Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

French Activist Pedaled Across Atlantic Eating Expired Food

French Activist Pedaled Across Atlantic Eating Expired Food

French activist Baptiste Dubanchet, 29, pedaled and sailed across the Atlantic, risking his life to raise awareness about unnecessary food waste. Traveling from Paris to Morocco, to Miami and then New York, he ate only out of date, expired food to fuel his body and the ten month journey by bike and by boat. He purposely chose food that otherwise would've been thrown away: 50-year-old honey, decade-old lentils, and rice from 2011.


It was a dangerous journey across the ocean.

Facing storms and dangerous close contact with whales, Dubanchet traveled on average 40 nautical miles a day on the ocean, and 40 to 75 miles a day when on land.

"A giant whale came right up to the boat. She was two times bigger than the boat so she could of flipped it or broken it with her tail. It was so scary," said Dubanchet. "I could not do anything to help it, I froze, I couldn't move. The storms were scary as well but as they come slowly - you have the time to realize what's happening"

But he did fall in love with the night sky: "But the stars at night were amazing. There were millions and millions, like sparkling dust all over the sky."

Promoting ways to end food waste

Dubanchet wanted to prove that it's safe to eat dry product food past the expiration date:

This project was a way to find and promote ways to end food waste for good. Fresh food should be freeze-dried instead of thrown away. And dry products should no longer be thrown away if we remove the best before dates, people will keep them until they are eaten.

No one on Twitter seems impressed.

One person thinks Dubanchet was just trying to get attention from the press.

"He should have picked foods that DO go off, everyone knows honey has no shelf life for example anyway he got in the papers so result!"

And Larry here doesn't think that Dubanchet isn't making a bit of different - he just wants to think he is.

"From the annals of 'I gotta do something to pretend I'm making a difference, anything really.'"

Do you think he's proved anything?

Even his food choices inspired bawdry bowel commentary.

"Or maybe he was banned to the oceans because of chronic explosive diarrhea due to eating out of date foods?"

"Good thing there was nobody with him. His ongoing vomitting, farting and diarrhea must have been unbearable for somebody else."

A petition to change food labeling.

In April 2014, Dubanchet crossed seven European countries, from Paris to Warsaw, eating only food from the dumpsters.

Dubanchet has a petition on Change.org to prevent food waste by removing "Best Before" dates.

Please SHARE this with your friends and family.

h/t: Daily Male UK

More from Trending

Ryan Gosling
Dominik Bindl/FilmMagic

Ryan Gosling's Frank Comments About The Struggling Movie Theater Business Have Fans Nodding Hard

It's no secret that movies are kind of... well, dying, unless they're super-hero movies. And even some of those aren't doing so hot anymore, either.

Star Ryan Gosling recently got candid about just how bad it's getting, especially for the movie theaters we are no longer going to as much as we used to, especially since the pandemic.

Keep ReadingShow less
Riley Gaines
@xx_xyathletics/X

Anti-Trans Activist Riley Gaines Just Tried To Claim That Trans People 'Silenced' Her—And People Are LOLing Hard

Clothing brand XX-XY Athletics, who made transphobia their brand—literally—released a new ad on X featuring their poster girl, former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines.

In the newest bid for attention for the clothing company, Gaines pulled tape off her mouth then claimed she was "silenced" by trans rights activists. She added that pro-trans university administrators also destroyed her dream of becoming a dentist.

Keep ReadingShow less
Alan Ritchson, who plays an Army Ranger in War Machine, pushed back against age-related criticism by citing updated U.S. Army enlistment rules.
Jamie McCarthy/WireImage via Getty Images

Alan Ritchson Epically Shuts Down Trolls Who Say He's Too Old To Play Army Ranger In New Film

Alan Ritchson has a message for anyone calling him “too old” to play an Army Ranger: take it up with the Army. The War Machine actor pushed back on online criticism by pointing to a recent change in U.S. Army enlistment rules.

After trolls questioned his casting in the Netflix film, including his portrayal of a soldier in RASP (Ranger Assessment and Selection Program), Ritchson noted that the military recently raised its maximum enlistment age from 35 to 42, undercutting claims that he’s aged out of the role.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @connortalkslol's TikTok video
@connortalkslol/TikTok

Guy Admits His Ignorance After Girlfriend Educates Him On What Really Happens During Menstruation—And He's Horrified

Women's health should be much more common knowledge than it is, but many subjects related to women—especially menstruation, pregnancy, and childbirth—are still considered pretty "taboo" subjects in public spaces, in shared educational spaces, and, of course, among men.

That's why there are so many men like TikToker @connortalkslol who only start finding out what menstruation really is and what the cycle entails when they go looking for the information themselves.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from Dr. Suneel Dhand, MD's TikTok video
@dr.suneel.dhand.md/TikTok

Doctor Shares Eerie Warning Why You Should Never Leave Your Loved Ones Alone In The Hospital—And Yikes

It's easy for us to assume that when we rush one of our loved ones to the doctor's office or the emergency room, that we have done our part and the doctors will take it from there.

But Dr. Suneel Dhand, MD, argued in a multi-part series on X that a person's role in their loved one's healthcare has only just begun when they walk through the hospital's doors, making them one of their loved one's most vital advocates.

Keep ReadingShow less