Tobold's Blog
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
 
Making the news

Whatever online newspaper I open, there is a story about Steve Irwin, an Australian wildlife TV documentary star, who got killed by being pierced in the heart by a stingray. Which kind of makes me wonder why that is big news. Yeah, yeah, its sad for the family, tragic accident, and all. But the guy was making a living getting close and personal with dangerous animals. How often *can* you put yourself in harms way before disaster strikes? I mean, he was in the water filming a documentary named "Ocean's Deadliest". And people are surprised that one of those ocean's deadliest is um, eh, actually deadly? For me that is kind of non-news, just like a "bungee jumper breaks his neck" headline.

Stingrays are relatively harmless, non-aggressive animals. There have been only 17 deaths by stingrays reported in the last decade. That is due to *most* people when seeing the animal quickly concluding that getting too close to it is not a good idea, and the stingray has no intention whatsoever to pursue them. But of course if you are a TV guy famous for wrestling crocodiles and insist on touching the stingray, you'll find out why he has that 10-inch sting at the end of his tail.

If you want to live the wild life, I can recommend computer games. You make a wrong decision and get shred to pieces by Onyxia, or barbecued by Ragnaros, but except for the time lost and a repair bill in virtual gold pieces, failing in the adventure doesn't cost you anything. If you insist on doing dangerous things in real life, you *will* get harmed sooner or later, potentially deadly.
Comments:
It's news because he seemed to do such death-defying acts that we all wondered whether he was really immortal or just darn lucky. Guess his luck ran out...
 
its also different becuase he was a famous person, not just some random bungie jumper
 
I think the fact he got killed by a wild animal actually makes it more of a talking point than for instance if he had died of cancer. I've seen a lot of comments along the lines of: "It was bound to happen". Perhaps subconsciously we even feel a bit smug - we may have boring desk jobs but at least we had the sense not to take up crocodile wrestling for a living. In any case, condolences to the family - he is survived by a wife and young kids afaik.
 
I think it is a shock to so many people simply because it reminds us of our own mortality. I was extremely sad to hear about his death.

"Now I'm gonna jam my thumb up his butthole.......Awwwww he's really pissed off now"
 
That must be it. They don't send his shows over here in Belgium, and I don't feel I "know" the guy, so no sense of loss.
 
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