Twenty-one people lit themselves on
fire in Cleveland, setting a new Guinness World Record.
Everything burns in Cleveland.
In the city of the flaming river, a
group of people lit themselves on fire to set a new world record.
The 21 burners gathered on Saturday
in the parking lot of a local restaurant as a roaring crowd counted down.
"Three! Two! One! Ignite!"
The burners wore fireproof gel suit under their flaming layers of cotton and wool.
Torches flared, and the crew burst into
flame, marching back and forth across the lot with their arms extended like
blazing airplanes.
The 32-second stunt ended with a
stop, drop and roll into the Guinness World Records for "most people
performing full body burns."
Cleveland printing company Hotcards
staged the spectacle as a fiery fundraiser on the banks of the Cuyahoga River,
a waterway once so polluted it famously caught fire in 1969.
The burners marched back and forth
for 32 seconds in front of a roaring crowd at Shooters nightclub in Cleveland.
"We take a lot of heat in
Cleveland as the Burning River City. Yet, it became the catalyst for a lot
Cleveland pride, including environmental movements, breweries, and a whole lot
of 'Hot in Cleveland' fame," Hotcards' CEO John Gadd said in a statement.
"It's a unique part of our legacy that we can embrace and give new meaning
with such a magical spectacle."
Stuntman Ted Batchelor coordinated a
55-person team of "burners" and "igniters" over two months
of training. The burners wore fireproof gel suits under layers of cotton and
wool that served as the fuel for the blaze.
Local CEOs, politicians, a funeral
director, minister and radio DJ filled out the crew of flaming participants.
The new 21-person record eclipses the previous record of 17, also set in Ohio.
Batchelor lit two of them himself
and scanned the lot as his blazing pupils glowed in the night.
"I could see it all,"
Batchelor told the Daily News. "And in my mind, it looked great. I was
like, 'Oh my gosh, this looks beautiful.'"
Batchelor, 55, had coordinated the
previous record of 17 full-body burns in 2009 in South Russell, Ohio, and has
set five Guinness records in his life.
He's well aware of the national
embarrassment Cleveland suffered after the burning river and said the record
was a way for the city to spark interest in its resurgence while raising money
for the Cleveland Foodbank and Brick by Brick, an Ohio-based charity that aids
women and children in South Africa.
"We're going to take that fire
and use it to our best interests," Batchelor said.
Source: Daily Mail UK
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