Caged man to 'take a poke at the pokies'
Caged man to 'take a poke at the pokies'
He's
Downunder's most prolific record-breaker having notched up
38 Guinness World Records in what can only be described as a
very curious career.
Now Alastair Galpin plans to
add to this by spending 21 days in mid-air while striving
for the, err, much coveted title of 'Most Radio Interviews
in a Suspended Cage'. Other media - print and television -
are also welcome to get in on his act.
At 11am this
Wednesday - April Fools - the 35-year-old ex-pat South
African adventurer is being hoisted aloft at Rainbow's End
theme park at Manukau City, courtesy of Auckland Cranes,
with a Portacom portable toilet as his home - and relief -
for the next three weeks.
The rules of engagement
include that he can only come down from his cage for a
maximum of one hour in every 24.
The rules are
serious and closely monitored. Exceed that hour by 30
seconds and the record attempt fails. However, this time
he's aiming for the Record Holders' Republic rather than the
Guinness big book. Oh, and while caged, between interviews
he'll be working on his final papers for a Bachelor of
Science in Human Geography at Auckland
University.
While it has the element of whimsical
stunt-cum-entertainment, as do many of Galpin's 'records' to
date, there is a more serious side in that he will also be
promoting the Problem Gambling Foundation (PGF), in
particular the high social cost of poker machines which are
foremost in the foundation's sights.
The PGF and he
have had a three-year collaboration to date which include
dropping pokie machinesfrom a helicopter and, with then
chief executive John Stansfield, briefly setting a world
record of 57 radio interviews in 24 hours before this was
usurped by American rock band Fall Out Boy.
Other
'world records of Galpin's have also been overtaken -
including most snails on his face - and donning the most
underpants in one minute (20), an achievement he now shares
with someone in Perth. But not the 25,000 litres of soup he
and a cast of hundreds cooked up and served to thousands in
South Auckland.
So while some 'records' sound
frivolous there is another component in that Galpin uses
each stunt to promote a social or environmental charity
group. With the Rainbow's End endurance, he says it will
include encouraging people to "bring the kids here instead
of pouring money into pokies".
"Another poke at the
pokies," he quips, adding that as for his three-week
Portacom residency: "People go down the toilet when they
play the pokies."
Snails, undies and Portacoms do not do
justice to Galpin's significant international achievements.
These include hitch-hiking through Africa. "I met fantastic
truck drivers who introduced me to wonderful people, put me
up and took me to parties." Solo across Ethiopia; travelling
the length of the Senqu River in Lesotho - 270km on foot,
110km on horseback. "One of most beautiful place I have ever
been."
He also walked solo "across the Republic of
Ireland in fancy dress" to raise funds for Friends of the
Earth - to mention just a few of his achievements. He is
intensely focused and intensely busy.
Ends
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