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World's Ugliest Dog Contest

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A 2013 contestant

The World's Ugliest Dog Contest is an annual contest held in Petaluma, California, as part of the Sonoma-Marin Fair, to decide which of the dogs entered in the contest is the ugliest. The contest, along with the rest of the fair, is typically scheduled for the fourth week of June. Along with the title of “The World’s Ugliest Dog” the winner’s owner receives a check for $1,000 and a trophy[1] As of 2017, the prize has been increased to $1,600, a trophy and a free trip to New York City.[2] There is significant media coverage, and as many as 20,000–30,000 people attend the contest during the fair each year. The fair now holds an all-day Dog Lovers' Festival preceding the evening contest.

The contest has been going on since the 1970s.[3] In 2009 the Sonoma-Marin Fair trademarked the phrase World's Ugliest Dog. In 2013, the contest celebrated its 25th anniversary as a fair-produced event, and an anniversary book, World's Ugliest Dogs, was published with text by the contest's producer of seven years, Vicki DeArmon, and photos by photographers who have covered the contest over the years for the fair.

History

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The World’s Ugliest Dog Contest began in the 1970s as a way to generate revenue for the Old Adobe Association in Petaluma, and member Ross Smith is widely credited as the creator of the contest. After the association considered replacing their pet parade with a dog contest, Smith suggested an ugly dog contest, and the idea stuck. The Old Adobe Association nurtured the World’s Ugliest Dog Contest in its infancy, with Smith emceeing until 1981. Winners for the contest have been recorded since 1976, and it became a part of the Sonoma-Marin Fair in 1988. Animal Planet began sponsoring and filming the competition in 2006, bringing additional attention to the event.[4]

Participation

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Himisaboo, a Chinese Crested-Dachshund mix, 2018

Dogs generally come from across the United States but are welcome to enter from around the world. In contrast to conformation shows (which are restricted to purebreds), the World's Ugliest Dog Contest has separate divisions for pedigreed dogs and mutts, with the two winners then competing for the overall prize, and contestants are not judged against any breed specification.

Dog owners must provide documentation of veterinarian checks to determine the competing animal is healthy. The Sonoma-Marin Fair has also partnered with animal rights groups such as the Sonoma County Humane Society to educate the public about animals and to provide opportunities to adopt rescue dogs. The fair issues a photo of the winner, a press release summing up the contest, and YouTube video within hours of the contest conclusion. Contestants for each new year are featured on the website before the contest as well in the World's Ugliest Dog Voting.

Winners

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Contest trophy, 2024

Contest winners are recorded since 1976, and include Boomer, a French mastiff, in 1996.[5]

1999–2001

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Nana, the contest winner for three years between 1996 and 2001 and a previous winner of the mutt division,[5] was a three-pound chihuahua mix with a sidelong walk.[6][3] She appeared on the cover of a RatDog album[7] and twice on The Tonight Show.[6] She died in 2001.

2002

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Rascal, a 7 lb. Chinese Crested owned by actor Dane Andrew of Sunnyvale, California, won the title in 2002 and is now in “The Ring of Champions”. Rascal went on to win the 2008 Oldest Ugly Dog Contest in Fort Bragg, the Tim Downs Ugly Dog Contest in 2008, the 2009 Ugly Dog Contest in Highland, and the 2009 Regal Cinemas "Hotel For Dogs" Ugly Dog Contest in Florida. As of June 2010, he had won ten Ugly Dog contests. Rascal was so ugly that Jay Leno put him on The Tonight Show before he had ever even won, and he was cast in four horror movies, seen on The View, Last Call with Carson Daly, and The Insider. He has his own leash line, cartoon strip, and documentary, the proceeds of which go to animal charities.[citation needed]

2003–2005

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Sam, a blind Chinese Crested dog from Santa Barbara, California, was voted the world's ugliest dog three times in a row, from 2003 through 2005. He died in November 2005, bringing an end to his three-year reign.

