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cmuncey writes
"Salon has two articles about those perennial geek favorites, the Darwin Awards. This includes an interview with "Darwin" and their current favorites from the winners and nominees. (The official site is here.) Any nominations that they have missed? "
Yeah! (Score:4)
I remember (Score:2)
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early contributions from holland... (Score:1)
I used to laugh (Score:3)
Invicta{HOG}
OK Blantant Troll (I guess) (Score:2)
yeah yeah moderate me down to non-existance
Shocked and appalled (Score:4)
There. I've said it, so no-one else needs to. So let's get on with the business of laughing at morons.
My own personal favourite will always be actor Jon Erik Hexum (sp?), who shot himself in the head with a blank, cunningly forgetting that blanks are lethal up to a few metres. He was starring in some godawful series about models and spies at the time; the title escapes me but I still wake up screaming when the dialogue haunts my dreams.
However, as a way to go I reckon autoerotic asphyxiation has yet to be beaten (so to speak). What better way to be remembered than with your eyes bulging, and your tongue and your dick hanging out?
Re:Oh please!!! (Score:1)
Moderate this down (-1, i^2)
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Come on - surely RIAA and DVDCA would win! (Score:1)
Do they have a special category for suicides ? (Score:2)
While he was in hospital "recovering" he was discovered missing from his bed and the nurse just managed to catch him on his way out the window.
He was tied to the bed after that which wouldn't have been a problem if he didn't keep trying to lodge food in his throat. I.e. He would swallow a piece of dumpling until it blocked his windpipe and then sit there and tried to pretend everything was fine until he started to turn blue.
And yes this really happened. I got it from the officer who investigated the case and the one who was stationed at his bedside. Too bad I don't know what became of him afterwards. Although 4 butched suicides in one day speaks volumes
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:1)
Re:darwin awards emulator for BSD just released! (Score:1)
Re:did you laugh at all the suckers at work on NYD (Score:1)
Re:darwin awards emulator for BSD just released! (Score:1)
Re:Shocked and appalled (Score:1)
*groan*
I must say, that pun was a stroke of genius!
Death from a great height (Score:1)
One of my favourite Darwin awards of all time must be the one where a guy was demonstrating how strong the window was by running straight at it. As fate should have it he went straight through and plunged 25 stories to his untimely end.
I guess what made it memorble was the thought by Adam Spencer, "25 stories is just about enough time to realise what an idiot you were"...
PS it's always strange how we find wierd and whacky deaths so humourous really. I mean if all this stuff is true then their respective families and friends mightn't laughing as much as we are...
Re:I used to laugh -- me too (Score:3)
Someone is going to tell me to 'lighten up' now. This being Slashdot, it will be put less politely. But when you laugh at this lot, bear in mind that half of them were done whilst drunk (have you never done something life-threatening when drunk yourself? It might be you next time...) and all of them involve people who had relatives and friends who had thousands of people laughing whilst they dealt with someone's death. Of course, this is Slashdot, where the discussion of one person's death became the subject most riddled with the most appalling comments, so I suppose it's fit fodder for here. Go ahead and laugh. My friend lost a friend.
Re:Darwin Awards (Score:4)
Do you think being blind to that which God has created and set in motion is faith? To deny the existance of evolution and natural selection is to deny one of the most grand parts of God's creation. If anyone has been misled, it is you; for you have thrown out those things that are clearly evidenced in the world that God created. God wants you to have faith, but God certainly does not want one to dismiss what they can see and feel. Do you not believe that God is capable of creating a system where the most desirable traits are passed on and emphasised, and the least desirable are phased out?
It is my belief that this particular Anonymous Coward is a member of the Kansas Board of Education. :)
o/~ So tonight we're gonna party like it's 1699! o/~
I remember... (Score:1)
Respectfully,
Kevin Christie
kwchri@wm.edu
There's a french saying (Score:2)
Re:Darwin Vs. Religion (Score:1)
Darwin was actually a religious man.. he didn't hate OR deny God. Hi was a botanist who wanted to study how species diverged despite geographical separation. It was accidental that his studies resulted in a theory (that has now been accepted as wrong by anthropologists, incidentally) which didn't agree with the creationist six-day theory.
Darwin's work, and more since, solidified the idea of natural selection, which is easily witnessed even by lay-people of today, and this is the whole point of the humour behind the Darwin awards.
An example: Two types of butterfly lived in Manchester over a hundred years ago... a pale one, and a dark one. They lived on birches, which are naturally silvery white. Along came the industrial revolution, which polluted the birches into blackness. The white ones suddenly became very visible to predators in their natural habitat, all but died out, having been dominant for many centuries. They were "naturally selected" out of existence.
