Some people never stop chasing the adrenaline
rush that only comes from performing the wildest and most dangerous stunts, and unfortunately,
the risk is sometimes far greater than the reward. Here's a look at daredevils who tragically
lost their lives doing insane stunts. Most of us don't need to build a rocket in
order to know that the Earth isn't flat. Still, there are some people who are convinced
that it's all a big conspiracy that literally every scientist in the world is in on. It seemed Mike Hughes was one of that handful
of people who was convinced that the Earth is flat, but he wanted the rest of the world
to be convinced, too. So he built a rocket, which he launched from
the California desert. That's one way to find out whether or not
the Earth is flat. Those remote cameras should tell you everything
you need to know. Except...he didn't just send up cameras, he
wanted to see the flat Earth with his own eyes. Unfortunately, his rocket crashed shortly
after launch, and he was killed before he could reach the hoped-for altitude of 5,000
feet. Hughes' publicist, Darren Shuster, told the
New York Times after Hughes' death that Hughes didn't actually believe the Earth was flat. He said, "He was eccentric and believed in some government
conspiracies, for sure, but it was a P.R. stunt." Either way, it's not quite clear. "I believe it is flat." "I believe you don't believe that and you
just want a free trip to space." "A lot of people think that." Regardless, Hughes wasn't an amateur daredevil. According to the BBC, he'd successfully completed
a lower-altitude launch the year before his fatal attempt, and he set a Guinness World
Record in 2002 for the longest limousine jump. So his fatal accident wasn't necessarily because
he was an inexperienced daredevil, and there was definitely an element of very, very bad
luck. Jessi Combs originally set the land speed
record for a four-wheeled vehicle in October 2013. Her jet-powered vehicle hit 398 miles per
hour, but Combs wasn't satisfied. She made a few attempts to bust her own speed
record and clocked more than 483 mph in those attempts, but the runs couldn't be recorded
as records because of mechanical issues. Undaunted, Combs decided she was going to
aim for 619 mph. Ultimately, she wanted to beat Kitty O'Neil's
land speed record of 512 mph, which had been set in a three-wheeled vehicle in 1976. Combs was in her jet-powered car on a dry
lake bed in Oregon's Alvord Desert when USA Today says the front wheel suffered a mechanical
failure, causing the entire wheel assembly to collapse. Combs had accelerated to nearly 550 mph at
the time of the failure, and was posthumously awarded the world record. Human beings love competitive sports. Human beings also love to watch other human
beings do ridiculously dangerous stuff. The X Games, which have been held every year
since 1995, are a happy union of the two, ridiculously dangerous competitive sporting
events complete with gold medals, prize money, and mortal peril. Still, despite a large number of serious injuries,
the X Games managed to get through quite a lot of years without any fatalities...until
Caleb Moore's freestyle snowmobile jump at the Winter X Games in 2013. Moore was performing in the freestyle snowmobile
competition when he attempted a backflip at a speed that was a little too slow for the
maneuver. According to Deadspin, he under-rotated, and
the snowmobile's skis dug into the snow, flinging him from the seat. That might have been survivable on its own,
but unfortunately, Moore's 450-pound snowmobile landed on his chest. Still, it looked like Moore would be okay,
he actually walked away from the scene. A few hours later, though, it became clear
that the accident had damaged his heart. He went into cardiopulmonary arrest and died
a few days later, becoming the first X Games fatality Base jumping carries a one-in-2,317 risk of
death. Sounds pretty safe, right? That's per jump, though, so if you jump 25
times a year for ten years, well, you'll probably like those odds a lot less. Base jumping websites even admit it's dangerous. Heck, danger is part of the appeal. But, unfortunately, it's also why we really
shouldn't be surprised that there are so many deceased base jumpers. Uli Emanuele was famous for a wing-suit jump
through an 6.5-foot-wide crevasse in a Swiss mountain, which is widely thought to be the
most difficult wing-suit maneuver ever accomplished. But even the best base jumpers are vulnerable
when they're flying around the mountaintops at speeds exceeding 100 mph, and Emanuele's
luck ran out while he was shooting video for GoPro in the Dolomites. According to The Inertia, Emanuele lost control
during a jump and crashed into the rocks before he could deploy his parachute. He was 29 years old. Sixty-year-old Angela Madsen was a Paralympic
rower and an inspiration for anyone trying to come back from a serious injury. Madsen was injured while playing basketball
in 1981, and a botched surgery cost her the use of her legs. In 1997, she became a competitive rower, and
in 2012, she won a bronze medal at the Paralympic games. Madsen's ambitions went a long way past rowing
in competitions, though, and in 2007, she became the first woman with a disability to
row across the Atlantic ocean. Then, in 2009, she became one of the first
two women to row across the Indian Ocean. She then set her sights on the Pacific. This time, she planned to go solo. Tragically, Madsen died 60 days into her attempt
to row across the Pacific Ocean alone. In her last communication, she'd mentioned
that her boat needed repairs, but by the next day, she'd fallen silent, and tracking data
indicated that the boat was not being rowed. The Coast Guard found her floating in the
ocean on June 22, 2020, still tethered to her boat. So far, no one knows the circumstances that
led to her death.