The airplane disaster that may have happened with Gimli is nothing short of a miracle and luck. The fact the pilot knew the landing area by heart, knowing how to do a slip and was expierienced. The fact that the drag racers were done for the day and having a bbq so the race way was clear of cars and people. The fact that the nose failed and saved those boys from getting squashed. And the weather didnt have any storms or high winds or anything that may disrupt the plane. If any one of these factors were out, the damage and disaster wouldve been massive. Also, the image of those two boys trying to out run a crashing plane is so funny. Imagine racing with your friend on the raceway with your bikes. All of a sudden you hear a noise and glancing behind a MASSIVE PLANE IS SPEEDING TOWARD YOU. And in your panic you start pedaling WHILE STILL ON THE TRACK away as fast as you can. Absolutely no one is going to beat that story
@swilsonmc25 ай бұрын
Gimli is an amazing story. What are the chances that the pilot knew how to sideslip flying into an airport he was familiar with (the only airport available) all caused by a poor solder joint and a metrict to imperial conversion snafu. Not to mention the drag racing had finished for the day. Just incredible set of circumstances.
@l.coupland20405 ай бұрын
And no casualties
@7577iaАй бұрын
These actors are better than the Hollywood actors .to portray something that serious with utter most seriousness and no drama .
@peterborg334020 күн бұрын
I never thought about that. You are absolutely right!
@brandonmcgrew436719 күн бұрын
100% agree
@SolidAvenger12905 ай бұрын
Mayday forgot to mention that Air Canada demoted Captain Pearson for six months, and First Officer Maurice Quintal was suspended for two weeks after the incident. They more or less tried to blame the aircrew, but overall, it was Air Canada's poor training and disrepair of maintaining critical & new equipment for their aircraft.
@sassytbc79234 ай бұрын
Why did they sanction the pilot and first officer?
@gprich824 ай бұрын
@@sassytbc7923 because that's what they do to deflect litigation.
@paradisedreaming63633 ай бұрын
They saved every single life on that plane, performed a maneuver that was NEVER, EVER successfully even attempted in the history of aviation and the pilot gets demoted and FO suspended! I will never fly Air Canada again!!
@jadeamolat846517 күн бұрын
@@SolidAvenger1290 sad to hear about sanctions to the pilots.
@GusMcC8 күн бұрын
This was flying and airman ship of a magnitude where these guys (yes mistakes were made by many here) pretty much did the impossible. Hats off big time to Bob Pearson and Marice Qunitel.
@marilynh.5 ай бұрын
As a Dallas resident, I can tell you that this was one of the hottest summers we had. Even though it's just June on here, it's still 101. However, by July, we had over 110 degrees for over 3 straight weeks. This was a very sad day in Dallas when this accident occurred.
@jerichobeach29673 ай бұрын
I just translated Freedom units into Canadian celcius:) 110 is 43.3c. Thats insane hot. We had that much heat once in my life of 44 years i believe it was 42c in 2022 in vancouver
@Candy_Blossom12453 ай бұрын
What
@Candy_Blossom12453 ай бұрын
Meh
@yomama95673 ай бұрын
@@Candy_Blossom1245 More Upthumbs!
@h3ndagek2 ай бұрын
average texas behavior
@K000HАй бұрын
Really have to give a shout out to all the people that went head first into storms that were known to wreck planes for the sole reason to figure them out. Selflessness, curiosity, or madness... they deserve all the respect.
@robert9495Ай бұрын
Or not. The flip side to this is not to let curiosity get the better of you and you and everyone else will be ok. I aint too keen on giving kudos to pilots who like to explore just to satisfy a deadly curiosity. Theirs and theirs alone at the expenae of the innocent lives they're responsible for.
@JackRabbittmАй бұрын
@robert9495 it's not just to satisfy a curiosity. It's to develop better technology that can be used to detect the storms. This tech can be used to save thousands of lives. It's just like tornado chasers. They follow tornadoes to gather useful data that can be used to develop improve warning systems. Scientists need to take risks to save lives. They absolutely deserve praise.
