Villano said:On one of the morning show (The Today Show, I think), one of the hosts talked about the incident where he took his baby in with the crocs. He said that this event shouldn't overshadow his life, and then they showed a clip of Irwin defending his actions. He came off as a weirdo, saying that "everyone is an expert" (like it takes an expert to know that you shouldn't take your kid into a crocodile pit) and trying to say that living by a busy road is actually more dangerous.
I'm not trying to beat up on the guy now that he's dead, but this sort of proves his critics right. Wild animals are dangerous and unpredictable. Irwin was a professional who supposedly knew what he was doing and he was killed. He's lucky his kid wasn't killed years ago.
I had to walk away when I first read this because I would have had the moderators all over me for what I wanted to say.
The whole croc feeding thing should not define his life. I don't think it was the smartest thing to do. Parents do dumb thing sometimes hang a baby out of a window ala Michael Jackson, drive with your kid on your lap ala Spears.
One action does not make someone a bad parent. If that was true then I am a horrible parent. I made the mistake of puttting my son strapped in his carseat on the hood of my car while I got some packages out. It was not careful enough and the thing fell of the hood. The carseat landed face down on the asphalt. Luckily my two month old son was not hurt because he was so well strapped in.
I will also admit to a couple a times of not putting him in the carseat because I was in other people's cars. That was very wrong and I got lucky nothing bad happened and my son is now an adult.
Steve Irwin did a lot to improve the lives of animals and he educated people about them in a fun enganging way. Is death is a loss to his family , his fans and to the animals he cared about.