Then the city of Manchester worked on its pollution laws, the silver birches became silver again, and the pale butterflys, now camouflaged, were naturally selected back in again.
OK... seriousness aside, Darwin's "survival of the fittest" may not agree with your personal idea of where we came from, but his notions happen to fit very well with the humour in the Darwin awards, and so in a perverse way, the name of said awards satisfies the weak anthropic principle... it exists because the conditions are correct for its existence.
Rant over. Let the games continue.
/Prak
Re:early contributions from holland... (Score:1)
Did he die staring at the sun (or subsequently)? That's the number one rule [darwinawards.com] to be elligible for a Darwin award. Quoted from their site:
"we commemorate those who unintentionally douse the gene pool with chlorine by innovating moronic ways of killing themselves, thereby helping eliminateu ndesirable weaknesses from the genome."
Re:Darwin Awards (Score:1)
My favorite darwin award... (Score:1)
Urban legends (Score:2)
I guess I should be uplifted (instead of bummed) that these are fiction, not fact. But I continue to believe that people are stoopid enought to do that - it's just that this time fiction got there first.
how'd he fit? (Score:1)
Re:did you laugh at all the suckers at work on NYD (Score:1)
Anyone else want one? (Score:2)
Chris Worth [chrisworth.com]
Gopher It (Score:3)
You see they didn't want to stand around whacking it with shovels while the kids watched. So, being the mental giants they were, they put the animal in a bucket, and took it to a storage room. There they decided to gas/freeze it to death using a spray for freezing chewing gum on sidewalks so it can be chipped off. They closed the metal door behind them and started spraying into the bucket. Unfortunately they also decided to do something else (in the interests of sound time management, of course) they couldn't do in front of the kids.
They lit up some cigarettes.
Well, that got a response. If they had bothered to read the labels, they would have known that the propellant (good name in this case) in the spray cans was quite flammable. Maybe propane. The resulting detonation blew the door completely off its hinges, and put the custodians in the hospital for a day.
Oh, and the gopher? According to the Modesto Bee, witnesses stated that the animal not only survivied the incident, but was last seen crossing the road in front of the school, trying to get away at a high rate of speed. Smart move.
The Rocket Car Story. (Score:4)
Re:Not what they seem... (Score:1)
Re:early contributions from holland... (Score:1)
like i said, he didn't die, so it doesn't count. i remember one other nominee from a few years back that didn't die, though. it was the guy who tied a bunch of balloons to a lawn chair and floated away, only to drift over the pacific ocean, necessitating a helicopter rescue...
Teenager Division (Score:2)
At my previous residence, elevator surfing was a popular fad until one of the little moppets made the fatal discovery that you shouldn't put your body in between the cab and the wall of the shaft.
Daniel (Score:1)
Re:Not what they seem... (Score:1)
Moderate this down (-1, This Doesn't Count)
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Shouldn't DIVX be given an award? (Score:1)
1) Died - Yep
2) From Stupidity - Ditto
BASE Jumping off of El Capitan (Score:1)
Darwin awards going downhill (Score:5)
Way back when they first started, nominees actually had to die in order to be considered. A few years later, they added the "honorable mention" category for those who merely maimed themselves. But this year, they seem to be handing out full nominations for mere stupidity... i saw nominations this year that involved no bodily harm whatsoever! (like the guy who tried to steal the letters from the board for his mug shots)
I really hope the Darwin Awards staff will reconsider their methodology and return to their previous high standards, lest they become another Golden Globe, or worse yet, America's Funniest Home Videos.
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120
chars is barely sufficient
Both of this years stories are true... (Score:1)
As for the firemen, it made the "funny-but-tru" news on tv a few months ago....
...
Yes, I know I ramble and my spelling isn't quite up to scratch. If you wish to complain,
Try the REAL Darwin List! (Score:5)
Clueless twits with the "FAQs are for pussies" gene need not apply. Before signing on, for the love of Uncle Chuck, please read The CoFD FAQ [antipope.org].
(On second thought, don't bother. We love flaming helminthic parasites who can't read FAQs into smoldering piles of ash...)
I can assure you that, unlike www.darwinawards.com , the CoFD has never, and will never pull any punches when it comes to "sensitive" deaths. Hell, we had a fsckin' field day over the "don't wear a seatbelt and let your chauffeur drive drunk" gene (ex-Princess Die), the "trees are your friends" gene (Sonny Bono, $DEADKENNEDY), and the "Hey, I can fly in this fog" gene ($DEADKENNEDY, closely related to "Hey, I can drive" gene posessed by yet another $DEADKENNEDY).