@Taylor-or1kj4 ай бұрын
Holy mother of God… this pilot is an absolute LEGEND. That simulated landing was legit.
@FckYTube-r3vАй бұрын
NO GOD so NO Mother of NO GOD...
@thisravenhasflown0105 ай бұрын
A microburst hit our area, it was amazing the type of damage it caused, ripping out trees by their roots yet leaving homes standing. Terrifying. The area of damage (not a path) was viewable similar to a tornado's path yet so different 🤔
@michaelcoletta45472 ай бұрын
So would it be safe to say microbursts are akin to something like a stationary tornado? Or a sort of mini-tornado, perhaps?
@thisravenhasflown0102 ай бұрын
@@michaelcoletta4547 I would say its definitely similar
@josephdupont5 ай бұрын
One fatality on this plane crash was someone who as a young kid survived and M. U2 crash, that's a twin Turbo prop. He was the only survivor on an M2MU2 turboprop crash. And so I guess the messages surviving 2 air crashes is very unlikely.
@michaelcoletta45472 ай бұрын
That's pretty wild, if indeed true. A nice little aside. RIP to the fallen.
@jordanlewis3376Ай бұрын
What about terenife🙂
@MothKeeperАй бұрын
Where's terenife?
@kyoakland24 күн бұрын
Real spit
@fallingfeather21Ай бұрын
Microbursts ripped out 10 trees on my property. Neighbors on either side were untouched. Oak trees 24" diameter at chest level. Twisted out like toothpicks. This was outside of Chicago. I'll NEVER forget it.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr282329 күн бұрын
When was this? I've been there over half century.
@richardkranium29445 ай бұрын
Those kids who outran the plane on bike’s probably got laughed at until this show came out and proved it. 😊
@Levi-qc5vv5 ай бұрын
Is Air canada 143😮
@NoahLevine-p8m4 ай бұрын
@@richardkranium2944 are you talking about those 2 kids that out ran it on the place where they were about to start raceing
@Parker20103 ай бұрын
Those two boys went on to write Alien: Covenant.
@richardkranium29442 ай бұрын
@@NoahLevine-p8myes. Those kids on bikes
@dennislilley55622 ай бұрын
That was the gimli glider
@abigail_19705 ай бұрын
The Glimi Glider and Nowhere to land episodes should've gotten their own movie! Like Miracle on the Hudson did...IMO
@GOLDVIOLINbowofdeath5 ай бұрын
Gimli Glider was more of a miracle than Sully and the pilot was not a ham
@IamDiamondDraco5 ай бұрын
I agree with this! Gimli was a few years before Taca 110 and looooong before the Hudson, making them the first crew in modern aviation to successfully land a commercial jet dead stick. I replay this and when I can find it Taca 110 repeatedly.
@MakerInMotion5 ай бұрын
Yeah there have been aviation miracles greater than Sully's. Aloha Airlines 243, British Airways 5390, and British Airways 009 come to mind. All due respect to Sully, but he had a brief period of stress to get through and some of these other pilots went through a prolonged nightmare.
@crowboy06665 ай бұрын
@@MakerInMotion i think part of it might have been the immediate publicity, like it was in the middle of new york city, there were thousands of witnesses for basically the entire situation, it was caught on security cameras, civilian ferries were some of the first boats to the rescue scene... so i think the involvement of the general public definitely played a part in why it got so much attention. i think part of it was also the fact that it was a water landing, which is a whole different nightmare compared to a runway landing, even one in dire circumstances.
@kehuuzz5 ай бұрын
There is a movie about the gimli glider...
@KetsaKunta4 ай бұрын
This is the only time you can say that smoking saves instead of kills 😂.
