Tightrope walker teeters above Beijing's Bird's Nest for 5 hours a day, 60 days; breaks record
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BEIJING (AP) — China's "prince of tightrope walking" broke a world record Friday after spending several hours a day for two months gingerly crossing a wire above Beijing's Bird's Nest stadium.
Adili Wuxor, who has been walking about 12 miles (19 kilometers) a day on the tightrope strung across the stadium, finished his last performance Friday, breaking the record for the longest period of mid-air walking. He walked more than five hours a day for 60 days.
A representative from Guinness World Records presented him with a certificate at a news conference.
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"I'm very lucky to have this opportunity to walk in such an iconic structure," Wuxor told The Associated Press. "It's not just a record for myself, but also a record for all Chinese people."
Chinese media have dubbed Wuxor the "prince of tightrope walking." Since April, he has lived in a small cabin adjacent to the tightrope, eating and sleeping there while performing stunts for visitors during the day. He already holds five Guinness World Records for various tightrope-related stunts.
The Bird's Nest was the venue for the opening and closing ceremonies and the track and field events for the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games.
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Wuxor, an ethnic Uighur from the far western region of Xinjiang, says he's ready to take on a new challenge in October: to walk on a tightrope from an island off the southern city of Xiamen to the shore.