For Y2K, I personally celebrated by laughing heartily at news footage of some dumb bloke in California standing up on a light pole and reaching up to grab a couple of nearby wires for support. Presumably, he had the "electrical safety is for pussies" gene. Darwin be Praised, he fell down and went boom (actually, "zzap-thud" was more like it) shortly afterwards. Verily, I could almost hear the Voice of Darwin echoing in the Y2K crowd. YOU. Yes, YOU, on the streetlight. Outa the gene pool. NOW.
For any who object - I quote the final lines of the CoFD FAQ:
Re:Teenager Division (Score:1)
People talk about how violent computer games have no redeeming value, but that's a mistake no quake player would ever make.
Trainsurfing ("Choose death...") (Score:3)
Now this guy, apparently having smoked a little too much dope, decided that it would be really cool to go surfing in the City Loop (the underground section of the Melbourne train system, running under the city centre). He did not count on the height of the tunnel abruptly decreasing ahead of him. He hit a wall of concrete face first at something like 60km/h. Apparently he died some hours later in hospital.
There were memorial aerosol-art murals to him all over the Melbourne train system for several years. Guess they didn't have Darwin Awards back then...
Fictional from Clerks (Score:2)
Re:early contributions from holland... (Score:1)
Re:I used to laugh (Score:1)
I realize its tragic for people who know someone who died and is nominated for an award, but personally I try not to associate with morons -- to cut down on my risk of being in that situation.
Re:Oh please!!! (Score:2)
Fatal Flaw (Score:3)
They don't remove themselves from the gene pool, if they have already reproduced. Hell, if they orphan their children, then someone else has to take care of their offspring. They're ahead.
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Re:Teenager Division (Score:1)
Re:BASE Jumping off of El Capitan (Score:2)
He could still make himself eligable! (Score:2)
Contrary to popular myth, you can survive an act of collassal stupidity and be eligable for the darwin awards, provided you are no longer capable of pro-creating.
Re:I remember... (Score:1)
Some of these things must be suicides (Score:1)
Re:I used to laugh (Score:2)
If the Darwin awards have any redeeming social value, its to remind people that they are mortal.
As you get older and collect your share of knee, back, and other injuries, you'll discover that most of the time when you hurt yourself, it's preceded by a little voice in your head that says "I shouldn't be doing this". Eventually, you learn to listen to that voice and wear those safety classes, clamp that piece of work, to climb down and move the ladder a little more often while your painting your house.
The guy who got himself wrapped around a car's drive shaft wasn't doing anything more dangerous than a lot of weekend mechanics do. It's just as stupid to get yourself crushed because you didn't chock your car wheels well enough bit happens often enough.
Re:Oh please!!! (Score:3)
Now I've always thought the Darwin Awards were funny, but if our situation is any indication, their complete exaggeration of truly horrible events in order to get some laughs is simply not laughable.
Re:Darwin Awards (Score:1)
So what if I am? I am proud to have served my state in the glorious name of God. I am proud to have erased the last vestiges of Darwin's Theory of the Damned from our public schools. In Kansas, nearly every town has held public book burnings, where we dispose of the hellish "science" books. Biology books are gone (they teach evolution.) Same with astronomy books (they teach heliocentrism, also they teach about objects that are more than 6000 light years away from Earth, which is a temporal impossibility.) Same with history and geology books. Here in Kansas, we've discovered that the only book that is needed is the Bible. All the rest have been burned, and the state legislature is considering passing a measure to criminalize ownership of non-Biblical books.
I am convinced that the educational system here in Kansas will be the envy of administrators around the world. The back-to-the-Bible movement here will spread. I guarantee it. We will spread it to other states and countries, and they will like it. If they don't like it, well, we can make them like it. See, we folks here in Kansas think guns are real, real nifty.
Re:Try the REAL Darwin List! (Score:1)
Re:Try the REAL Darwin List! (Score:1)
I heartily endorse the CoFD Mailing list, having laughed my ass off regularly at the expense of those discussed there.
Fools are not suffered gladly, just ask DJ Lee, Richtard, Xerxes~, and a few other memorable dofusses. Humorous twisted on topic tales are in order and welcomed by the several hundred listmates.
Please read the FAQ of the list and lurk for a bit to avoid public embarassment on your part.
Regards
WT Stull
Re:BASE Jumping off of El Capitan (Score:2)
Re:Yeah! (Score:1)
The Anti-Darwin Award (Score:2)
Sorry to seem heartless about this, but doesn't this mean the gene for childhood cancer stays in the gene-pool? Is this a Good Idea?
