The reactions here to facts are generally more evidence that our society would rather be politically correct than truthful.
That said, many of these older folks with low-level waivers will always out-fly my ass because there isn't enough money, time, or cheap avgas and cheap airplanes to ever get myself enough practice time in something Sierra Hotel enough to fly at their level.
When doing low level stuff there's so little margin between awesome and dead, it's amazing. Even a minor mechanical problem is a life-the eating emergency. You might have one second to do what it takes to survive.
I'm impressed anyone does it, really.
That the demographic of folks with the aircraft, skills learned in a cheaper time, and health to even apply for a low-level waiver, says more about the economy and the (probably necessary) invincibility complex necessary to even attempt it, than anything.
It's always sad to lose a fellow aviator, especially in front of a crowd of numerous non-aviators. No doubt about that.
The generation or two behind these guys probably sees it pretty clearly for what it is, though... the older crowd pushes themselves to keep doing it and sometimes lose their roll of the dice. TV is full of commercials showing 70+ year old boomers wandering around on motorcycles, too. And never-ending commercials for weenie pills.
It's just where our society is at right now.
Most of us won't ever even get to attempt it. Good for them, we say...
We're well into the era of parking WWII warbirds for lack of qualified pilots to fly them and enough of them crashed that people want to preserve them in air conditioned buildings.
I'm glad he was out doing it. Sad he wiped out. Doesn't really change the fact that the human body doesn't get any faster or better after your 20s for most of us.