Darwin Award

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Approved by Kansas Board of Education
Approved by the Kansas State Board of Education
This page meets all criteria and requirements for use as teaching material within the State of Kansas public school system. It consists of facts, not of theories, and students are encouraged to believe it uncritically, and to approach alternatives critically.


The Darwin Award is a composite of futuristic metals including steel and zinc.

The Darwin Awards is a popular awards show held at irregular and infrequent intervals, usually in late spring, when any worthwhile programming has ended and nobody has anything better to do anyway.

Named for the late Charles Darwin, the award commemorates the outstanding efforts of various beasts that have proven just how useful natural selection really is. Notable recipients of the award include the ever popular Platypus, the blue footed booby, <insert name here>, Manbearpig, "The" Yobin Mcshnee and Macy Gray.

Like many other award shows, the Darwin awards feature a small and essentially useless humanoid statuette, barely literate celebrities reading from teleprompters, and more fashion faux pas than you can shake a stick at.

History[edit | edit source]

Charles Darwin - A penchant for monkey suits.

The Awards have circulated for at least 22 years as emails and Usenet group discussions; the Google Usenet archive records two early mentions of Darwin Awards, 7 August 1985 Vending Machine Tipover[2] and the 7 December 1990 JATO Rocket Car[3] urban legend. The JATO legend was widely distributed via emails from 1995–97. Several anonymously authored email lists titled (for example) 1999 Darwin Awards have appeared annually since 1991.[2] There are several websites that record "Darwin Awards"[1] — a well-known one started in 1994 is "darwinawards.com" run by Wendy Northcutt, who has also written several books on the Darwin Awards.

Requirements[edit | edit source]

Northcutt has established five requirements for a Darwin Award on her website:

  • Inability to reproduce — Nominee must be dead or sterile.

Sometimes this can be a matter of dispute. Potential awardees may be out of the gene pool due to age; others have already reproduced before their deaths. To avoid debates about the possibility of in-vitro fertilization, artificial insemination, or cloning, the original Darwin Awards book applied the following "deserted island" test to potential winners: If the person would be unable to reproduce when stranded on a deserted island with a fertile member of the opposite sex, they would be considered sterile. In general, winners of the award are either dead or become unable to use their sexual organs.

  • "Excellence" — Astounding misapplication of judgment.

The candidate's foolishness must be unique and sensational, perhaps because the award is meant to be funny. A number of foolish but common activities, such as smoking in bed, are excluded from consideration, while smoking after being administered a flammable ointment in hospital and specifically told not to smoke[4] is grounds for nomination.

  • "Self-selection" — Cause of one's own demise.

Killing a friend with a hand grenade would not be eligible, but killing oneself while manufacturing a homemade chimney-cleaning device from a grenade[5] would be eligible. There is no award for killing someone else or causing someone else to be sterile.

  • "Maturity" — Capable of sound judgment.

The nominee must be at least past the legal driving age and free of mental defect.

  • "Veracity" — The event must be verified.

The story must be documented by reliable sources, i.e., reputable newspaper articles, confirmed television reports, or responsible eyewitnesses.

If a story is found to be untrue, it is disqualified, but particularly amusing ones are placed in the "urban legends" section of the archives.

Examples[edit | edit source]

Examples of Darwin award winners include

  • juggling active hand grenades (Croatia, 2001),[6]
  • jumping out of a plane to film skydivers without wearing a parachute (USA, 1987),[7]
  • trying to get enough light to look down the barrel of a loaded gun using a cigarette lighter (USA, 1996),[8]
  • Refusing treatment for a snake bite and instead going to a bar to brag about it. (PA, 1997)
  • using a lighter to illuminate a fuel tank to make sure it contains nothing flammable (Brazil, 2003), (This method is not entirely original: a mid-1950's Burma-Shave commercial reads:"He lit a match /to check a tank. /That's why they call him /Skinless Frank.")
  • attempting to play Russian roulette with a semi-automatic pistol that automatically reloads the next round into the chamber,9

Northcutt's Darwin Awards site gives "Honorable Mentions" to people who manage to survive their misadventures with their reproductive abilities intact.

The Statuette[edit | edit source]

At first, the statuette can seem confusing. One might expect a ship, or Darwin himself, or even a tiny facsimile of “The Evolution of Man” with quaint and adorable, but highly anatomically detailed replicas of the species from Ape to Human. However, it is anything but.

The statuette alludes to Charles Darwin’s other favorite pastime: the valiant and pioneering aviator cum astronaut led a little-publicized expedition into the various quadrants of our own galaxy. Few know it, but shortly after disembarking from the HMS Beagle, Darwin captained the U.S.S. Labrador, an Intrepid-Class starship of the United Federation of Planets.

Shunning such Cro-Magnon materials as “Gold” and “Silver”, the statuette is formed from a composite of futuristic metals. Each modern statuette is infused with one Hair of Michael Jackson, an ultimate show of respect to the man who received his Recognition of Lifetime Achievement during the 2004 ceremony.

See also[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]