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His job is to be shot from a cannon. This time, he missed his target

Chachi Valencia, alias "The Rocketman," is propelled into the air during the closing ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympics.
Chachi “The Rocketman” Valencia took his act to the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London.
(Adrian Dennis / AFP via Getty Images)

His job description is “human cannonball.” And for 23 years that seemed to be working out for Chachi “The Rocketman” Valencia. Even his wife, Robin Valencia, is in the human-cannonball line of work.

But on Sunday at the Riverside County Fair & National Date Festival, one could see why being a daredevil isn’t for the faint of heart as the Rocketman missed his target.

The performer is recovering from his injuries after slipping through a safety net during a performance at the Indio festival, fair officials said.

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Valencia began his performance around 2:30 p.m., fair officials said via Instagram. He routinely pumps up the audience with a 20-minute speech before climbing into a cannon, according to his website.

Valencia was launched about 65 feet high at 55 mph across a distance of 165 feet — where a narrow net was set up to catch him. The net is about 20 feet off the ground, according to his website. But instead of delivering a final heartfelt salute to the crowd, Valencia fell to the ground.

He was rushed to a hospital around 3 p.m., fair officials said. The Riverside County Sheriff’s Office told the Press Telegram on Sunday that Valencia sustained non-life-threatening injuries. Riverside County Fair officials said Valencia was released later that night.

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Valencia says on his website he has more than two decades of experience as a human cannonball. He performed at the closing ceremony of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London and at the 2014 Carnival festival in Rio de Janeiro.

Human cannonballs are said to be a small and select group — and they are no strangers to catastrophe. After the death of one performer in 2011, a daredevil told the British online outlet the Independent that it’s a skill that requires the performer “to understand physics, mathematics and engineering” — and “you can’t be scared of anything.”

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