According to a report in the British newspaper the Telegraph, BBC stars have been dying in unusual circumstances.
Yesterday, another BBC star passed away, as homosexual TV host, Kristian Digby was found dead in his home, after a game of autoerotic asphyxiation gone wrong. Hollywood actor David Carradine died in the same manner.
The problem lays in the fact, celebrities all over the world are exposed to so much sexually, due to the kinky circles they move in. As a result, many celebrities engage in unorthodox sexual activity that is often harmful.
They are often seeking that next thrill, due to having had sex with so many people and becoming jaded, they end up hurting themselves.
Kristian Digby, the BBC presenter, may have died in sex game gone wrong
Published: 1:29PM GMT 02 Mar 2010 - Police are investigating his death in "unexplained circumstances". The post mortem is expected to answer the question whether he died of suffocation after deliberately restricting his supply of oxygen. Auto-erotic asphyxiation, which has been condemned by police and medical experts as a dangerous practise, is said to heighten sexual arousal.
Kill Bill film star David Carradine died in June last year after his body was found in a wardrobe in a Bangkok hotel with a rope around his neck...
Mr Digby, who was the host of daytime property shows including To Buy or Not to Buy, died at his home in east London on Monday. Ambulance crews were unable to revive the 32-year old at the flat in Newnham at 7.45am.
Kristian Digby: The latest BBC presenter to die in unusual circumstances
Published: 10:21AM GMT 02 Mar 2010 - Natasha Collins, a former BBC children's presenter, was found dead in her London flat in January 2008. The 31 year old was discovered in the bath by her fiance Mark Speight, who had worked with her on the BBC children's series See It Saw It. Toxicology reports found traces of cocaine in her system.
Mr Speight, 42, was arrested immediately following the death but was released without charge. The Smart Art presenter later committed suicide in April that year. His body was found by police in a remote part of Paddington station.
Christopher Price, 35, a presenter of the cult show Liquid News on BBC3, died in April 2002. Concerned colleagues went to his London flat when he failed to turn up for work after taking a week off for an ear infection. A coroner's court found that he died of heart failure after developing a rare condition associated with the infection. Police found a small amount of cocaine and weight-loss prescription drugs in the flat but they were not connected with his death.