@tsw1963Ай бұрын
I’m so glad that times have changed and no smoking is allowed at all. I hated sitting in a plane and behind that curtain they were smoking like crazy. Curtains do not hold back any smoke. People can smoke all they want but inhale your smoke on your own.
@ewjiml6 күн бұрын
@@tsw1963 I used to smoke like a champ when I was in the military but I absolutely hated smelling others smoke. It was weird. I once went to a smoking Airport in Georgia while training and I almost threw up in the “smoking room.” I got so nauseous from that smell I could only imagine being on a plane.
@whatwillbem68255 ай бұрын
I have no idea WHY I’m watching these mayday episodes…I’m flying to Burbank California Sunday 😳 from Az …geez 🙄
@eviljesus61115 ай бұрын
Burnbsnk is horrible
@Chamonix.frequently5 ай бұрын
I go from Bur to Vegas at least once a year, best believe I'm looking at the full condition of the visible plane every step of that walkway! 😅 ❤safe travels
@Chamonix.frequently5 ай бұрын
@JimAllen-Persona and the Frys is gone now so it's just dark and creepy
@kamakaziozzie30385 ай бұрын
Not to worry. I flew on United from Honolulu to LAX on February 25, 1989 on a 747 one day after flight UA811 disaster. It made me feel more secure as the chances of two accidents one day apart on same airline were almost nonexistent
@gailrobinson80525 ай бұрын
I have done the same thing recently going from nyc to las vegas. I like the episodes where people survive. I've pucked up a few safety/survival tips...i.e. wear cotton clothes or natural fiber clothes in case of fire, don't inflate the life preserver when inside the plane since it will keep you inside the plane and you could drown, check the outside of the plane and dont feel embarrassed if you see something strange, I didn't see this but I brought a towel and filled up a water bottle in case of smoke and fire, cover face with jacket and maybe a pillow when you have to brace, know where the exit signs are in relation to your seat. I haven't yet figured out where the best seat on the plane is...lol.
@evalevy29093 ай бұрын
I've watched this before but it's always amazing. It reminds me of miracle on the Hudson. Absolutely brilliant airmanship
@joycedudzinski94155 ай бұрын
I was working patrol at the Southwest substation when this accident occurred. We were too far from the airport to help but Northwest substation was closer, so officers were sent to help to collect remains of passengers. I can only imagine what a horrific scene that was.
@robertsandberg22463 ай бұрын
I would never want my mortal remains to be picked up by a cop.
@lizlarsen16533 ай бұрын
My husband and I were at Six Flags, only a few miles from the airport, with our children when this happened. The news was passed from person to person like wildfire.
@GinaOhNo5 ай бұрын
The Canada Air Flight 143 event has a movie on Amazon Prime. I had just seen it this weekend and now I get to see the true story behind it. So cool!
@TERoss-jk9ny4 ай бұрын
Really? I’ll watch that after my Dodger game today. Thanks.
@cindelynulbata2347Ай бұрын
They always blame the dead pilot just when they can not speak for themselves anymore.
@allagametome45883 ай бұрын
My college professor was in the plane behind this one. She told us about how scary it was. Of course this conversation happened while we were waiting to board our flight to D.C.
@sweettexaslatina55yrsyoung2 ай бұрын
😳😬❤❤❤
@ladyzapzap95145 ай бұрын
Might be a rerun but I’ve not seen this one yet
@TERoss-jk9ny4 ай бұрын
@@ladyzapzap9514: I’ve seen it 4 times…. Still? Here I am.
@ladyzapzap95144 ай бұрын
@@TERoss-jk9nysame. I rewatch these. I do have favorites, as morbid as that seems.
@deirdrekiely6187Ай бұрын
@@TERoss-jk9ny You are dedicated.
@CuriousMouseExplorationАй бұрын
Remember the Ford Pinto? Ford knew how dangerous it was when hit from behind - i.e. it tended to explode - but they calculated the losses if they were sued and decided they'd pay more if they had to fix them. And they were right. It did end up costing less to be sued than to fix them. Most companies will always look at their bottom line when it comes to either fixing dangerous design flaws or getting sued for them afterwards. McDonnell Douglas did the same thing.
