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Beer bong

Drinking device composed of a funnel and attached tube

Beer bong

Summary

Drinking device composed of a funnel and attached tube

Beer bong

A beer bong is a device composed of a funnel attached to a tube used to facilitate the rapid consumption of beer. The use of a beer bong is also known as funneling. A beer bong is unrelated in function to a bong, which is primarily used to consume cannabis.

Construction

The typical construction of a beer bong involves a large funnel connected to tubing. Beers are stockpiled in the funnel and as the user drinks, the beer will pour down the tubing. Beer bongs often have valves to engage/disengage the flow of beer.

Use

Typical use

One person holds a clear pipe to their mouth, while a second holds the other end of the pipe with a large plastic funnel attached. The pipe is part-filled with beer, with the remainder of the pipe and the bottom of the funnel filling with a foamy head.[[File:A young man beer bonging for the first time..png|thumb]]

Drinking from a beer bong is different from drinking beer normally (or other carbonated beverage). This is because the drinker is not in control of the volume of liquid entering the mouth. In addition, the force of gravity pushes the beer into the drinker's mouth and thus 'forces' the beer down. It is for this reason the beer bong often engages the gag reflex.

The beer bong is either 'hit' or 'chugged'. A hit from the beer bong is when a valve is used and one drinks as much beer as they can before turning off the valve. Chugging is where an entire, or a number of beers are consumed in one use. A popular technique is to 'open' the esophagus and simply allow the beer to flow down. This takes practice and may cause pain in trying it for the first time.

Rectal use

Occasionally the pipe is inserted rectally to administer an alcohol enema. Called butt-chugging or boofing, this method of alcohol consumption can be dangerous or even deadly because it leads to faster intoxication since the alcohol is absorbed directly into the bloodstream and bypasses the body's ability to reject the toxin by vomiting.

References

References

  1. (2010). "Alcohol in Popular Culture: An Encyclopedia". Greenwood.
  2. (2012-09-21). "5 Shocking Ways Your Kids Try to Get Drunk". ABC News.
  3. (2012-09-22). "Experts: Alcohol enemas 'extremely dangerous'". CNN.
  4. Vander Ven, Thomas. (2011). "Getting Wasted: Why College Students Drink Too Much and Party So Hard". NYU Press.
  5. Leibovich, Mark. (September 20, 2006). "Bong Girl". [[The New York Times]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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