Stig Severinsen - 250 Feet Below 3 Feet of Ice In Speedos - A New Guinness World Record



http://www.breatheology.com - On a single breath of air, Stig Severinsen sets a new official Guinness World Record by swimming 250 feet (76.2m) below the ice in a frozen lake in East Greenland where nobody has ever been diving before! Crowned "The Ultimate Superhuman" by Discovery Channel, winning the show "Superhuman Showdown" in 2012, Stig Severinsen has now faced a new challenge - to dive longer under ice than any man has done before - on a single breath of air wearing only speedos! The preparation, training and record dive was closely followed by film producers and scientists and will air on Discovery Channel late October 2013 in the series: "The Man Who Doesn't Breathe". Learn more about optimizing your health and athletic performance here: http://www.breatheology.com/ Material copyright of Discovery Channel. Produced by back2back and Ace & Ace Associate Producer Stig Severinsen/Breatheology. http://www.breatheology.com/

Comments

  1. Awesome Stig!
  2. Dont try home guys !! this guy so so good diver.
  3. CAN EVERYBODY JUST BOYCOTT DISCOVERY CHANNEL!!!
  4. HE CHEATED! HE USED LIGHTS! FUCKING FAGGOT! HE HAD A WIRE SO HE DID NOT DIE! COCK SUCKER!
  5. HE IS A LIAR!!!!
  6. he got giant balls. jesus crist!
  7. Stig, You are a freak. That is meant in the best of ways of course.
  8. That's so dangerous. I'd say his balls are huge to attempt this, but not in this case.
  9. I could never do it, I wouldn't try to do it, but I wasn't impressed that he did.
  10. This is great.
  11. 神了
  12. I think that the best way to get another record of diving under the ice in only swim trunks is to inform people from the Badjao tribe about that Guinness world record category because according to http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-12151830, a lot of those people can hold their breath for 5 minutes. I know that being in cold water reduces breath hold time but 5 minutes is so long that even after subtracting time from the water being 0°C and adding time from taking considering that the record holder will be one of the best people from the Badjao tribe instead of only average, the time will probably still be long enough to way beat Stig's record. The muscle movement probably doesn't subtract time from the breathhold time because spear fishing in their natural life also uses muscle movement but the current caused my movement probably cools the body a lot faster than would static apnea in freezing water making it burn oxygen a lot faster. The record should only count if the person diving under the ice enters one hole and comes out another already existing one and to measure distances more accurately and be more fair, from now on for any new record to count, they should be required to be round holes of a fixed size to count as a record, made by a drilling machine that are all the same size for everyone trying to beat the record and the distance between the holes should be what counts as the record. Having another backup safety hole of the same size between those holes should stop the record from counting either. Breathing pure oxygen before swimming under the ice should not be allowed in this category either and should be a separate category if anyone ever attempts it. To make the competition safer and get people to go closer to pushing their bodies to the limits leaving a better record, there should be a backup plan that the person attempting to beat the record prepares a body signal saying they want out of the water and if they either do that signal or don't move for 5 seconds, the ice above them will immediately get smashed because pulling them out the slow way using the rope they're tied to might be too slow to prevent them from breathing in water. If the ice gets smashed, how far the person swam under it before it got smashed should not count as a record, with the sole purpose of smashing the ice being a backup safety plan but there's no reason smashing the ice should disqualify them from doing another record attempt later where the ice doesn't get smashed. In fact they can't be pulled out very fast using a rope because if they're pulled out too fast, water resistance will be acting on them quite a lot causing a lot of pressure damage to the body from the rope. Every time somebody gets a new record, unless another person is on track for a new record soon after that, the clip sliding along the goind rope should have a camera attached to it to record the whole process of diving going down one hole, swimming under the ice and coming up the other hole and  there should be a YouTube video that shows the entire swimming time uncut.
  13. Good luck dieng next time
  14. this is really inspirational!
  15. Bravoo great
  16. Stig has balls of steel...all be frozen balls of steel but still...balls of steel! 
  17. This is sick !
  18. Maximum genital shrinkage
  19. Fantastisk!
  20. This is a genius , " panic kills " , that's true, is all in the mind


Additional Information:

Visibility: 515393

Duration: 1m 37s

Rating: 1068