@julosxАй бұрын
@@CuriousMouseExploration Actually the Ford Pinto wasn’t more dangerous than many other cars of the time which were designed pretty much the same way. Just think how many US cars had their fuel intake behind the registration plate in the 70s. It meant the fuel tank was right next to the rear bumper, just like in the Pinto. Nowadays most rear wheel drive cars have their fuel tank above the differential, a progress introduced thanks to the front wheel drive cars.
@GSXR-10009 күн бұрын
Rather lose money than lose customers and prestige
@ericwoy41325 ай бұрын
The pilot of the Turkish airline played the terrorist in another episode.
@wtsnxt-kari5093 ай бұрын
@@ericwoy4132 good to see he wasn't type cast 😊
@trumpsb757sucks519 күн бұрын
@@ericwoy4132 The Captain no
@JPN850R5 ай бұрын
Microburst and Downburst were discovered by professor Ted Fujita at University of Chicago.
@GH-oi2jf5 ай бұрын
This was the crash that killed the IBM employee who led development of the IBM PC. Oh, I see that it is in the video.
@کنزاًمخفیاً-ع9ص5 ай бұрын
Wow imagine being hit by an airplanes engine, I remember reading a story about a meteorite narrowly missing a woman's head as she sleeps on her bed lol
@mr.pancake79605 ай бұрын
Bad luck moment
@MakerInMotion5 ай бұрын
In 1992 a meteorite crashed into the parked car of a broke young woman in Peekskill, NY. A car she had just bought for $300. She got $50,000 for the meteorite and another $25,000 for the car. As long as it misses you physically, it can be a gift from the heavens.
@brianjude67895 ай бұрын
@@MakerInMotionthat’s JUST like what the Sam hill happened on Friday the 13th!
@Serenity42425 ай бұрын
You know, I have been paranoid for years about that...there was another time when a plane lost its blue water from the bathroom...imagine that! 😮😮
@sassytbc79234 ай бұрын
Aww geez I wouldn’t get in my bed ever again..
@Shutup679netfall25 ай бұрын
137 deaths 27 survivors 25 injured
@brisk14975 ай бұрын
Wild that smoking kinda saved that dudes life in delta 191
@stevenhiggins25445 ай бұрын
>turn right head 620. Im not familiar with that heading, and I train air traffic controllers 💀
@jayeetachakraborty92995 ай бұрын
💀☠
@natehill80695 ай бұрын
Sure, thats a complete right circle and then an additional 3/4 turn to the right. A lot of oil stockholders in Texas, scope dope must own a lot of shares...
@chantalmarie83613 ай бұрын
@@stevenhiggins2544 that is so funny, it made me laugh 😂
@bewilderedbytheonlinecommunity3 ай бұрын
@@natehill8069 math doesn't add up, but your explanation sounds good
@Alex462047Ай бұрын
Turn around once, then turn to a heading of 280.😳
@je3996Ай бұрын
This happened to me when I was younger. The plane crashed with a bird. I jumped out of the plane with my parachute as I thought all 15 people in the plane would crash and die. The pilot managed to make an emergency landing without any injuries. I broke both my legs and had to spend the whole summer in hospital. It would have been better to stay in the plane than to jump out with my parachute as I did. The plane was tilted too much and was at too low an altitude so I came out all wrong.