2006

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Scandal erupted during the 2006 World's Ugliest Dog Contest when an as yet unidentified person gained unauthorized electronic access to the contest's internet voting page and deleted 40,000 votes from then leader "Pee Wee", son of "Sam", and 30,000 votes from second-place "Victoria", according to marketing director Vicki DeArmon.[8] To rectify the situation, fair officials decided to completely restart internet voting on May 22, 2006. The official winner, Archie, was selected by a panel of judges on June 23, 2006. Archie died July 2008.

2007

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The winner of the 2007 World's Ugliest Dog competition was a Chinese Crested-chihuahua mixed-breed dog named Elwood, who had placed second the previous year. Rascal, who won the 2002 title, became the Ugliest Dog on the West Coast. With the loss of Archie and Elwood, Rascal is the only dog alive to be "Ring of Champions" World's Ugliest Dog. Most of the competitors in the competition were also Chinese Crested, because the breed can exhibit exaggerated traits like a mohawk, bug eyes, and a long, wagging tongue.[9] Elwood died at the age of 8 on November 28, 2013.[10]

2008

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The 2008 World's Ugliest Dog competition was won by a Chinese Crested dog named Gus. Eleven dogs took part in the competition.

Rascal, the 2002 World's Ugliest Dog and Ring of Champions holder, won the World's Oldest Ugly Dog Contest in Fort Bragg, California on August 30, 2008, making him the only dog to win both top titles.

On November 10, 2008, Gus died. He was 9 years old.[11][12] Runner up Rascal, The 2002 World's Ugliest Dog, frepresented the Contest and Fair officially as the World's Ugliest Dog in the Petaluma Butter and Eggs parade.[13]

2009

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Pabst, a boxer mix owned by Miles Egstad of Citrus Heights, California, won the 2009 World's Ugliest Dog competition; Miss Ellie, a blind 16-year-old Chinese Crested Hairless, won in the pedigree category; Pabst beat her in a run-off for the overall title.[14]

Miss Ellie died June 1, 2010, at the age of 17.[15]

2010

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Princess Abby, a chihuahua with "a hunched and peculiar walk due to that her back legs are longer than her front (which allows her to have moments of bipedalism), a missing eye, and mismatched ears", won the 2010 contest out of a field of 25 dogs.[16] Despite being a rescue dog,[17] she was entered in the pedigree division.

2011

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Yoda, a previously abandoned 14-year-old Chinese Crested-Chihuahua mix with a malformed nose, "short tufts of hair, protruding tongue, and long, seemingly hairless legs", won the 2011 contest. The dog is from Hanford, California, and is owned by dog groomer Terry Schumacher.[18][19]

Yoda died in her sleep at her home in Hanford, California on March 10, 2012. She was 15.[20]

2012

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The 2012 winner was Mugly, an 8-year-old Chinese Crested with a short snout, beady eyes, and several unkempt white whiskers, owned by Bev Nicholson of Peterborough, England.[21][22] Mugly was the first dog from outside the United States to win.

2013

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In 2013 Walle, a four-year-old "huge-headed, duck-footed mix of beagle, boxer and basset hound" from Chico, California, beat 29 other contenders to win the contest after being entered at the last minute.[23]

2014

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The 2014 contest was won by Peanut (alternately named Opossum), a 2-year-old mutt believed to be a mix of Chihuahua and Shih Tzu. In contrast to most of the contestants, Peanut's physical deformities, which include deformed lips and eyelids (which give the dog the appearance of a perpetual growl) and significant loss of hair, were a result of being abused as a puppy; owner Holly Chandler of Greenville, North Carolina rescued the dog from an animal hospital.[24]

2015

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Quasi Modo, a 10-year-old mutt with Dutch Shepherd and pit bull lineage, won the 2015 contest, narrowly beating two Chinese Crested/Chihuahua mixes. According to the dog's biography, Quasi Modo's shortened frame, hunched back and long legs relative to her body led to confusion at first glance as to whether she was a dog or a hyena. Her owner is from Loxahatchee, Florida and rescued her from a shelter.[25]

2016

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The winner of the 2016 contest was SweePee Rambo, a Chinese Crested from Van Nuys, California.[2]

