Week 648: Caller IDiot [to Kitchen Aid food processor customer service rep] "I have a complaint about your product. It processes food. But aren't processed foods supposed to be bad for you?" Not content with a half-page of puerility on Page 2 of the Style section each Sunday, many Invitational readers also wallow in the font of juvenilia known as Below the Beltway, Gene Weingarten's weekly column in The Washington Post Magazine. Every few weeks, when he's run out of anything to say, Gene calls some 1-800 consumer advice numbers advertised on product packages and harasses the poor PR workers with stupid questions. As you can see by the example above, Gene is getting pretty desperate here. Fortunately, he is reputed to be familiar with The Style Invitational, so you can help him out: Name a product or company and supply a stupid question to ask the consumer hotline person. Winner receives the Inker, the official Style Invitational trophy. First runner-up wins a tapestry wall hanging, contributed by Loser Eric Murphy of Ann Arbor, Mich., depicting a pretty angel holding a candle and feeding (or possibly swatting at) some doves. What gives this fine artwork its Loserly dimension are the slots around the candle, the angel's halo and her swat-hand, into which you insert little Christmas lights (included!). Other runners-up win a coveted Style Invitational Loser T-shirt. Honorable mentions get one of the lusted-after Style Invitational Magnets. One prize per entrant per week. Send your entries by e-mail tolosers@washpost.comor by fax to 202-334-4312. Deadline is Monday, Feb. 13. Include "Week 648" in the subject line of your e-mail, or it risks being ignored as spam. Include your name, postal address and phone number with your entry. Contests are judged on humor and originality. All entries become the property of The Washington Post. Entries may be edited for taste or content. Results will be published March 5. No purchase required for entry. Employees of The Washington Post, and their immediate relatives, are not eligible for prizes. Pseudonymous entries will be disqualified. The revised title for next week's contest is by Kevin Dopart of Washington. This week's contest was suggested by Russell Beland of Springfield, whose name has been printed more than 950 times in The Washington Post, as opposed to Weingarten's 506 or so. Report From Week 644, in which we asked for some new events, product tie-ins, etc., to create some interest in the Winter Olympics, which you probably won't be watching starting this Friday. This week was one of those frustrating ones in which a lot of people offered pretty much the same ideas. If the one you sent is practically identical to one included below, you may file an appeal to the Empress; be sure to mail your petition inside a suitcase well lined with that special green Olympic packing material. 4 Punitive Luge: Each country binds one convicted murderer to a sled, has four men push him. The criminal who reaches the bottom fastest wins glory for his country. (Seth Brown, North Adams, Mass.) 3 All figure skaters have to perform their routines in those big Seven Dwarfs costumes. Because let's face it, in terms of future job prospects . . . (Brendan Beary, Great Mills) 2 The winner of the bobblehead of Arnold Schwarzenegger in a dress: The Olympic caldron will be positioned below the ski jump. Look for height and distance records to be shattered this year. (Dave Prevar, Annapolis) And the Winner of the Inker 1 Carnival biathlon: Each competitor starts with a handful of tokens, wagering at each shooting station for a chance for larger stuffed animals, which must be carried for the remainder of the course. Winner takes the gold medal and the big stuffed giraffe. (Joel Knanishu, Rock Island, Ill.) Honorable Mentions New rules: To ensure security, the following will be banned or eliminated from Olympic venues: sharpened blades and poles, white powdery substances, airborne crystallized material, speeding vehicles and high-altitude staging areas. (Michael Gips, Bethesda) To improve their credibility and accuracy, all figure-skating judges must score each contestant using the Magic 8 Ball. (Rick Haynes, Potomac) The figure skaters must wear full pads and helmets, while the hockey players wear the frilly shirts and tight little pants. (Kevin Dopart, Washington; Brendan Beary). New events: Downhill limbo: Just like normal downhill skiing, but there's a 4-foot-high bar across the finish line. In the second round, the bar gets a little heavier, and a little lower. . . (Brendan Beary) Die-athlon: Two skiers follow parallel paths and stop to shoot at each other. No silver or bronze medals will be awarded. (Douglas Frank, Crosby, Tex.) Old biathlon: Skiing and shooting. New biathlon: Skiing and doing shots. (Bode Miller, La Dolce Vita, Italy) (Brendan Beary) The Athlon: All the excitement of the biathlon at half the cost. (Marc Naimark, Paris) Ice Brawling: Hockey with all the boring parts removed. (Seth Brown) Mouth-to-Mouth Speed-Skating Relay: Stick the metal baton to your tongue and go. The "handoffs" will be ethpethially exthiting. (Kevin Dopart) Extreme curling: This already exciting sport is taken to the nail-biting limit when the ice in the path of the slowly sliding rock is cleared by high-tech vacuum cleaners. (Kyle Hendrickson, Frederick) Blobsledding: The 275-pound weight class. (Douglas Frank; Bill Davis, Canton, Ga.) Global Warming Biathlon: Contestants start out skating, end up swimming. (Art Grinath, Takoma Park) Snow Calligraphy, sponsored by Bud Light: Contestants drink a pitcher of beer and spell their names. And since it's an international competition, names must appear in both Roman and Cyrillic alphabets, plus Japanese kanji. (Brendan Beary) Protest filing: A competition among coaches. Points awarded for Speed of Objection, Clarity of Protest and Degree of Hissy Fit. (Stephen Litterst, Ithaca, N.Y.) Slush funding: In a demonstration sport, Alaska's congressional delegation competes to see who can throw the most money at tiny, ice-bound villages. (Peter Metrinko, Chantilly) Suburban pentathlon: The 50-meter driveway shovel, the windshield scrape, finding lost keys in deep snow, the car dig-out and the 100-meter ice walk in dress shoes. (Martin Bancroft, Rochester, N.Y.; Andrew Hoenig, Rockville) Men's Piste-Off: Points awarded for size of the hole created in the snow, depth of the hole; and style points for an attractive color pattern around the edge. (Harvey Levy, Kibbutz Kalila, Israel) Ski-binding: Well-conditioned athletes in Lycra are bound with leather straps and then must struggle to free themselves. No actual competition involved, but traditionally one of the most watched events, especially the pairs category. (Peter Metrinko) Ads and sponsors: Team U.S. Curling Association: "Hey, ladies, come see a man with a broom in his hand!" (Andrew Hoenig) The U.S. Figure Skating Team, sponsored by Botox: "It takes more than ice to freeze a smile." (Kevin Dopart) The U.S. Luge Team: The two-man luge: It's rugged. It's intimate. And their pants couldn't be any tighter. Don't miss those wild rides down Brokeback Mountain! (Jay Shuck, Minneapolis) The biathlon, brought to you by Fox News Network with host Bill O'Reilly: Fair and Balanced In-Your-Face Coverage of American-Bred, Rifle-Toting Marksmen Whipping the Elastic Girly Pants off Bands of Incestuous European U.N. Suckup Cowards. (Robin Grove, Woodbridge) Opening Ceremonies: Hillary Clinton carries the U.S. flag, having been dubbed our official Ice Maiden. Finalists follow, including Martha Stewart, Omarosa and Nancy Grace. (Jean Sorensen, Herndon) Opening Ceremony: Arrival of the Olympic Snowball, which started out from Athens as a 50,000-pound block of ice. (Martin Bancroft) Closing Ceremonies: All the athletes gather around the Olympic caldron and blow it out on the count of three. (Dave Prevar) Next Week: A Hearty Har-Har, or Love's Labored Losers