@kyoakland24 күн бұрын
Ok pal
@jalalmiah81352 ай бұрын
That coffin in the DC-10 and the fact that the cargo door flew off is spooky
@MrMalvolio295 ай бұрын
I used to fly back and forth from Newark-Liberty to either London Heathrow or Paris Charles de Gaulle, as well as from Newark-Liberty to the Tel Aviv International Airport in Israel quite often each year for my career…Each time we were landing in less-than ideal weather--despite all my years of experience flying--I would be UTTERLY PETRIFIED a micro-burst down-draft was going to hit us,and tho no order from the captain or first officer had been given to do so, i would assume the infamous “crash position,” with my seatbelt tightly secured around my waist; my head down between my knees, and my small pillow placed behind my head and neck, with my hands clasped over it….Probably seriously unnerved some fellow passengers, yet it made ME feel less afraid. Was I silly and absurd to do that throughout my 20s, 30s, and most of my 40s (when my failing health made travel nearly impossible, sadly)???
@mntryjoseph19613 ай бұрын
May all the victims rest in peace.
@billfarrell70514 ай бұрын
With much sympathy for the crew and passengers of this star crossed flight, I resolved to never ever fly Delta since this natural disaster. In court settlements with victims, Delta attorneys tried to argue that survivoring families of gay loved ones deserved only half the compensation of straight families, reasoning that most of them would soon have died of AIDS anyway. Talk about sick. I still await an apology for their crass, cynical, and offensive legal argument. Given their HQ in the deep South, I'm not holding my breath.
@Binteh10 күн бұрын
Wow, the Gimli story is really a testatement to the pilots knowledge, courage and ability to critically think in a stressful situation. What an absolute gem of a human.
@susansage72182 ай бұрын
My dad always told me to reserve a seat in the rear section.
@peterwilson552814 күн бұрын
They say smoking kills, but the passenger who smoked was saved by smoking. What a strange world we live in.
@bobroberts6155Ай бұрын
Watching these videos the innocuous phrase ‘the crew begins their final descent’ gains an ominous new meaning.
@twiceadopted71475 ай бұрын
Gimli glider Tokyo drifted into the runway!! Beast crazy skills that pilot has.❤
@Serenity42425 ай бұрын
I have wondered why they always say something about a veteran pilot or having so many hours flown...but the endgame happens to old timers and newbie pilots...the ground doesn't care...anyone who hits a microburst is likely to be damaged
@joelmotapia6397Ай бұрын
The DC-10, classic American behavior; wait until a tragedy happens, then do something.
@QueenMFLaurie19 күн бұрын
The main reason for many plane crashes is that instead of actively considering the possibility that something could go very wrong one day and taking steps to prevent it, people tend to wait until there's a problem. Then they react dramatically, saying, "Oops! That went wrong; we should have seen it coming... we need to make sure it doesn’t happen again!" Like that one episode (I forgot which one sorry) with the airport that was one of the busiest in the world. They had the worst radar, which was a contributor to a disaster waiting to happen.
@pooryorick831Ай бұрын
I hope the poor souls who were lost found their way to their final destination, wherever that may be. I flew in to DFW on a Delta L1011 about 4 weeks after this crash. I remember seeing where the accident happened and feeling a chill. You can call me crazy or delusional, but I swear some of those people were still around that spot at DFW. I know it sounds like a hallucination but it really was chilling to be in that place so soon after something horrible happened. And the memory is still vivid 39 years later.
@MEILESHI3 ай бұрын
Uhh you know the deadliest crash is actually the Tenerife airport disaster and more than 500 people died when two Boeing 747s crashed into each other
@onefootedphoenixАй бұрын
That likely happened after this one
@KrisCorby-iv8dgАй бұрын
Nope! This one happened, Aug 2nd 1985, Tenerife happened March, of 1977!...💁🏻♀️ so much for your guess!..🤷🏻♀️
@KrisCorby-iv8dgАй бұрын
Yup! 1977, 8 years before this one!..🤷🏻♂️
@RamPlaysGuitarАй бұрын
What about the mid air collision of DhL
@skzoo_ChezzallАй бұрын
They may mean involving one plane possibly tenerife was two planes
@Jack-hy1zqАй бұрын
It's crazy to think that smoking used to be allowed on planes.
