Warning: includes details some readers may find disturbing.
1. On Oct. 12, 1960, during a televised political debate, Japanese politician Inejiro Asanuma was assassinated with a samurai sword by 17-year-old Otoya Yamaguchi. The young militant nationalist rushed the stage and stabbed Asanuma between the ribs on his left side, killing him.
2. Richard Beltzer was choked out by Hulk Hogan on his own talk show in 1985. Hogan and Mr. T were on the show promoting the first WrestleMania. Beltzer asked Hogan to perform some wrestling moves on him. So Hogan put Beltzer in a front headlock and put him to sleep. Beltzer dropped to the floor and smashed his head open before he regained consciousness and the program cut to commercial.
Beltzer sued Hogan for $5 million and received $400,000 in an out-of-court settlement.
3. On April 15, 1984, while performing on live national television, comedian Tommy Cooper collapsed from a heart attack halfway through his act. Since Cooper's acts consisted of failed magic tricks, the audience didn't notice anything unusual and continued to laugh. He died shortly after.
4. In India on March 3, 2008, Sanal Edamaruku challenged Surinder Sharma, a tantrik, to kill him on live television using only his tantra powers. After hours of trying, Sharma claimed that he could not kill Edamaruku because the god he prayed to was protecting him. Edamaruku replied that he was an atheist.
5. On July 15, 1974, Christine Chubbuck, a TV news reporter for WXLT-TV in Sarasota, Florida, shot herself while reading the news on air. Before killing herself, she read the following statement: "In keeping with Channel 40's policy of bringing you the latest in blood and guts, and in living color, you are going to see another first: attempted suicide."
The 2016 film Christine was based on the life of the on-air reporter.
6. On Feb. 8, 1956, the TV game show I Have a Secretfeatured Samuel J. Seymour, the last living person to witness the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Seymour was 5 when he was taken to the theater the night Lincoln was shot, and saw John Wilkes Booth jump off the balcony and break his ankle.
Seymour died two months later after the episode aired.
7. Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, along with his wife Elena, were executed by a firing squad. A TV crew was present to record the execution, and aired the footage on Romanian television on Christmas Day in 1989.
The Ceausescus were tried and convicted of economic sabotage and genocide. They were executed the same day. They were the last people to be executed in Romania before the abolition of capital punishment on Jan. 6, 1990.
8. On Dec. 1, 1969, CBS aired "The Draft Lottery," where birthdays were drawn at random for the Vietnam War draft, live from the selective service headquarters in Washington, DC. The first birthday picked was Sept. 14.
It was the first time a lottery draft had taken place in the United States since 1942.
9. In 2011, two Dutch TV presenters literally ate each other. They each had pieces of their flesh surgically removed from their bodies — one from the butt cheek, the other from the abdomen. A TV chef cooked the tiny pieces of flesh in sunflower oil, and the presenters ate them. Advertising
10. On Aug. 20, 1987, Gary Stollman interrupted a live newscast at KNBC armed with a BB gun and demanded anchor David Horowitz read his written statement about the CIA and aliens.
The moment was very tense, but Horowitz was able to stay calm, cool, and collected while he had a fake gun pointed at him. After Horowitz read the statement, Stollman put the gun down and was promptly arrested.
11. On May 23, 1999, at the WWF (now WWE) live pay-per-view Over the Edge event, an equipment malfunction caused professional wrestler Owen Hart to fall 78 feet from the rafters of the Kemper Arena in Kansas City. He died as a result of his injuries.
The incident occurred while a hype video for Hart's match was playing for viewers at home. When they returned from the video, WWF showed shots of the crowd as EMTs provided medical attention to Hart in the ring.
Hart was taken to the Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, and the event carried on after the incident. WWF commentator Jim Ross announced the death of Owen Hart later in the broadcast, just before the main event was set to take place. A memorial show for Hart took place the following night on Monday Night Raw.