About the Christmas Olympics
The Origin Story
What started as a dumb holiday idea spiraled β very quickly β into an annual tradition of pure chaos, friendly violence, and competitive glory. The Christmas Olympics were born in the Hulberg household, powered by caffeine, sugar, and the inability to let anyone else win at anything ever.
Official Competitors
Every year, the same elite athletes return to defend their personal pride:
- π Jake
- π Andy
- π¦ Dalton
- β¨ Rachel
- π Austin
- β Brittany
- πͺ Dusty
These six bring the heat, the chaos, and the deeply unserious yet obsessively competitive spirit that defines this event.
A Totally Real, Official Competition
Donβt be fooled by the ornaments and the Christmas lights β this is serious business. Each event is scored individually, points are tracked meticulously, and at the end of the night, a single champion is crowned. No teams. No mercy. No participation awards.
The Olympics are structured, judged, logged, and treated as though the fate of the world depends on it. And honestly? It kinda does.
The Legendary Events
Among the many chaotic challenges, one tradition stands above the rest:
π The Hot Dog in a Hole Competition π
A spectacle that defies physics, dignity, and the Christmas spirit all at once. It remains a cornerstone event, a crowd favorite, and a guaranteed photo opportunity.
Photos, Chaos, Memories
Every year produces legendary moments, incredible photos, and at least one argument about points, timing, or judging. The Christmas Olympics arenβt just a set of games β theyβre a competitive Christmas saga.
The photos page (coming soon) will house the most iconic highlights of each year.