@walterfredrickson388710 күн бұрын
I also remember this day very well. This folks did not die in vain. We learned so much about microburst. And today we are much safer. Little did I know then that my very best friend and his wife and two cousins , would die on TWA flight 800 off Long Island . The pain of that loss was the worst . It was so instantaneous. And I lost all faith in GOD for over ten years.
@joffreyverbeeck1640Ай бұрын
47:40 "We were at 850, and we just dropped to 750 in no time at all. Lovely." These guys are made of something else.
@johnsmith-rs2vkАй бұрын
The DC 10 . It always scared me with this huge engine mounted on the tail plane . Although I did fly on it twice .
@walterfredrickson388710 күн бұрын
I think the founder of Curtis Matheus TVs was on that flight too.
@corveau147819 күн бұрын
The guy who said he was a medic in the Vietnam war and never saw civilian casualties is having some heavy denial.
@ScrewTikTokАй бұрын
When he said this was one of the biggest airport in the world, i had a feeling he'd say its one of the busiest airports, then he said it...
@nani-by1hv11 күн бұрын
okay but imagine finding a casket that fell from the sky
@zed4225Ай бұрын
That coffin was a spin out, rather glad the occupant didn't have to see the latter ending in life. RIP fellow human.
@lisamcleod9850Ай бұрын
If the person in charge to tell the pilots was on a meal break then why on earth didn't they have a qualified person fill in when the other is on break, That's insane! There should never be a single minute that someone is not there watching 24/7.
@anas-ee6qx24 күн бұрын
1st story: it's rare that smoking cigarettes save your life! But there he is!
@sukhygill9596Ай бұрын
this is no deadliest crash, click bait, this is one of the best level of skills displayed by a pilot and i salute him
@desertxr8859Ай бұрын
Microburst only lasts for 15 minutes at the most, well, that’s an eternity when you consider the planes landing in an hour. Went through one of those in orlando, it felt like a giant sudden force pushed our plane down like a toy, some people hit the roof of the plane that didn’t have their belts fasten. A very close call.
@anneoconnor8741Ай бұрын
What I do not understand is taking all shoes off. I know high heels need to be removed, but I always wear trainers and keep them on for the whole flight. I understand this is safer.
@bezrux71474 ай бұрын
The American Dc-10 “ ladies and gentlemen we got a small problem” as descending 1600 feet per minute
@ferociousgumby3 ай бұрын
"Houston, we have a problem."
@DellaMikell2 ай бұрын
Love the words so meaningful. BEAUTIFUL.
@juanabanana06235 күн бұрын
Omg! The first episode the Delta one, i had thought they would be alrigth until it was cut in half 😢😢😢
@Luna_moon_11275 ай бұрын
Can you just imagine flying in the plane at this time not one that was going to crash but I mean at this time like whatever year this was that you could smoke on planes just imagine you’re sitting next to someone in the latest cigarette you’re sitting pretty close to them and there’s no way for them to really blow the smoke away from you. You would be stuck smelling that and what if you were like really sensitive to cigarette smoke I’m pretty sure that’s the reason that they made a rule that you can’t smoke on our class anymore I’m kind of happy about it. I remember when I was a kid anytime I would walk outside while my dad was having a cigarette. I would instantly get a stomach ache and a headache. It would make me nauseous and make my headache just the smell of cigarette smoke
@roderickmaclean2050Ай бұрын
@@Luna_moon_1127 never heard such garbage in a long time, like all control freaks who ban smoking a, it's about CONTROL, nothing more, take COVID as an example WMD another, the list is endless
@BrightEndStories15 күн бұрын
It’s crucial to learn from these tragic crashes to make flying safer, but sometimes it feels like these disasters could have been prevented with better regulations. Are we doing enough to prevent history from repeating itself?
@toomanykatsu5 ай бұрын
The alarm in the jammed rudder one is an 80’s alarm clock and it is TRIGGERING 😂😂😂
@MakerInMotion5 ай бұрын
Time for school!!! GET UP!!!
