board.

This is actually kind of a scary view

Thanks to the Boise Centre for having me out to give a talk on Growth Mindset at the employee growth conference and for allowing us to make an official Guinness World Record attempt.

Thanks for having us out!

No Hands Balloon Juggling

I thought this was going to be an easy record to break. Four seconds into my first practice, I realized it was going to be harder than I thought. In fact, after a full practice session, I put this one on the shelf for months not sure if I wanted to spend the time to be able to break it.

The record is for the longest time to keep 2 balloons in the air with the head. It doesn’t seem like it should be too difficult, but it’s deceivingly hard. One rule that makes it ten times harder is that you have to alternate hits on the balloons with the head.

This means to have to hit each balloon up consistently because if one goes much higher than the other, the wrong balloon is going to come down first. By the time you hit the other balloon back up into the air, the lower balloon is too low to get the head under. It also means that mid-air collisions are detrimental because they usually result in the balloon that was the last hit with the head sending the balloon you want to hit next up and the one you can’t touch right back down. That ended up being what got me at this end of this attempt. The balloons not only have to be hit up far enough apart not to hit each other, but they also have to be close enough to be able to have time to shuffle back and forth between them. The footwork reminded me of the last few steps to get into the perfect position to hit a tennis ball.

Joel Strasser of toothpicks in his beard fame (3,500) came and acted as a timer. He’s from the Boise area but now lives in Oregon. He was back for the holidays. The previous record was 1 minute 9 seconds and I had my best run of 3 minutes 40 seconds.

Thanks to Bob and Tom Show for providing the balloons. They send them for a different record attempt but they ended up being too large for the Guinness rules on that attempt but they worked great for this attempt.

Thanks to the team!

Pull up a Chair

I had the privilege of being invited onto the Huckabee show last week. I jumped at the opportunity to promote STEM education, talk about the power of a growth mindset, and of course break a Guinness World Records Title. I flew down to the filming in Hendersonville, Tennessee. In this case, I was shooting to reclaim a title I had formerly held that was last broken on Britain’s Got Talent by Jaw Rawlings earlier this year.

The record was for the most chairs balanced on this chin at one time. I broke it the first time in June of 2018 balancing 8 chairs in a single stack on my chin besting the minimum mark of 5. They had to be held on the chin for over 10 seconds to qualify. Ashrita Furman broke it with 9 and Jay 11 on BGT with 11. I went on the set and decided I would try up to 15. I didn’t get to practice with the chairs until earlier that afternoon when I arrived on set since they were shipped straight there.

When I arrived for my rehearsal, I started with one chair to warm up, then 8 which was the previous record, then 11 to see if I could tie the record. I couldn’t try any more without help since I couldn’t get that many chairs up to my chin safely without help.

The 15 chairs weighed over 60 lbs altogether and bounced like a spring on my chin making it quite the challenge to keep balanced. I was able to do it in practice with the assistants lifting the 15 chairs on my chin, the question is if I’d be able to pull it off in front of the live audience.

Interview with Governor Huckabee (photo owned by Trinity Broadcasting Network)

The filming for the show is done for a live audience of about 100 people and I had a nice interview with Governor Huckabee about why I break Guinness World Records Titles (you can check it out below from the Huckabee channel). I then went on to attempt it live. I got just a little nervous and it took me 4 tries to get a run that lasted over 10 seconds to break the record. A video review confirmed I kept all 15 chairs balanced on my chin for 10.4 seconds to break a Guinness World Records Title.

Huckabee Show segment
15 chairs in a stack
Thanks for having me out! (photo owned by Trinity Broadcasting Network)
Signing the wall (photo owned by Trinity Broadcasting Network)

The Most Records Broken

(Not that record, I’m talking vinyl records)

I gave a talk to the kids at Futures Public Charter School describing my journey from not being smart enough for the gifted program to getting an electrical engineering degree from MIT and from having no Guinness World Records 4 short years ago to having over 130 today.

