 Alright you guys, what is going on? Welcome back to another video. Today's video is not going to be football related. It's not going to be sport related, what might be actually. I'm not completely sure. It's called Ten People Who Instantly Regretted Their Decisions. And it sounds really interesting. It sounds like something I'd want to watch and it sounds like something I'd love to react to. We've got a picture of a woman being dangled off the edge of a cliff by a man for what seems like a photo opportunity. She did it for the gram and she instantly regretted her decision. Let's find out exactly what happened guys. Let's do this. When it comes to risk, most of us live pretty straightforward vanilla lifestyles. Then there is that small group of people who just can't live without pushing the limits and taking risks. Such people seemingly need to undertake activities that would make the rest of us break out in a cold sweat. Whether climbing buildings with no safety gear, dropping from realities without a parachute or bath. Whenever I first saw this, it's like, it's heights. It's heights. Anything with heights, anything without safety equipment that's high above the ground is like, none. Dancing on a wire thousands of feet in the air, these people love undertaking some pretty extreme stunts. An all-around extreme athlete and thrill seeker, you'll find Andy Lewis wherever extreme balance and concentration is required. He's best known for his slacklining, often high up. High up. One stunt involves walking the line at the lost arrow's spire in Yosemite, naked and with no safety gear. Not done there, Lewis upped the ante by walking between two hot air balloons over 1.2 kilometers off the ground. That's insane. They say no safety gear, but obviously they've got a little caravanna there, right? So if they do fall off, they're not falling to their death. Right? Are they going to show me something where this guy instantly regrets his decision? What the hell happened? Given most crossings occur between two solid and stationary objects, we'll agree the hot air balloon walk is pretty damn impressive. Oh my God. Wim Hof. Dutch climber Wim Hof isn't your usual extreme thrill seeker. In addition to not using any equipment, the man known as the Ice Man doesn't really use that much in a way of clothing either, wearing only shorts he's climbed past the 7,500 meter death zone of Mount Everest and even scaled Mount Everest. Only shorts? What was this possible? Well, apparently he is really good at controlling his breathing and body functions, which is why he can take on mountains with no special gear or oxygen. Freddy Knog. Mate, excuse me, excuse me, this video has not been titled correctly whatsoever. 10 people instantly regretted their decisions. Let me see the dislike ratio. Yeah, 9.1k likes, 7.3k dislikes. I knew it. I fucking knew it. Oh well, let's keep going. As we all know, tightrope walkers are a special breed of thrill seeker. Often high above the ground with no safety gear, a small rush of wind could send them to their death with no warning. Freddy Knog doesn't seem to care about that. In 2011 with absolutely no safety gear, the 45 year old walked down the cable used for cable cars near the Swiss town of St. Moritz. Hundreds of feet above jagged rocks and ice, he walked for over 1.5 kilometers without a slip. So this guy doesn't have any safety equipment. He walked for 1.5 kilometers along a tightrope like that. Like, not only physically would that take a toll, but mentally. Oh my god, to concentrate like that for a K and a half. But he didn't regret his decision. Like, what the fuck is this title? Robert Knitch. When you think of Daredevil's, a lot of people don't think of water. That's where Robert Knitch comes in. Mastrian is a pilot by profession, but he's made his name under the waves. You see, Knitch likes to dive really deep and all using just one breath. Now that is scary shit. Free diving? First he made his onlookers when he dove to a depth of 214 meters. Not done there in 2012, he went over 250 meters down with the help of a special sled. Fortunately, the one blemish and the other one. 250 meters below the surface. Wouldn't that be completely black? Holy shit. That would be the scariest thing ever. No, no way. The spectacular dive was that Knitch required oxygen just 10 meters from the surface after running into some trouble. Elaine Robert. If you're afraid of heights, look away now. There's a reason Elaine Robert is dubbed Spider-Man. This guy will climb anything, including a massive birch perlipa in Dubai. In 2011, the French climber and Daredevil started at the bottom of the 2,717 foot tall structure and worked his way to the very top. What? As officials didn't want a bloody mess should he fall, Robert was forced to climb while using a harness and rope as a safety precaution. Fuck it, I was gonna say. When you're an extreme sports-based jumper, you'll throw yourself off of anything. Just ask Valerie Rozov. The Russian jumper left from the north face of Mount Everest in 2013 to mark 60 years since the mountain was conquered by Sir Edmund Hillary. In freezing conditions in the thin air, Rozov's jump took place at an altitude of over 7,000 meters. In fact, the air is so thin that his wingsuit didn't begin to work until after a few seconds into the front wall. Oh my gosh. Wow, can you imagine that ride down from 7,000 meters? Oh my God, that wouldn't be just a normal skydive, that would be like minutes. Would it be minutes? No, it wouldn't be minutes. It would probably be a minute. Maybe two minutes at the most, but fucking hell, that would be intense. Speaking of wingsuit jumpers, Gary Connery might not have dropped from a great altitude but he did make a big statement with the landing. What did he do? Hundreds of skydives and base jumps under his belt. Falling doesn't really seem to concern the British stuntman. But what about landing without a parachute? That just sounds crazy. Yet in 2012, Connery jumped from a helicopter and with a special wingsuit landed safely in the back of the airport. Let me say this. Over 730 meters below. Luke Akins. Many of you know that thing skydiving is crazy to begin with. After all, who wants to jump out of a perfectly good airplane? Luke Akins took that to a whole new level of insanity. The 42-year-old has made a lot of jumps but recently he made the news by jumping without a parachute on purpose. With viewers watching nervously, Akins fell over 7,500 meters before landing in a giant net. With that, he began the first skydiver to jump without a parachute and land. What? Felix Baumgartner. When you talk about speed and breaking the sound barrier, most of the time you're referring to a rocket or a jet. In 2012, Daredevil Felix Baumgartner demonstrated that you don't need any sort of vehicle to break the speed limit. Just yourself and good old gravity. Okay, and maybe a special balloon to take you up into the stratosphere. This is getting more intense and more intense. This is the kind of shit that I used to get high and sit at home as a teenager and watch and watch and watch. It is so interesting. It's so amazing. But it's not ten people who instantly regretted their decisions. Nine kilometres up. Is that a real photo? Is that a real fucking photo? If that's a real photo, that's incredible. Street and free fell in the speed of rock 1.25. That's Photoshop, surely. Beginning the first person to break the sound barrier without the aid of a vehicle. Alan Musash. You might not think to see him, but this computer scientist and one-time senior vice president at Google likes to push himself the limit. Two years ago after Felix Baumgartner made his jump, Musash secretly performed his. Although he didn't have any cameras watching, the 57-year-old set a few records. At over 41 kilometres in altitude, he went the highest and fell the furthest of any jumper. He's also no slouch for speed, as he was reported going well over rock 1 during his descent. He jumped from a balloon 40 kilometres in the air when normally a skydiver will do 3 kilometres in the air. What? Look at his fucking space suit. How is there any gravity up there? Look, man, that was a terrible video, a terrible title, but I will give you credit in that I am quite intrigued. Quite intrigued. The 10 rarest dog breeds that walk on Earth, 10 biggest celebrity transformations, 10 strange things happening in the world right now. 11 crazy things people actually did so PewDiePie can beat T-Series. Oh, wow. Alright then, I'm going to do one more. 10 strange things happening in the world right now because that is current and I just hope that the title is not misleading. So I'll see you back here soon. Like the video if you've liked it, subscribe for more, and don't subscribe for then. Peace out.