@toomanykatsu5 ай бұрын
@@MakerInMotion NO MOM I DON'T WANNA GO
@magnusmalmborn8665Ай бұрын
Douglas was bought by Boeing, whose doors are now falling off. Gives new perspectives...
@pete30503 ай бұрын
I am 70 years old so the metric system is foreign to me i still have to use conversion charts, but still crews should be properly trained in the metric system
@LindseyGrahamCrackerАй бұрын
6:10 I like Captain Connors already. I can't imagine this man losing a plane
@sanchoodell6789Ай бұрын
18:55 Who ever said smoking was bad for your health. (NOT in this gentleman's case!)
@bunnyb15995 ай бұрын
dfw airport is massive we had to switch planes there once, they gave us like 10mins to get to the whole other side of the airport, it took us 20 and we missed our flight. 😂
@shedwork14 сағат бұрын
The Gimli Glider - Captain Bob - a true stick and rudder man! Love that story.
@L33tSkE3t3 ай бұрын
I have seen so many videos of people having to be evacuated from planes on the tarmac, mostly due to fire emergencies, and there will seemingly always be a not insignificant number of people trying to get their luggage and other items out from the overhead compartments that they then attempt to take with them during the evacuation. This slows the evacuation, is extremely dangerous (as taking heavy luggage down the inflatable slide can seriously hurt someone) as well as slowing the evacuation process itself and thus leading to the needles deaths of many innocent passengers due to people’s selfishness, ignorance and stupidity as they are blocking the isle and one of the few paths to escape from a burning death trap. All because these people are truly that self centered and oblivious to the rest of the world, other people and their own surroundings, always having to be the main character in their own life story. A poll was done not too long ago where they questioned airline passengers and, when asked if they would attempt to grab some of their belongings during the emergency evacuation of a plane, 35% of the people questioned said yes…
@CyberWeezАй бұрын
7:44 Dude missed a belt loop.
@Mr_XXX513Ай бұрын
smoking on board? i'd love to have that today 😅
@Decay7Games5 ай бұрын
Rerun Warning
@silentsushix35 ай бұрын
Doing God's work. We appreciate you! 🙏🏽
@IamDiamondDraco5 ай бұрын
They all are.
@dana1020835 ай бұрын
They all are..youthink its an youtube tv show?. Lmao
@forgtcejba93655 ай бұрын
Wait are you telling me that this show, from TV, that was uploaded to KZbin, is not the first release? 😮 I never would have guessed
@forgtcejba93655 ай бұрын
Wait are you telling me that this show, from TV, that was uploaded to KZbin, is not the first release? 😮 I never would have guessed
@augustrnning782322 сағат бұрын
Idk but weren’t JAL 123 and The Tenerife-disasters more deadly? Im guessing “on US-soil” is missing
@scribbleOG5 ай бұрын
Theres no way they had that much leg room
@Drgonzosfaves4 ай бұрын
Yes, we did back then. You'd get an actual meal in coach also.
@CrowMercuryАй бұрын
McDouglas would then proceed to shave off their reputation by “merging” with Boeing. And in 2024 we had once again door openings mid-flight.
@cchris87428 күн бұрын
I agree, but on the other hand Boeing doors have opened mid flight too, long before the Douglas merger.
@CrowMercury28 күн бұрын
@@cchris874 …someone objecting to my negativity should not make me more depressed.
@cchris87428 күн бұрын
@@CrowMercury Well look at it this way. Airbus doors have not come off yet (I think.)
@tanialangford666212 күн бұрын
This is not the deadliest crash in aviation history. That belongs to the Tenerife Disaster on 27 March 1977 where 583 people died due to a runway incursion. The largest loss of life in a single place crash was Japan Airlines flight 123 on 12 August 1985. If it held the record for the most people who died in a single place crash, sadly that record was only held for 10 days before the Japan Airlines crash
@julianafrancis569916 күн бұрын
Pilot : " we have a small problem" Cptn Brice is good.
