When a story surfaced that a Japanese whaling crew had been , leaving 16 dead, the social-media peanut gallery picked up on the “tragedy,” hailing the assault as “awesome” and “karma.”
This would have been the first deadly attack on humans by wild orcas—a significant event amid the growing SeaWorld controversy. After all, one of the central arguments in Blackfish is that keeping orcas in captivity essentially , making them uniquely dangerous to humans. So the more than 250,000 shares on this whaling-attack story would have been warranted—had the piece not been completely fake.
People, check your sources. Anyone who clicked on the would see that it appeared in World News Daily Report, a self-described ““—which basically means it just makes everything up, funny or not. That’s pretty much all there is to this hoax.
That means killer whales have still chalked up a total of zero fatal human attacks in the wild. And the that have occurred in nature usually seem to be cases of mistaken identity. Orcas could very easily kill humans, but all signs point to the fact that they probably aren’t interested in eating us. Unfortunately, the same can’t be said of orcas in captivity. Tim Zimmermann’s The Killer in the Pool explores several of those deadly incidents—it’s worth a read and is definitely real.