By allowing ads to appear on this site, you support the local businesses who, in turn, support great journalism.
Professional eater, YouTube sensation, coming to RH for challenge
Professional eater Randy Santel
Professional eater Randy Santel. Photo provided

Professional eater Randy Santel will be visiting Papa’s Pizza To Go in Richmond Hill on October 4th to take on the Pizza Pride Challenge during his 2020 Southeast USA Tour.

Santel, who is the record holder of worldwide food challenge wins, has participated in food challenges in all 50 of the United States and in numerous countries. He currently has over a million subscribers to his YouTube channel and over a million followers on his Facebook page.

The Pizza Pride Challenge at Papa’s Pizza to go, 2495 US-17 will be his first ever. His challenge will be to eat one order of Papa’s piggystix, one pound of Papa's boneless wings, the hundred pounder pizza, and one order of Papa’s cinnastix in an hour or less. The challenge will start at 3 p.m. and end at 4 p.m.

If Santel wins the challenge, his meal will be free and he will also win a t-shirt and his photo will be featured on Papa’s Pizza To Go’s Wall of Fame.

The challenge is open to the public. Masks will be required inside of Papa’s Pizza To Go and optional outside.

Those in attendance will be able to purchase food from Papa’s Pizza to Go and meet Santel.

For more information about the Pizza Pride Challenge, contact Papa’s Pizza to Go in Richmond Hill at (912) 756-5150.

Sign up for our E-Newsletters
Decision on potential Parker's Kitchen location delayed
Decision on potential Parkers’ Kitchen location delayed
A picture of the Burnt Church Cemetery in Richmond Hill, Georgia. Residents at Tuesday's county commission meeting believe that the potential rezoning for the proposed Parkers' Kitchen location will negatively disrupt the historic gravesite. Photo credit: findagrave.com.
Bryan County Commissioners on Tuesday night deferred a decision on whether to rezone some 3.8 acres near the historic Burnt Church Cemetery to allow a Parker’s Kitchen convenience store. The vote to defer the decision for 30 days to look into concerns raised by opponents to the project came after several residents – including parents of children buried in the 195-year-old cemetery – urged commissioners to deny the rezoning.
Would you like to keep reading?
You have 1 free view remaining. Use your last view to read more.
Latest Obituaries