@cureforintroversion1262Ай бұрын
19:05 "Smoking saved my life." Not something I thought I'd hear
@ann73185 ай бұрын
What kind of plane was it that had a cargo door come off out over the Pacific Ocean someplace? I thought it was a McDonnell Douglas also... those people also sued because several died from that event. I saw that film also.
@tinymetaltrees4 ай бұрын
The plane in the thumbnail has no wings. The engine is just floating there. 😂
@sarahr98944 ай бұрын
Omg I was staring at it wondering why it looked so wonky but couldn't figure it out 🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️
@Drgonzosfaves4 ай бұрын
I'm the world of A.I., planes don't need wings...
@d.g.15942 ай бұрын
It's tragic if you lose your newlywed in a plane crash.
@SnafuskiАй бұрын
I think the deadliest was on Tenerife two jumbos crashed into each other, around 580 dead... I even remember it in the Newspapers as a teenager...
@lmbcvtАй бұрын
@@Snafuski yes still the deadliest crash in history!
@zed4225Ай бұрын
I AM IN AWE OF THE PILOT AND CO-PILOT. WHAT AN AMAZING LANDING. WHAT A PAIR OF LEGENDS, BUT THAT CAPTAIN IS NEXT LEVEL GOOD. AMAZING, SIMPLY AMAZING ❣ CREW AND PASSENGERS..... GREAT JOB!!!. THIS IS THE BEST BECAUSE EVERYONE SURVIVED. CAPTAIN BOB YOU CAN FLY ME ANYWHERE SIR❣
@uriituwАй бұрын
There’s absolutely no need to shout!
@JessBar-qx8rk4 ай бұрын
Man is alive
@lauriebradley82955 ай бұрын
This is a Good opportunity to reach out❤️
@sarahcartier3393Ай бұрын
Absolutely completely irresponsible to not fix a problem that occured during testing, which could have potentially saved and prevented two commercial flights from going down. Kudos to the glider captain who successfully brought down and landed his plane without fatailities including those very lucky young boys. Hats of the the engineers and scientists, including NASA who correctly identify, develop and rectify aviation errors for the greater good and it all started with the Wright brothers.
@jiahazahar6607Ай бұрын
"The runway is no longer a runway" GOOSEBUMP!
@KeithAppАй бұрын
Smoking literally saved his life by being in the seat he was. The irony! 😂
@KirkanJohnsonАй бұрын
This pilot is a genius
@pinkmagiclala2 ай бұрын
191 is such a cursed flight number
@nicholasbondarenko9227Ай бұрын
ATC always give us deviation left or right and never send us direct into thunderstorm.
@natehill80695 ай бұрын
Ironic that Boeing and McD both made defective cargo doors at the same time.
@eurogryphon5 ай бұрын
55:40 Brand new aircraft and things are already broken. Typical Boeing...
@Drgonzosfaves4 ай бұрын
This was McDonnell Douglas, but their MO of taking care of shareholders first was in full play.
@koosuys3101Ай бұрын
I am not surprised that a 737 was used to do the research. I always feel that it is such a robust plane to fly on. My personal favourite plane of all time for commercial flights.
@jordysrevenge5 ай бұрын
4:44 …heading 620?? whose gon tell him 💀
@dom120113 ай бұрын
I watched this 5 times can’t stop laughing 😂😂😂😂as ATC my ocd just went off
@stefansekulic7903Ай бұрын
Make a 720 degree turn. End up facing the same direction.😅
@nz62413 ай бұрын
it's not really deadliest when there are survivors post crash? The title is misleading.
@prohibidax15192 ай бұрын
Pearson and Piché are the best pilots in the world
@poji2223 ай бұрын
52:29 that guy who portrayed the Air Canada maintenance guy, kinda reminds me of Gordon Ramsey lol