I hope that all right-thinking people agree that pizza slice droop (left hand image) is a problem to be avoided. Cheese, sauce, and toppings are all in serious danger of sliding off the slice and into the diner's lap if the tip of the slice flops down. Why does the slice tend to droop? If you hold the edge of the crust and try to "cantilever" the slice out into space, the weight of the sauce/toppings exerts downward force, and therefore a torque that tries to droop the crust.
A simple way to avoid this problem is shown in the right-hand image (shamelessly stolen from here). By bending the pizza slice, with a radius of curvature around an axis that runs from the crust to the slice tip, the same pizza slice becomes much stiffer against bending. Why does this work? Despite what the Perimeter Institute says here, I really don't think that differential geometry has much to do with this problem, except in the sense that there are constraints on what the crust can do if its volume is approximately conserved.
The reason the curved pizza slice is stiffer turns out to be the same reason that an I-beam is stiffer than a square rod of the same cross-sectional area. Imagine an I-beam with a heavy weight (its own, for example) that would tend to make it droop. In drooping a tiny bit, the top of the I-beam would get stretched out, elongated along the \(z\) direction - it would be in tension. The bottom of the I-beam would get squeezed, contracted along the \(z\) direction - it would be in compression. Somewhere in the middle, the "neutral axis", the material would be neither stretched nor squeezed. We can pick coordinates such that the line \(y=0\) is the neutral axis, and in the linear limit, the amount of stretching (strain) at a distance \(y\) away from the neutral axis would just be proportional to \(y\). In the world of linear elasticity, the amount of restoring force per unit area ("normal stress") exhibited by the material is directly proportional to the amount of strain, so the normal stress \(\sigma_{zz} \propto y\). If we add up all the little contributions of patches of area \(\mathrm{d}A\) to the restoring torque around the neutral axis, we get something proportional to \(\int y^2 \mathrm{d}A\). The bottom line: All other things being equal, "beams" with cross-sectional area far away from the neutral axis resist bending torques more than beams with area close to the neutral axis.
Now think of the pizza slice as a beam. (We will approximate the pizza crust as a homogeneous elastic solid - not crazy, though really it's some kind of mechanical metamaterial carbohydrate foam.) When the pizza slice is flat, the farthest that some constituent bit of crust can be from the neutral axis is half the thickness of the crust. When the pizza slice is curved, however, much more of its area is farther from the neutral axis - the curved slice will then resist bending much better, even made from the same thickness of starchy goodness as the flat slice.
(Behold the benefits of my engineering education.)