Regards, Ralph.
Re:Fictional from Clerks (Score:1)
Yeah, but he still managed to have sex after he died, so those could be some winning genes!
Re:Urban legends (Score:1)
My favorite web site for looking up stories to see if they are Urban Legends is that of the San Fernando Valley Folklore Society [snopes.com] Very well researched and documented, plus well written. I could do without the cutsie effects on the home page, however. I frequently refer people there, for example, after having received yet another copy of the "Bill Gates is giving away $1000 just for forwarding e-mail" hoax.
The so-called "official Darwin Awards" site and its mailings don't seem to me to be in the spirit of the original Darwin Awards which, as others have noted, always referred to people who died for their stupidity. Nowadays, there's a mixture of Urban Legends and real stories, most of which do not involve an individual's removal from the gene pool.
Steve Lionel
Missed nominiation (Score:2)
I believe that he was intentionally left out because of who he was. His act was one of blatent and stinging stupidity and he should get a Darwin award for it.
LK
Re:I used to laugh -- me too (Score:1)
Re:Darwin Awards (Score:1)
What about Terry Kath? (Score:1)
Can we nominate our parents... (Score:1)
Re:Missed nominiation (Score:1)
He wouldn't be considered because it's not funny. The Darwins are chosen to make readers have a nervous laugh and feel bad about it, and to marvel at the stupidity while enjoying a sad yet amusing story. If I step out in front of a train because I didn't look both ways before crossing the tracks, I may be stupid, I may have made a bad judgement, but it's not that interesting. JFK Jr. died in a plane crash, and he happened to be famous. It's not like he was trying to fly it from the wings.
The Good Reverend
Re:BASE Jumping off of El Capitan (Score:1)
Personally, if you want to BASE jump, go ahead, but you should have to put a deposit down to cover the expense of some unlucky soul having to scrape you off the ground.
Darwin is the only spam i like to recieve! (Score:1)
Why doesnt someone start a mailing list for ppl that send spam??
The message could read -
Hi, someone has subscribed you to this mailing list because of all the annoying messages you send them. To unsubscribe, forward this message to 10 people by midnight....
iRobot [csu.edu.au]
Re:Trainsurfing ("Choose death...") (Score:1)
Actually, a few days after that happened I ended up sitting behind some of his friends on a city-bound train, while they were discussing it. He, and most of the ones I overheard discussing it, had gone 'over the top' in the loop several times before. This time, however, he'd been wearing a jacket, the jacket snagged on the 1500V overhead line, and the train raced out from under him, bashing him on the roof before dropping him on the tracks.
That, at least, is what his friends thought had happened to him. It puts some of my stupid teenage exploits into perspective. Especially since they were talking about picking up a few others to go trainsurfing *again*!
There were memorial aerosol-art murals to him all over the Melbourne train system for several years. Guess they didn't have Darwin Awards back then...
What amazed me was that they seemed to consider him a hero...
Re:Fatal Flaw (Score:2)
One of the problem with safety precautions is that they let the unsafe and dangerous amongst us continue to live.
Re:Death from a great height - by a lawyer (Score:2)
Darwin + Lawyer = +5 points on Darwin scale
Well, at least your friend took a risk (Score:2)
In my time in the military (ok, so you all don't believe that some of us do stupid things like that) I've seen MANY examples of pre-Darwin behaviour. Like playing with loaded guns, drinking large quantities of vodka before messing with explosives (including anti-personnel mines and tank mines), grabbing an M-90 one minute after it "didn't go off" (it then went off - just before his hand got it - and good thing he had thick glasses or he'd be blind).
Still, from a genetic point of view - they all "deserved to die". A lot of people take stupid risks like that and live - most of them shouldn't. And, most of the time, alcohol or other drugs are involved.
Re:Oh please!!! (Score:2)
After all, if not, they can't be Aggies!
And, no, I didn't go to UTA
Darwin shows year "100" (Score:2)
ROTFL
"No Pain Intended" in Darwin Awards (Score:1)
Nowadays, Darwin Awards enjoy increasing visibility and are therefore capable of causing anguish to families of the deceased. My intent is to provide sick humor, not to shove a hot poker into the emotional edifices of families. www.darwinawards.com [darwinawards.com] doesn't use last names, avoids going for the easy and sleazy celebrity punches, and, when requested by survivors, will edit a story to remove references that make it obvious who is being slammed.
This is ethical and considerate behaviour.
Meanwhile, my favorite Darwin Award is the fellow who kept a loaded gun on his nightstand. One night, the phone rang...