7-inch vinyl records used

I juggled, balanced, and hopefully inspired kids to believe they can do more than they thought possible, especially when working on challenging problems. I loved the kids’ reactions and their support.

I then attempted to break the Guinness World Record’s Title for “most vinyl records smashed in 30 seconds”. The previous record was 38. The records were removed from their cases and inspected for micro fractures before the attempt. A few were found with small holes drilled near their center (maybe indicating that they were no longer playable?) Those were all removed before the attempt.

Breaking Records

I had 30 seconds to break them completely, one at a time using only my hands. I started off strong and did well until I got a few records that were more flexible than the rest and instead of breaking they only flexed. In practice, I discovered it’s much faster to drop it and move on to the next instead of trying even hard. If I take up precious seconds there’s a chance it might break, but sometimes the records just bend all the way in half and never breaks.

Rounding the corner

When time was called I had broken 38. It was good enough to tie the record but I wanted to do even better. We lined up another stretch of records and tried again. This time I went even faster. I was doing great until again, I ran into a stretch that just flexed. I touched 46 records in 30 seconds but 7 didn’t break and had to be disqualified. The final count was 39. A new Guinness World Records Title!

As soon as I finished I realized my hands were covered in a half dozen cuts from the shards of the fractured records. The kids could see the blood and showed their concern but I was happy to have broken the record and assured them that my hands would be fine. It was a wise decision to wear safety goggles for this one.

One of a half dozen cuts

Thanks to Amanda, Estee, Chris, and Future’s Public Charter School for having me out to inspire kids to pursue STEM with a Growth Mindset!

Thanks for having me out!

Weighed Down No More

Happy Guinness World Records Day 2019!

I broke a 21-second record during my lunch break since I didn’t have a whole lot of free time on this special Guinness World Records day. In the end, it took 21.69 seconds to surpass the previous record of 32.05 seconds.

The record was for the Fastest time to transfer 40 lbs of weight hand to hand 100 times. It turns out my 40lb dumbbell actually weighed 42 lbs so I did a little extra. At no point can both hands come in contact with the object at the same time. I had a 16.7-second attempt that was disqualified because one of the frames on one of the 100 passes showed both hands came in contact with the barbell at the same time. We reviewed it in slow-motion video and it looked good. It wasn’t until I did a frame-by-frame analysis that I realized that 1 of the 100 transfers had both hands touching the dumbbell at the same time. It also wasn’t 100% clear that I didn’t just “tap” it instead of full grasping and taking control of the object. The rules disallow simply tapping the object.

My fingers paid the price for this record but they will heal.

The bottom pads of my fingers were ripped off but it was worth it

Grit, growth mindset, and hard work lead to another Guinness World Records Title.

Tennis Ace

It’s not every day that I can hit a tennis ball faster than my tennis idol Roger Federer. Here’s another one of those Guinness World Records that real people might not even attempt. Alternating hits on a tennis racquet is actually a pretty common activity to entertain yourself on a tennis court (just like juggling, but more accessible) so maybe Federer has tried it. If so Roger, let me know!

182 isn’t MPH, it’s the number of alternating hits I got in one minute. That’s over 3 per second for an entire minute. When I first started practicing for this record about a year ago the 1-minute record was only 135 hits or just over 2 per second. It was readily accessible but the 30-second record was 90 hits, and much harder to reach. I was tempted to just go for the easy one and move on but I decided to approach my practicing with a growth mindset and try to break both of them at the same time.

bouncing the ball low and fast

90 hits in 30 seconds seemed impossible and so out of reach that I nearly gave up a few times but stuck with it. In the meantime, the 1-minute record of 135 hits was broken by a run of 160 hits so that one became just a little more challenging as well.

I got all the folks together for this attempt and had one hit on the frame of the racquet just about at 30 seconds disqualifying the first attempt but I nailed both of these on just my second attempt with the news station on hand.

Promoting STEM education through my story and juggling

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