Submitted by Rona_Gura on

What Happes If He Slips?

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Entertainment Blogs

Last week, my children sat transfixed in front of the television as they watched Nik Wallenda walk across the Grand Canyon on a tight rope. Apparently, my children were not the only ones who watched as Discovery Channel, the channel that aired the walk, reported it’s highest ratings since 2000. My children were similarly spellbound when they watched Mr. Wallenda walk across Niagara Falls on a tight rope in 2012.

Although invited, I declined watching both television specials with my kids. I do not understand the appeal of such events. To me, watching someone “perform” a stunt that could, possibly, result in their death is not entertaining but stressful. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy going to the circus. But Ringling Brothers use a safety net while Mr. Wallenda does not. And for me, that makes all the difference.

I guess I just don’t get it. Do you?

Comments

Corey Bearak

The payday is what matters and the acclaim. Not sure the order. A great feat but I did not seek to watch or put it on my calendar to have a shot at catching it.
Fred Klein

People watch for the same macabre reason they watch car racing

Submitted by Jeanne_Anne_Norton on Mon, 07/01/2013 - 01:49

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Jeanne Anne Norton

I chose not to watch either the Niagra Falls or Grand Canyon crossings. They would have been one long "heart in my stomach" moment. I do, of course, respect Nik Wallenda's prowess on the tight rope.
Cynthia Somma

I'm with you Rona, just can't do it...
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY~~~~~~~~~~~
Ester Horowitz

I won't pay to go to the movies to be scared either. What basically is the difference?

Submitted by TheodoreLanzaro on Mon, 07/01/2013 - 09:28

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Theodore Lanzaro

Nik Wallenda is amazing! The reason he does not use a net is because it gives you the mentality that you can make a mistake. When you know you don't have a safety net, you simply do not make a mistake. I watch an HBO special about the training for the Grand Canyon walk. He used special fans that blew winds of up to 90 miles an hour at 90+ degrees. The winds during the walk were very high and had he not trained like that, he probably would have fallen.

There is actually an excellent business lesson here. When you know that failure means the end, you do whatever you have to do to succeed. Also, that preparation is the key to success in any situation.

Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on Tue, 07/02/2013 - 14:44

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Erik Scheibe

I have never been a thrill type person, and call me a wuss but it bothers me to see him come off the wire and kiss his kids. Then again...his last name is Wallenda right? Is it in his bloodline?

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