2017

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Martha, a 3-year-old Neapolitan Mastiff owned by Shirley Dawn Zindler of Sebastopol, California, won the 2017 contest. Weighing in at 125 pounds and having extremely loose and droopy jowls, the once-blind rescue dog was particularly noted for her uncooperative personality, being described as a "snoring, gassy" dog that refused to show off for the crowd, bosses around other dogs in her company, slobbers all over human guests, and knocks over water buckets.[2][26]

2018

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The 2018 contest was won by Zsa Zsa, an English bulldog with a particularly wide-legged stance, underbite, and very long droopy tongue.[27][28]

2018 was the first year to award the People's Choice Award, based solely on the online voting results.[citation needed] The winner was Himisaboo, a 12-year-old Chinese Crested-Dachshund mix from Oregon.[citation needed]

2019

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Scamp the Tramp, a mutt with unkempt hair that grows into dreadlocks and stubby legs and who was rescued from the streets in Compton, California, won the 2019 contest;[7] his owner, Yvonne Morones, also owned Nana when she won the contest.[27]

The People's Choice award went to Meatloaf, a bulldog with protruding teeth from Sacramento, California.[7]

2020–2021

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Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020[29] and 2021 competitions were canceled.[30]

2022

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Mr. Happy Face, a 17-year-old hairless Chinese Crested-Chihuahua mix who was adopted from a shelter in Arizona after being rescued from a hoarder's house, won the 2022 competition.[30][31]

Wild Thang, winner of the 2024 contest

2023

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The 2023 competition winner was Scooter, a seven-year-old Chinese Crested with reversed hind legs who uses a mobility cart. Scooter was adopted from Saving Animals From Euthanasia in Tucson, Arizona.[32][33]

2024

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Wild Thang, an eight-year-old Pekingese from Coos Bay, Oregon, was the 2024 winner. [34] Wild Thang, whose prominent features include extremely long and unkempt hair, has competed in the competition five times; surviving distemper at a young age caused his teeth not to grow in, so that his tongue protrudes.[35][36]

Television and film

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Animal Planet has sponsored the event and broadcast the show on television for several years. In the 2009 contest, the event included celebrity judges such as Jon Provost ("Timmy" on the 1950s television show Lassie) as well as an Ugly is the New Beautiful Fashion Show featuring models and adoptable rescue dogs. Hosts rotate each year. In 2013, syndicated radio hosts Bob & Sheri hosted the show.

