Honestly, doesn't much matter, people have been documented doing similar stunts.
And every video of similar that I watch, my palms are immediately sweaty. Every. Single. Time.
I've always been curious how many times you hear of a suicide from jumping off a high-rise would technically be considered accidental death from insanity-level daredevil behavior? I mean, that could change life insurance payouts dramatically. Hard to definitively prove that, despite conclusive evidence they had been doing similar stunts for a long time, the lethal final jump wasn't finally succumbing to some long-brewing mental health issue? I wonder how many people have actually been screwed by such circumstances? Damn that would suck for the loved ones regardless, never really knowing, especially if it may have just been their first time ever even attempting something that could go so wrong?
I think the one thing that may be of saving grace is the idea that just about everyone records themselves just talking about themselves, let alone doing anything noteworthy; we are in full-blown narcissism mode with social media as a civilization these days. But would insurance argue that dying when doing something practically begging for that outcome should be lumped into that of doing something that is expected to kill you with full expectation of that being the most probably result (a wordy way of saying suicide or self-inflicted harm).