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That's as much as an assumption as saying they were clueless to the height of the fall. So my point still stands. While it's not "okay" to laugh at anyone who falls, regardless of the distance, it is the first reaction of many if not most people to whom it is not obvious the person is fine. I don't think it's right (especially for the announcers, part of a professional staff) but with AFV and other blooper shows that tend to condition people to laugh at potentially injurious situations, I wouldn't expect anything else. Should they be fired? No. Should they act more sensitively to similar incidents from now on? Yes.
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...anyway...it isn't natural to laugh at someone falling in a baseball stadium.
Falls in stadiums are hit or miss. Some people survive and some people don't. A man survived a 30-foot fall about a year ago. People can choose to laugh...whether nervousness or humor...but that doesn't make it natural to laugh. |
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The morning news showed excerpts of Shannon Stone's memorial service. Rest in peace.
On the same day as this memorial service, a complete idiot named Keith Carmickle was saved from falling head-first. http://sports.espn.go.com/mlb/allsta...ory?id=6759862 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/0..._n_895355.html The morning news showed the clips of Carmickle being grabbed and saved by his folks. Scary stuff but I consider this almost freak accident to be more preventable than what happened to Stone (still preventable but he wasn't being a complete idiot--perhaps careless--but not a complete idiot). |
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