Have spicy food challenges become too extreme?
CBSN
The death of a 14-year-old boy following his participation in a foodmaker's "One Chip Challenge" that dared consumers to eat just one of its intensely spicy tortilla chips has renewed attention on the popularity — and risks — of spicy food challenges and other extreme dares on social media.
Paqui chips, a Hershey snack brand that created the challenge, announced on Thursday its decision to remove the product, packaged in coffin-shaped boxes, from store shelves. The company's move came six days after the death of Harris Wolobah of Worcester, Massachusetts. Wolobah died hours after taking the spicy chip challenge. His family is waiting for a cause of death from the Massachusetts Medical Examiner's Office pending an autopsy. The results are not expected for several weeks.
"I hope, I pray to God that no parents will go through what I'm going through," Harris's mother, Lois Wolobah, told WBZ-TV. "I miss my son so much. I miss him so much."
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin launched six space tourists on a high-speed dash to the edge of space and back Friday, giving the passengers — including a husband and wife making their second flight — about three minutes of weightlessness and an out-of-this world view before the capsule made a parachute descent to touchdown at the company's west Texas flight facility.