Advertisement

Blaine to try to spend 2 days upside-down

Well wishers at New York's Lincoln Center on May 6, 2006 touch the sphere where Illusionist David Blaine's latest stunt of being submerged in a water filled 8 foot acrylic sphere since May 1, 2006 is on going.The stunt titled "Drowned Alive" will end on May 8, 2006 with Blaine emerging from the sphere, shedding his breathing tube and returning to hold his breath under water longer than anyone has accomplished. (UPI Photo/Ezio Petersen)
Well wishers at New York's Lincoln Center on May 6, 2006 touch the sphere where Illusionist David Blaine's latest stunt of being submerged in a water filled 8 foot acrylic sphere since May 1, 2006 is on going.The stunt titled "Drowned Alive" will end on May 8, 2006 with Blaine emerging from the sphere, shedding his breathing tube and returning to hold his breath under water longer than anyone has accomplished. (UPI Photo/Ezio Petersen) | License Photo

NEW YORK, Sept. 16 (UPI) -- Illusionist David Blaine reportedly intends to try hanging upside-down for 60 hours over New York's Wollman Rink as his next stunt.

The 35-year-old Brooklyn, N.Y., native has been training for about a month and is to begin his endurance test Monday, the New York Daily News reported.

Advertisement

"For most people, it's hard to hang (upside-down) for more than 15 minutes," California inversion therapist Anthony Cardenas told the newspaper. "It's extreme. ... I guess he's doing it for glory and fame."

"His head is not going to explode, but it could cause some problems with the blood flow to his brain," added Washington physician Michael Friedman. "I wouldn't do it, and I wouldn't counsel anyone else to do it."

Blaine is said to be monitored by doctors as he prepares for the event.

"This is a lot more difficult than it looks," he told the Sunday Daily News.

Blaine previously has spent 63 hours enclosed in a block of ice in New York and 44 days without food in a glass cube dangling over the River Thames in London.

Latest Headlines