“Earlier this week on the Allure of the Seas a guest was observed recklessly and dangerously posing for a photo by standing on her stateroom balcony railing with the help of her companion,” the statement said. “Security was notified and the guests were later debarked in Falmouth, Jamaica, as a result of their actions and are now banned for life from sailing with Royal Caribbean.”
Royal Caribbean did not identify the woman or her companion. It was unclear what deck she was on.
More than 250 people worldwide have been killed taking selfies since 2011, according to the Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care.
“‘No selfie zones’ areas should be declared across tourist areas, especially places such as water bodies, mountain peaks, and over tall buildings to decrease the incidence of selfie-related deaths,” the journal said in a 2018 article.
This week’s episode is emblematic of the selfie culture in which some people have died trying to get the ultimate photo.
Instagram is cluttered with death-defying selfies, from legs dangling off the Cliffs of Moher in Ireland, where a 26-year-old college student from India died in January, to daredevils showing off their yoga poses at the Trolltunga in Norway.