World | Chilean miners Chilean Miners Smoked Pot Underground They also requested blow-up dolls, says new book by Jonathan Franklin By Kate Seamons Posted Feb 13, 2011 8:12 PM CST Copied An image made from a video released by Television Nacional de Chile via the Chilean government Thursday Aug. 26, 2010, shows the trapped miners in their underground chamber. (AP Photo/Television Nacional de Chile) If you were surprised to learn that some of the Chilean miners contemplated cannibalism during their time underground, steel yourself for another big reveal: Some of them smoked pot, or so says a new book by New York Times journalist Jonathan Franklin. The Daily Mail notes that Franklin had special access to the rescue operation, and his book claims some of them got marijuana smuggled to them by way of letters from their family ... and didn't share. Franklin says the pot "created more tension than it relieved," and says officials contemplated using a drug-sniffing dog. And speaking of tension: The men also asked for blow-up sex dolls, and a donor reportedly offered 10 dolls but was turned down. A doctor monitoring the men reportedly said, "33 or none. Otherwise they would be fighting for inflatable dolls: whose turn is it? Who was seen with whose fiancee? You are flirting with my inflatable doll." Instead, they got pin-ups from a popular tabloid and porn. The Mail also notes that there were two "near disasters" while the men were being hauled out. Click for more new details on their time underground. Read These Next Negative press coverage should get TV licenses yanked, Trump says. Here's what late-night hosts had to say about Jimmy Kimmel. Autopsy is in for Black student found hanged from tree at college. A judge found Trump's NYT lawsuit was way too long. Report an error