April 18, 2003
Fear was not a factor
Blood and guts gets
Iqaluit man a trip to the Caribbean
KIRSTEN
MURPHY
Nunatsiaq
News
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Going...
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going...
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almost
gone.
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Gripped by nausea and motivated
to travel, six Iqaluit residents made history last week by competing in the
city’s first Fear Factor challenge.
Toonik Tyme Fear Factor,
modeled after the American television show, had contestants chewing and later
wading through country food discards mixed with earthworms and fish blood. The
prize was a $5,000 trip to the Caribbean.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Elizabeth Allakariallak
Roberts dips into her Iqaluit Slurpy.
(PHOTOS BY KIRSTEN MURPHY)
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Spectators lined up for
hours for a seat at the Royal Canadian Legion. The show sold out and dozens
of disappointed people were turned away.
Inside, the packed house
buzzed with anticipation.
When a contestant’s name
was called, audience members set aside their drinks and erupted in applause
and whistles. Harry Flaherty and Elizabeth Allakariallak Roberts, two of the
six competitors, had their own cheering section of placard-waving supporters.
Unlike the televised Fear
Factor, Iqaluit’s stars had to perform two, not three, fear-challenging events.
In the first challenge, contestants had to consume either worms mixed with fish
blood, caribou guts or just plain worms.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Martha Korgak successfully
ate a full cup of live worms but was unable to find keys hidden in a tank of
pink sludge.
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Competitors took turns
standing under the brightly lit dance floor, plastic cup in hand. One contestant
played with the audience, holding up a handful of worms before devouring them.
Seconds later, the young man was lining a garbage can with the contents of his
stomach. He straightened himself out and the crowd started singing "Na,
na, na, na, hey, hey, hey, good-bye."
Vomiting was an automatic
cause for disqualification.
In the second challenge,
contestants had their feet and hands bound while standing in a tank of guts,
blood and Jell-O. Their goal was to find keys in the sludge and unlock themselves.
After emerging from the
pink stinky tank, contestants slipped black garbage bags on each leg. Sporting
what looked like hip waders, the soggy participants offered waves to the crowd
and wandered off in search of clean clothes.
No glory without the guts.
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Spencer Dewar, 28, won
the illustrious Fear Factor title by choking down a cocktail of fish blood,
live worms and caribou guts in less than five minutes. He said the drink, aptly
named the Caribou Surprise, had the texture of watered-down soil and tasted
like "poop."
Dewar shook like an erupting
volcano as he scooped handfuls of the odorous sludge to his mouth. He fought
to swallow the slimy concoction and keep the putrid mixture down. People in
the front row screamed in bemused disgust.
The paler Dewar grew the
wilder the crowd became.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Fear Factor host Bob Hanson
fills up the tank with live earthworms.
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Dewar, who didn’t drink
a drop of alcohol before the event, can’t remember either challenge.
"After I had my first
finger full of poop I didn’t want to do it anymore. Then I blacked out. The
next thing I know, I’ve won," Spencer said.
He credits luck, stupidity
and adrenaline with getting him through.
Would he do it again?
"Never say never but
not in the next couple of weeks, for sure. I’m still a little shell shocked,"
he said.
Dewar is taking his girlfriend
with him to the Caribbean.
"She thinks I won
it on a scratch ticket. She’s in Halifax, she knows nothing," he said with
a laugh.
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PHOTO TO ENLARGE
Harry Flaherty digs for
keys.
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But victory has a price.
The next day, even with the most vigorous tooth brushing, Dewar couldn’t stop
smelling and tasting poop, he said.
The only solace has been
a friend’s secret blend of ice tea.
His advice to future Iqaluit
Fear Factor contestants is to think big.
"Win. Because if you
don’t win, it’s not worth it," he said.
Dewar’s parents, visiting
from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, had front row seats for the event.
"It was very disturbing,"
said Lois Dewar. "He likes to be in a crowd but he’s not a daredevil."
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