Originally posted by Mini D
The were both self serving. You're quibling over degree.
I'm also apparently quibling over the degree to which these guys calculated their risks when engaging in their activities of choice. After a bit of research, I'd have to conclude that Irwin, having spent his whole life around reptiles, was in his element around the animals. IE, he felt at home near them, and had reason to. Yes, there was risk, but with nearly 4 decades in close proximity with a variety of dangerous organisms, it is probably safe to say that he was aware of those risks to the point of professional certainty. Not 100 percent, but close enough.
Treadwell, although having spent a whole bunch of time with the bears (no variety, just one species), never really made it past the point of giving them human names and whispering sweet nothings into their ears while prancing around the forest on what appears to have been an extended acid trip.
Yes, both served their own interests, both did things that I would not want my children to do. One was killed by the very animals he supposedly specialized in, where as the other really was a victim of a freakishly rare attack--not killed by a Crocadile, which would have been his equivalent.
Does this make them inherently different? I think so. I admit, however, that my judgment is steered not just by their backgrounds, but also by the fact that I found one to be likeable, and the other, nothing but an acidic, overzealous moron.