| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before 2027 | 0% | 0¢ | 0¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks whether Dave Portnoy will award any pizza place a score of 9.0 or higher during calendar year 2026; the result matters because his One Bite reviews can drive consumer interest and media attention.
Dave Portnoy's One Bite pizza reviews are a widely watched series in which he tastes and assigns a numeric score to individual pizzerias, often accompanied by short video clips and social posts. High scores are uncommon and tend to generate outsized publicity for the restaurants that receive them, making this an event that links food culture, influencer impact, and local business outcomes.
Market prices reflect traders' collective expectations about whether such a score will be publicly assigned in 2026 and update as new information appears (tour dates, announced reviews, viral buzz, etc.). Use the market as a real-time signal of changing expectations rather than a fixed forecast.
It means a numeric score of 9.0 or greater that Dave Portnoy publicly assigns and posts during calendar year 2026 under his name or official One Bite/Barstool channels; informal praise without a numeric score does not qualify.
Only scores first published or explicitly updated to 9.0+ during 2026 would generally count; reposts of pre-2026 scores typically do not change the original posting date. Check the market operator's settlement rules for final determination.
Yes — a new, publicly posted numeric score assigned by Portnoy in 2026 should count even if the shop was reviewed earlier, provided the 9.0+ score is clearly attributed to him and dated in 2026.
No — this market is specific to numeric scores directly attributed to Dave Portnoy himself; third-party lists or guest reviewer scores do not qualify unless Portnoy personally assigns the numeric rating.
Only an explicit numeric score of 9.0 or higher as stated by Portnoy counts; ambiguous verbal comments, third-party rounding, or unofficial approximations do not qualify. For disputes or edge cases, the market's official settlement rules govern the outcome.