Reality TV has been a popular genre for years,
though some debate just how "real" shows actually get. While viewers pretty much accept that some
manipulation goes on behind the scenes, there's one harsh reality that no producer can fake:
the death of a star. Zookeeper Steve Irwin's childlike fascination
with animals endeared him to millions. He was taught how to "second-guess" crocodiles
by his dad, and later put these skills to use on The Crocodile Hunter, the Animal Planet
docu-series that made him famous. Many believed his unusually casual relationship
with the dangerous reptiles would lead to his death. But in the end, it was a far more placid creature
that killed him. In 2006, Irwin was out in the waters of the
Great Barrier Reef filming a nature documentary called Ocean's Deadliest when he noticed a
huge stingray. Suddenly it propped on its front and started
stabbing wildly. Irwin's cameraman Justin Lyons described it
as a jagged barb that went through Irwin's chest "like a hot knife through butter." "He had an extraordinary threshold for pain,
so I knew that when he was in pain, that it must have been painful." Upon discovering a two-inch-wide injury over
his heart, Lyons rushed Irwin back to the boat, but sadly the 44-year-old's injuries
were just too severe for him to be saved. As part of the Jackass crew, Ryan Dunn was
no stranger to danger, having willingly put himself in harm's way for the MTV show and
its spinoffs over the years. Unfortunately, his reckless ways eventually
caught up with him. On June 20th, 2011, his Porsche left a Pennsylvania
road at 130 miles per hour and crashed through trees before exploding into flames. The car was so mangled that it was impossible
to determine whether it was the collision or the subsequent fireball that ended the
lives of Dunn and his passenger, Jackass assistant Zachary Hartwell. Police Chief Michael Carroll told Radar Online
that this was "by far the worst" of all the fatal accident scenes he had ever seen. Dunn's Jackass co-star Bam Margera told local
TV station WTXF that Dunn was "the happiest person ever" who had "so many things going
for him." "It was the worst phone call I've ever got
in my life, waking up to that." At the time of his death, Dunn had just started
filming a Mythbusters-style video game reality show called Proving Ground. Singer and reality TV star Jenni Rivera was
one of the best-selling Mexican artists of all time. When she died at age 43, she was the single
most successful woman on the Billboard Latin charts and had just finalized a deal with
ABC to star in her own sitcom. But sadly, we never got to see it. On December 9th, 2012, Rivera and six others
perished when the plane they were on plummeted 28,000 feet into a mountainous region of northern
Mexico. Fans later got to see how the Rivera family
coped with the tragic loss thanks to the docu-reality series I Love Jenni. The late star was in the middle of filming
the third season of the show when her plane went down. The circumstances of her death were shocking,
but not quite as shocking as the family secrets that came out afterwards. Her ex-husband Jose Marin was sentenced to
30 years without parole for the repeated molestation of Rivera's sister and daughter. Rivera had also suffered abuse, as she was
assaulted just off a California highway soon after filming her first music video. "Man's man" Phil Harris starred in one of
the few reality shows to bear any semblance to reality, Discovery Channel's Deadliest
Catch. The chain-smoking fisherman was known to have
ongoing health issues, and he suffered a devastating stroke while off-loading crab in Alaska during
the show's sixth season. Engineer Steve Ward found the captain and
part owner of the Cornelia Marie on the floor of his room, unable to move. Harris was put into a medically induced coma
and underwent extensive surgery. He asked for his family and friends after
he came around, and, for a few days, it looked as though he was going to be okay. But on February 9th, 2010, things went downhill
fast. Harris told his best friend Dan Mittman that
he wasn't feeling as good as he was yesterday. When doctors told Mittman to leave the room,
he knew in his heart what was happening. Harris died later that day. There have been a number of deaths on the
Real Housewives franchise over the years, but none have been as explosive as Russell
Armstrong's. The husband of Real Housewives of Beverly
Hills star Taylor Armstrong took his own life in a Mulholland Drive house he'd been sharing
with a friend after his wife filed for divorce. According to the coroner's report, he used
an extension cord to hang himself in his bedroom. After her ex's death, Taylor revealed that
she'd allegedly suffered abuse at his hands. On one occasion, he grabbed her neck and shoved
her against the wall, and another time, he banged her head against a car. “But when he was bad, he was the scariest
human being I’ve ever met in my life.” With this backstory now out in the open, it's
no wonder that Armstrong was struggling with demons. Trashy reality shows have been one of MTV's
specialties for decades, and Buckwild was a prime example of that. Running for a single season in 2013, the show
followed a group of young adults from West Virginia who did whatever they wanted. That usually involved drinking copious amounts
of alcohol and mudding, aka driving their vehicles around in mud. According to former Buckwild star Shain Gandee,
mudding can be quite the romantic experience. But it turns out it can also be a dangerous
one. Gandee was found dead in his vehicle in April
2013, after he went mudding on a remote road and got stuck. The 23-year-old's uncle and friend were also
present. According to local law enforcement, all three
died of carbon monoxide poisoning. MTV was halfway through producing a second
season of Buckwild when Gandee passed away, which convinced execs to pull the plug. When Diem Brown first appeared on MTV's Fresh
Meat: Real World/Road Rules Challenge in 2006, she had just kicked cancer's butt. She took part in several seasons of The Challenge
