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California stuntman crashes to the ground as human cannonball act goes horribly wrong, video shows

California stuntman crashes to the ground as human cannonball act goes horribly wrong, video shows

Yahoo23-03-2025

Terrifying bystander footage shows the moment an experienced stuntman's act went awry in front of a shocked crowd of onlookers at a California fair earlier this month.
Chachi Valencia, whose stage name is The Rocketman Valencia, was performing his death-defying human cannonball act at the Riverside County Fair and National Date Festival in Indigo when a strong gust of wind blew him off course on March 2.
"Taking it day by day with my faithful pup by his side," David Valencia wrote in an update to Chachi's GoFundMe page. "Grateful for time to heal and soak up all the love and snuggles. Here's to brighter days ahead."
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Footage from the accident shows Valencia, a sixth-generation circus performer, sailing through the air after being launched from a 35-foot human cannon. As he falls to the landing spot, a gust of wind blows him toward the side of the net, causing him to bounce into the air and smash into the concrete ground below.
"Right before the shot, I think the wind moved and it started a crosswind, and that's what happened—the wind caught me and threw me off to one side," Valencia told Fox 11.
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Valencia can be seen laying motionless on the ground as employees rushed to call emergency responders.
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"I don't remember anything until I was in the ambulance on my way to the hospital," Valencia said.
Riverside County Fairgrounds did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.
The daredevil sustained multiple injuries from the incident - including a broken wrist, cracked ribs and a lacerated liver - and was rushed to the hospital, where he was discharged just a few hours later.
"I'm really sore. It's hard for me to move around—it's mostly because of the cracked ribs that I have," Valencia told Fox 11. "I also have a broken wrist that's not bothering me so bad."
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Before each launch, Valencia must decide if the conditions are safe for him to perform, and he admits to weighing the option of backing out due to the fairground's windy conditions shortly before the accident.
"You see all the people who are waiting for you to do your thing, and they're so excited, and you know I just couldn't cancel, you know?" he said.
Valencia has 23 years of experience performing his human cannonball stunt, appearing at the 2012 London Olympics closing ceremony and various sporting events throughout the United States, according to his website.
But before Valencia can return to the sky to continue his two-decade-long career, he must focus on rehabilitation and healing from his injuries, while reevaluating his risk-tolerance for his gravity-defying stunt.
"I will definitely not take as many risks, as many chances, especially when it's windy," Valencia said.Original article source: California stuntman crashes to the ground as human cannonball act goes horribly wrong, video shows

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It was the mid-Eighties, and the Nebraska-born Sweet, who'd moved to Athens, Georgia, for college and had become swept up in the burgeoning indie rock of the time, was on tour with the Golden Palominos. Featuring an ever-shifting lineup of New York-area musicians like keyboardist Bernie Worrell, singer Syd Straw, guitarist Arto Lindsay, bassist Bill Laswell, and drummer Anton Fier, the Palominos were Sweet's induction into the life of a traveling musician. 'I was just a kid, and it was the first time I was ever really on a bus tour, so it was like Touring 101,' Sweet says. 'I would like to go see Bernie in his room, and he'd be there with a bunch of girls in the bed with him. Just classic. Chrissie Hynde came to see us in Toronto. We stayed up with her all night in a hotel room, and I was like a fly on the wall, maybe providing the weed. Such cool memories.' 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Until the upgrades were finished, the Sweets checked into a local hotel ('I was really ready to leave after being in a hospital bed all day,' he says), but that resulted in another setback: When Lisa attempted to help bathe her husband, they both slipped on the shower floor, and Lisa broke a leg and had to be hospitalized herself. 'So,' Sweet says, 'not good luck for us to have that happen.' Sweet's life hasn't gotten any easier since then. As likely aftereffectsof his stroke, he's been diagnosed with ataxia, a neurological condition that often leaves him off balance, and nystagmus, which make one's eyes unexpectedly move side to side or up and down. Sweet suspects the latter diagnosis may have resulted from a smaller stroke he could have experienced a few months ago. He'd also been diagnosed long before his stroke with essential tremor, the neurological condition that causes people's hands or heads to shake. (Katharine Hepburn famously suffered from it.) 'There is a shaking that's pretty pronounced on the left side of my head, as weird as that sounds,' he says. 'So the early part of the day, I'm often shaking a lot in the left side of my head and face.' Even with nystagmus, Sweet can see well enough, but aides help him type out texts to friends. A sense of vertigo also accompanies him: 'When I look down, the floor looks like it's caving in, which is really kind of unnerving.' That makes it challenging for him to use a walker and has led him to have to rely on a wheelchair and nursing aides, who help transport him to his bed, shower, and bathroom or into a car. He can't walk upstairs and remains confined to the first floor of his home. Financially speaking, Sweet is doing better thanks to the GoFundMe, and he's applied for Social Security disability benefits and now has insurance via the Affordable Care Act. But with home-care costs continuing, his GoFundMe has been rebooted. Under the Trump presidency, the future of Social Security itself is uncertain. In the worst-case scenario, Sweet says he may have to sell his house and move to a less expensive place. The future remains a blank page, physically and professionally. 'It's sobering to think I might just have to always have a person that can handle moving me one place to another,' says Sweet. 'My thoughts originally were, 'Well, how likely is it that I'll walk if I have the ataxia?' And no one will say. It's more like they don't know. This might be as good as it gets, or I might make progress.' Carter shares that sense of frustration. 'He's getting treatment from lots of good doctors, but the most frustrating thing for Matthew is that he still has no prognosis,' he says. 'They encourage him to put his nose to the grindstone and do all the PT and just hope for the best. It's somewhat discouraging that he hasn't made more progress, but I don't think that's unusual. It's a very slow process.' Then there's his music. Before the stroke, Sweet was in the early stages of making an album he was calling Midsommar. 'I don't feel like it's in any way ready to be brought to fruition right now,' he says, 'but I certainly remember it.' In conversation with Rolling Stone, Sweet speaks in a voice that is occasionally halting, but he's lucid and never losing his breath. Singing, however, could be another issue, despite undergoing speech therapy in rehab. 'Maybe I'll regain some of the breath power, but it hasn't happened yet,' he says. 'I just kind of run out of air at the end of a word, and then I have to start over and say the word again.' Given his issues with his left hand, guitar playing is off the table, but he's hopeful that he can play some keyboards, since he generally relied on his right hand for the instrument. Performing live, however, feels unfathomable. 'Most of the venues we were in last fall had stairs in them,' he says. 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