In 2011, the contest was the subject of an hour-long indie documentary entitled Worst in Show, produced by Don Lewis and John Beck.[37]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Lori A. Carter (June 22, 2012). "Ugly dogs lap up global stardom". The Press Democrat. pp. B1, B3.
  2. ^ a b c Nancy Coleman, "'Drooling, snoring, gassy' Martha the mastiff wins World's Ugliest Dog", CNN, June 23, 2017, retrieved June 26, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Janet Balicki, "A look back at Sonoma-Marin Fair's World's Ugliest Dogs", The Press Democrat, June 16, 2016.
  4. ^ Tyler Silvy (June 2, 2021). "Ross Smith, creator of World's Ugliest Dog competition, dies at 91". Argus Courier.
  5. ^ a b "Pug-Nosed in Petaluma: Ugly Dogs Get Their Day at Fair" Archived 2019-06-23 at the Wayback Machine, The Press Democrat, June 24, 1996.
  6. ^ a b Vicki DeArmon, World's Ugliest Dogs: The Official World's Ugliest Dog Contest Book, Guilford, Connecticut: Lyons, 2013, ISBN 9780762792559, p. 28.
  7. ^ a b c John Rogers, Associated Press, "Scamp the Tramp wins World's Ugliest Dog Contest", San Francisco Chronicle, June 22, 2019. Archived June 23, 2019, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Brouhaha Erupts Over Ugly Dog Contest", KTVU.com, 2006-05-16, Retrieved on 2007-06-23.
  9. ^ AP, "Chinese Crested-Chihuahua mix earns world's ugliest dog crown in US", International Herald Tribune, 2007-06-23, Retrieved on 2007-06-23.
  10. ^ AP, "Elwood, crowned world's ugliest dog in 2007, dies", USA Today, November 30, 2013.
  11. ^ AP, "World's ugliest dog dies after battle with cancer", NBC News, updated November 10, 2008.
  12. ^ Daniel Nasaw, "End of the line for Gus, the world's ugliest dog", The Guardian, November 11, 2008.
  13. ^ Official Rascal Site: www.TheWorldsUgliestDog.com
  14. ^ "Pabst, a boxer mix, crowned World's Ugliest Dog over a field of Chinese cresteds," L.A. Unleashed, Los Angeles Times, June 29, 2009.
  15. ^ "Former World's Ugliest Dog Miss Ellie Dies at 17", CBS News, June 3, 2010.
  16. ^ "New Winner Announced for 2010," Archived 2006-05-21 at the Wayback Machine Sonoma-Marin Fair, June 25, 2010.
  17. ^ "Newly Rescued Chihuahua Takes 'Ugliest Dog' Title", Fox News (AP), June 26, 2010.
  18. ^ Chinese crested mix deemed ugliest dog. Associated Press via WIVB-TV. Retrieved June 25, 2011.
  19. ^ "Chinese crested from Hanford wins 23rd annual World's Ugliest Dog Contest", The Press Democrat, June 25, 2011, archived on September 25, 2012.
  20. ^ Christina Blaveaux,"Yoda, World's Ugliest Dog, Becomes One With the Force, Dies at Age 15", Entertainment Weekly, March 15, 2012, retrieved March 28, 2012.
  21. ^ "United Kingdom ugly dog takes all at World's Ugliest Dog Contest", Press release, Sonoma-Marin Fair, retrieved June 23, 2012.
  22. ^ Melisa Goh, "Ugly Mugly Wins Ugliest Dog Contest", The Two-Way, NPR News blog, June 23, 2012.
  23. ^ "Upset at World's Ugliest Dog contest", USA Today (AP), June 22, 2013.
  24. ^ Corinne Heller,"World's Ugliest Dog 2014 Contest: And the Winner Is ... Peanut! Check Out a Pic!", E!, June 22, 2014, retrieved August 18, 2014.
  25. ^ "Deformed mutt is crowned World’s Ugliest Dog" (corrected), AP, June 27, 2015,retrieved July 8, 2023.
  26. ^ Colin Dwyer, "PHOTOS: Meet Martha, World's Ugliest Dog", NPR, June 24, 2017, retrieved June 26, 2017.
  27. ^ a b Derrick Bryson Taylor, "World’s Ugliest Dog, Scamp the Tramp, Comes From a Family of Winners", The New York Times, June 22, 2019; also at Traveller.com.au.
  28. ^ "Scamp the Tramp! Zsa Zsa! Quasi Modo! Look Back at 16 Years of World's Ugliest Dog Contest Winners", People, June 14, 2022.
  29. ^ "A look back at every World's Ugliest Dog Contest winner since 2002", Tucson.com (Lee Digital Content Center), June 21, 2020.
  30. ^ a b Ben Hooper, "Odd News: Arizona canine named World's Ugliest Dog in annual contest", UPI, June 27, 2022.
  31. ^ Joyann Jeffrey, "Chinese Crested-Chihuahua Mix Named Mr. Happy Face Is 2022 'World's Ugliest Dog'", Today via NBC 5 Chicago, June 27, 2022.
  32. ^ Emma Bowman, "Meet Scooter, the winner of this year's World's Ugliest Dog contest", NPR, June 26, 2023.
  33. ^ Diana Ramirez-Simon, "Scooter, a Chinese crested, is crowned world's ugliest dog", The Guardian, June 25, 2023.
  34. ^ Michael Sainato, "Eight-year-old pekingese Wild Thang wins World’s Ugliest Dog contest", The Guardian, June 22, 2024.
  35. ^ Chloe Veltman, "Super fluffy 8-year-old Pekingese Wild Thang wins 2024 World's Ugliest Dog contest", NPR, June 22, 2024.
  36. ^ Ann Lewis, "Experience: My dog is the 'ugliest in the world'", The Guardian, September 27, 2024.
  37. ^ Richard von Busack (February 2, 2011). "Here, Doggie! 'Worst in Show' examines ugly-dog craze". North Bay Bohemian. Retrieved February 13, 2011.
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