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Editorial Examples

1) The editorial discusses the dangers of taking selfies in risky or unsafe situations, citing several instances where people were killed or injured while taking selfies with animals like bears and bison or in dangerous areas like cliffs. 2) It notes statistics on distracted driving accidents from texting and estimates over 16,000 deaths result annually from texting while driving. 3) The editorial warns that the obsession with taking selfies for social media can lead people to ignore basic safety in pursuit of photos, with some taking extreme risks that have led to injury or death.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
325 views2 pages

Editorial Examples

1) The editorial discusses the dangers of taking selfies in risky or unsafe situations, citing several instances where people were killed or injured while taking selfies with animals like bears and bison or in dangerous areas like cliffs. 2) It notes statistics on distracted driving accidents from texting and estimates over 16,000 deaths result annually from texting while driving. 3) The editorial warns that the obsession with taking selfies for social media can lead people to ignore basic safety in pursuit of photos, with some taking extreme risks that have led to injury or death.

Uploaded by

may
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Name; Ivy E.

Baculio
Subject: LIT 1 ( 2:30- 4:00)

Sample Editorials
Editorial 1: The Dangers of the Selfie, Courier Editorial Staff, Sept. 20, 2015
The Courier: http://wcfcourier.com/news/opinion/editorial/the-dangersof-the-
selfie/article_5eec703a-2bce-5d8f-a042-c00c928c42b7.html
All too frequently, common sense takes a holiday with a cellphone in hand.
According to the National Safety Council, an estimated 1.6 million accidents occur
annually as distracted drivers text. The University of North Texas Health Science
Center has determined 16,141 deaths occurred as a result of texting while driving.
Those are frightening statistics for anyone on the road who could become the victim
of such wanton negligence.
But the dangers in the digital divide don’t stop there. In this Age of Internet
Narcissism, dozens of deaths annually have been attributed to selfies — self-portraits
using cellphones often taken in unusual circumstances.
A North Carolina driver was killed when she crashed into a truck while posting a
selfie of herself singing Pharrell Williams’ “Happy.” A pilot in Colorado lost control of
his Cessna 150, killing himself and his passenger. A Puerto Rican musician died
while taking a selfie on a motorcycle. A Polish couple crossed a safety barrier and
fell off a cliff in Portugal while taking a selfie as their children watched.
Several instances of “death by selfie” occurred while the photographer inadvertently
pulled the trigger of a loaded gun in the other hand.
Selfie sticks also figure in the carnage. One person was killed when he was struck
by lightning. Another died after climbing atop a train when his selfie stick touched a
high-voltage wire.
Russia announced a public campaign against selfies in dangerous situations after 10
reported deaths and 100 injuries this year. An official stated, “We would like to
remind the citizens that the chase for ‘likes’ in social networks can lead to the road
of death.”
In Denver, officials closed a public park in late August after incidents involving
individuals taking selfies with bears. That echoed an action at Banff National Park in
Alberta, Canada, where a “bear bulletin” was issued to dissuade tourists from
taking selfies with the animals alongside the road.
Earlier in the summer, rangers in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming felt
compelled to distribute pamphlets with an image of a man being gored and flung
into the air by a bison. The animals, they noted, are “wild, unpredictable, and
dangerous.” They also weigh 3,500 pounds and have been clocked at 30 mph.
Three aborted Yellowstone selfies with bison could have added a new meaning to
“photo bomb.”
A 43-year-old Mississippi woman and her daughter were within 6 yards of a bison
for their photo op when nature reared its ugly head. According to a park service
Sample Editorials
statement, “They heard the bison’s footsteps moving toward them and started to
run, but the bison caught the mother on the right side, lifted her up and tossed her
with its head.”
She suffered only minor injuries. Other selfie-related incidents involved a 16-yearold
Taiwanese girl and a 62-year-old Australian man being gored by bison.
In San Diego — in an extraordinarily stupid and expensive instance of a selfie — a
man picked up a rattlesnake from the brush for his photo documentation. The
snake gashed his arm. It took the anti-venom stock at two hospitals to save him.
The bill was $153,161.25, including $83,341.25 for pharmacy costs.
While squirrels on the Wartburg College campus are legendary for their friendliness,
a selfie with the rodents can pose a risk.
A Maine teenager in Florida to check out a college campus saw a squirrel sitting on
a handrail in a park and took a selfie. The flash from the cellphone scared the
squirrel, which climbed under his shirt and hung onto his back.
“I threw myself on the ground, and that scared him off,” said Brian Genets, whose
mother captured the incident on Instagram.
An estimated one million selfies are taken daily. Time Magazine has even ranked
the Top Selfie Spots in the world — Makati City and Pasig, the Philippines at No. 1,
followed by Manhattan, Miami and Orange County, Calif.
Obviously, the vast majority of selfies aren’t hazardous to health — until the
obsession becomes too adventurous. While the list of selfie-related accidents may
seem stranger than fiction, the tragedy is that basic precautions to maintain life
and limb were ignored in pursuit of a photo.

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