Is it possible to do the milk challenge
Its where a small group of people get liter sized milk jugs one each , put random food coloring in them, and drink it as fast as you can. Then you try to puke. Me and my friends are gonna do the rainbow milk challenge! Yay for rainbow puke! Milk Super Challenge. The rules are pretty simple: Drink a gallon of milk in 60 minutes, and keep it down. It is harder than it sounds, as many a high schooler and college student have discovered. But "gallon challengers inevitably face an unpleasant round of vomiting and possibly diarrhea, cramps, and bloating" after attempting the feat.
The Jackass video is here — I'm not embedding it because it is gross. You've been warned. Watch above Kobayashi downed an entire gallon of whole milk in 20 seconds. And that wasn't even the main event: He was merely washing down the 13 cupcakes he'd just swallowed in one minute — a feat Uncle Bob claims is a world record.
Kobayashi became a competitive-eating legend by winning every Nathan's Coney Island hot dog contest from to , when he was frozen out from the contest over a contract dispute.
She said as a consequence of telling him about the health implications he did not participate in the milk activities when he went out with his friends the following weekend.
She said the teenagers were indulging their milk fascination in public areas like parks and shopping centres. A caller to 6PR, Bev, said her year-old granddaughter was also aware of the Facebook phenomenon. A nine-boy group, who appear to be in their early teens, have posted on YouTube their video of trying to complete the Rainbow Milk Challenge "on a boring Sunday in Ocean Reef" dated February 12 of this year.
The boys had a selection of flavoured milks and plain milk, which they dyed blue and green and drank before regurgitating it on a public oval. It is understood the human stomach can't actually hold three litres of milk which is the cause of the vomiting. There are numerous "milk challenge" groups and pages on Facebook, which spans the United States as well. Still, doctors warn that the consumption of too much of anything in too little time can be dangerous.
In the similar Water Challenge, where contestants are asked to drink a large amount of water in a short time, there have been several reported instances of fatalities. Water intoxication—overhydration, hyperhydration, or water poisoning—occurs when the normal balance of electrolytes in the body is pushed outside safe limits due to excessive water intake. This causes a decrease in the levels of sodium in the blood and can cause a potentially fatal disturbance in brain functions.
In February , Matthew Carrington, a student at Chico State University in California, died while participating in a fraternity hazing ritual involving forced water intoxication. Two years later, Jennifer Strange, a year-old mother of three from Sacramento, died after participating in a radio contest.
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