Leon Feingold


Leon Feingold is a baseball player, polyamory advocate, advice columnist, and co-founder of the Church of Good Deeds, from Oceanside, New York.

Sports

From 1990–94, Feingold pitched for the State University of New York at Albany. He then pitched in the Cleveland Indians system from 1994–95, the independent Atlantic League in 1999, and also played for the Pleasantville Red Sox.
Feingold was the first pitcher drafted by the Netanya Tigers in the former Israel Baseball League. Named to the IBL All-Star team, he was the IBL Player of the Year.
He has also gained international repute as a competitive eater. Known as "Justice," Feingold reached the rank of #12 in the world by the International Federation of Competitive Eating. He won the Nathan's Hot Dog Eating Contest Regionals three times, and competed in the July 4 World Championships at Coney Island three times. He was the second person in history to successfully complete the Carnegie Deli Challenge, doing it in just under two hours. He has appeared on several televised eating contests, including the US Open of Competitive Eating and the Glutton Bowl.

Polyamory

Feingold cohosts "Poly Wanna Answer?" a monthly polyamorous relationship advice column. In March 2018 he launched POLYquality.com as the new permanent home for "Poly Wanna Answer?", now co-written by fellow sex-positive advocate Lee Hencen.
Feingold has appeared solo and with others to discuss responsible nonmonogamy as a guest on The View, Huffington Post PolyInTheMedia, Jezebel, The Atlantic,, Quartz and others, plus featured spots in the HBO movie Americans in Bed, an episode of Season 2 of Vice Media's Slutever, as well as an expert interviewee in Sumati Sparks' 2019 Polyamory Summit..
In May 2014 Feingold helped launch New York's first openly polyamorous residence as its spokesperson, broker, and attorney.
He gave a TED Talk on polyamory at on March 21, 2015, and was invited to present alongside Zhana Vrangalova and Christopher Ryan at South by Southwest 2018.
Feingold became engaged in October 2016 to Yuanyuan Wang; after she was diagnosed with terminal cancer, they co-founded the Church of Good Deeds, a humanist, altruistic religious organization. The couple married in November 2016; Wang died in March 2017.

Legal issues

Feingold has been involved in two lawsuits. One involved his landlord at 1 River Place in Hell’s Kitchen. Feingold claimed that his landlord, River Place I Holdings, LLC, was attempting to illegally evict him. The case was ultimately settled.
Another lawsuit involved Adam Librot, claiming Librot illegally pocketed $15,500 raised to fund a group’s attendance at Burning Man.