over the next decade, coming out the victor in a second battle with ovarian cancer during
that time. There would be no third comeback, however,
as the disease returned once more to claim her life. Brown was sidelined during an episode of Battle
of the Exes II in 2014 after she began experiencing excruciating abdominal pain, and she was later
medically evacuated. The 34-year-old's flight from Panama to a
New York City hospital was featured on the show, and her final words for viewers were
extremely difficult to watch. Her prolonged troubles with cancer had forced
her to have her ovaries removed, but she still intended to have a child via surrogacy one
day. Sadly, that never happened. “Funny to say that, but having a baby is
normal, and I wanted something normal. And yeah, being a mom is really important
to me,and I want to be able to have my kid." Brown passed away in November 2014, just weeks
before Battle of the Exes II premiered. One of the many reality shows to document
the daily lives of obscure regions in America, Swamp People follows gator hunters in Louisiana. Mitchell Guist was featured on the show up
until his sudden death midway through Season 3, which shook the Swamp People family to
its core. Executive producer Brian Catalina remembered
Geist upon his death. "His simplicity sometimes I think betrayed
him, people may have thought he wasn't very smart, but he was an incredibly smart man,
a very clever man." A man who hunts alligators is always going
to be living on the edge, but Guist's death wasn't caused by a gator. The bearded Cajun was working on a new houseboat
on the Intracoastal Waterway in Louisiana when he suddenly collapsed. It was ultimately determined that a heart
attack was the cause of death. Mitchell's brother and best friend Glenn vowed
to complete the houseboat in his honor. On paper, The Contender was simply a televised
boxing tournament, with a defeated fighter leaving the show each week. In reality, it was much more than that. Not only was there a cash prize of a million
dollars at stake, there was also a personal aspect to the show, with cameras given access
to the contestants' families and everyday lives. For Najai Turpin, the two were very much linked:
he wanted to win that money to give his loved ones a better life. According to host and executive producer Sylvester
Stallone, Turpin was "a tough, punchy street kid from Philadelphia fighting for a better
life for his family," but it was a fight he couldn't win. After being eliminated from the competition,
the 23-year-old took his own life outside the Philly gym where he trained. Sitting in a car next to his girlfriend, the
troubled boxer shot himself in the head. The rules of the show dictated that none of
the contestants could fight until after it aired, and Turpin's former trainer "Buster"
Custus believes this may have been a factor in his death. He told the Philadelphia Daily News, "Fighters want to fight. He was frustrated, because he was, like, training
for nothing." If you or anyone you know is having suicidal
thoughts, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255.
Hi.God loves You. Peace, man. Revealed; The Truth about God, Jesus
and The Holy Spirit: Revelation 2:17, The Urantia Book, free, online.
Please share with everyone, (without a doubt or Prejudice, Our only True
Holy Grail), @AntonKnebenson @GAC8717 My Dear Beloved Friends, God
Loves You! Why? A New Revelation with the Spirit of Truth is here Today
to Help All of us know the Truth about God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit, (
The Urantia Book, Revelation 2:17,Free, Online, in all international
Languages, and Guided by Archangel Michael, His Trusted Angels, and the
Holy Spirit ).A prayer and Blessing for all Good Loving Believers who
Wish to share the Truth about Jesus, The Son of God and the Holy Spirit:
For all the Children who are Ruined by shame
Mirror child
The image of a precious dove
Dancing barefoot on the beach
Drinking in love and sunshine
full of smiles
never having to die.
Mere child
Dreaming awhile on a school title
Learning to carry books for miles.
Crayons, pencils, stencils
Nothing you need to do
but Sing and carry the wind on Your wings.
Mirror child
Like daddy or mommy
Carrying so many burdens
for A little person
All the time
Not able To catch the spies and Spiders.
Go back to the skies,
Little dove
And play with the eagles
who tamed this land
Until you are a spirit so good and pure
That you will truly guide
the directions of our
Bloodied hands.
Temptations of Evil
Muscles of Clay,
Eyes of pitifully empty bliss,
Teeth of dragons never begotten,
You stand alone
Praying to brainless demons
Praising power empty Of Spirit,
Goodness or Hope.
You shall reap no Glory
But only Mortal death
and baptized Shame
So as to Die without Jesus
Or any Holy Name.
Stained by lust,
Broken tears and stardom,
Born of evil and deviltries
Ill conceived
Raise Your Heart to God Jesus
and The Holy Spirit,
And He will Remove Your Pain,
Stop your foolish self destructive reign,
And bring you Spiritual Relief
You could never possibly or individually
Humanly gain.
To Have Peace, Love
And Eternal Happiness and Justice
For All People,
Believe in Jesus,
The Son of Mary and God,
And You Will Be Immortally
Saved For ever more,
And Be Loved
By Our Holy Father God
For all Eternity.
I Am a Divine Messenger, ( Described in The Urantia Book as The
Solitary Messenger), Working Directly with Guardian Arch Angel Michael J
Christ and His Angels, and I come To Share Good News, and the Facts
about our Only True Holy God from The Heavens with Everyone: Our only
True HOLY GRAIL Is The Urantia Book, REVELATION 2:17. Without any form
of falseness or deception involved, and with the Greatest Wish to stop humanity from
bringing ourselves to the brink of Nuclear Extinction, The Urantia Book is Our Only Truthful
Answer to our Man made Troubled Times. Peace and Blessings of Goodness to Everyone.
In The Name of Jesus and The Holy Spirit, Amen. @GAC8717 @Antonknebenson