The Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour Disaster | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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  • Опубликовано: 2 янв 2025

Комментарии • 4,3 тыс.

  • @DerpsWithWolves
    @DerpsWithWolves 3 года назад +6336

    "Farrell's Ice Cream Parlour"
    *[Thumbnail is a fighter jet]*
    Something's wrong, I can feel it...

    • @benmackarel295
      @benmackarel295 3 года назад +233

      I thought it might have been an Ariel ice cream parlour on board a plane for some reason from he thumbnail

    • @luvondarox
      @luvondarox 3 года назад +357

      😂
      I was trying to figure out how the heck those two went together.
      Turns out, they don't.

    • @falcfire3093
      @falcfire3093 3 года назад +166

      @@luvondarox They kind of did go together pretty fast I would say.

    • @NitroIndigo
      @NitroIndigo 3 года назад +28

      At first glance, I thought it was a Mini Air Crash Investigation video.

    • @reese8397
      @reese8397 3 года назад +20

      Haha I could point out the channel's called Fascinating Horror so everything is probably gonna be wrong

  • @TheFoolishSamurai
    @TheFoolishSamurai 3 года назад +3038

    "How do you possibly have a disaster in an ice cream parlor?"
    *Rams an airplane into the wall.*
    "Oh... Yeah. That would do it."

    • @ct6502c
      @ct6502c 3 года назад +100

      That's exactly what I thought when I saw the title! "At an ice cream parlor? What the??"

    • @internetduck1520
      @internetduck1520 3 года назад +116

      imagine just going to get an ice cream and getting killed by a rogue aeroplane

    • @joshmitchell5654
      @joshmitchell5654 3 года назад +45

      Thats what happens when you let the koolaid man fly a plane

    • @devinpaul9026
      @devinpaul9026 3 года назад +24

      @@joshmitchell5654 Takin' out the competition, clearly.

    • @worldcomicsreview354
      @worldcomicsreview354 3 года назад +19

      Look up the Taco Bell crash, don't be eating.
      It was "only" a motorcycle, but the energy gained from high speeds has to go somewhere.

  • @CometCereal
    @CometCereal 3 года назад +2361

    I cannot imagine the heartbreak that sole survivor of the family of nine went through. They didn’t just lose one loved one that day, they lost them all.

    • @TheDasHatti
      @TheDasHatti 3 года назад +233

      Just as sad as the lonely survivor of the Lago Maggiore Cablecar collapse recently in Italy, where only a young boy survived, losing all his family in this incident.

    • @8-bitsteve500
      @8-bitsteve500 3 года назад +129

      Yes, I can't even imagine how horrific that would be. Heartbreaking just doesn't cut it. That poor child :(

    • @mountainman4987
      @mountainman4987 3 года назад +15

      I bet said "poor child" grew up and eventually had a giant family of his own.

    • @gilded_lady
      @gilded_lady 3 года назад +48

      What gets me is that a 12 year knew this wasn't going to happen and the experienced pilot didn't. Hubris, maybe?
      But man, the loss of so many families is just gut wrenching.

    • @el34glo59
      @el34glo59 3 года назад +41

      @@mountainman4987?

  • @flowerfulfox2271
    @flowerfulfox2271 3 года назад +429

    My parents are friends with the eight year old who survived who lost his whole family in this video, he is now happily married with children, i grew up with his son. They are a happy family.

    • @flowerfulfox2271
      @flowerfulfox2271 3 года назад +71

      I of course cannot account for how his childhood was directly after the incident, but he NOW has a normal life with a big family

    • @jayjaynella4539
      @jayjaynella4539 Год назад +35

      That is good news to hear after reading about the man by one of the commenters above this post. I remember now the story about this. I was a teenager then.

    • @sleeplessstudios7626
      @sleeplessstudios7626 Год назад +23

      That's a relief to hear. I hope he's doing well mentally.

    • @Buasop
      @Buasop Год назад +17

      Tell Stephen hello from someone who went to elementary school with him

    • @billt6116
      @billt6116 Год назад +14

      In situations like that after such events, It leaves you with only 2 choices.
      Get on with living, Or get on with dying.
      Its 0 or 1, Yes or no?

  • @copperlocke
    @copperlocke 3 года назад +4585

    Seeing all those matching last names in the list really showed how families were devastated.

    • @kellyreilly-robinson2130
      @kellyreilly-robinson2130 3 года назад +44

      My thoughts exactly🥲

    • @catlady8324
      @catlady8324 3 года назад +11

      Thank you Captain obvious. 🤦‍♀️

    • @braye1198
      @braye1198 3 года назад +264

      @@catlady8324 was there really a need to be so rude?

    • @catlady8324
      @catlady8324 3 года назад +15

      @@braye1198 That was not so very rude. That was mild sarcasm. Don’t be so fragile and grow thicker skin.

    • @shimmershine6902
      @shimmershine6902 3 года назад +166

      @@catlady8324 Damn CatLady calm your shit 💀

  • @MoochiBoochi
    @MoochiBoochi 3 года назад +576

    The fact the pilot was distraught and wanted others to be rescued shows that he was truly sorry for what he did and not so much over the consequences he would face.

    • @ronstreet6706
      @ronstreet6706 3 года назад +120

      And the fact that he never piloted a plane again speaks volumes about how he felt, as well

    • @6502-Coder
      @6502-Coder 3 года назад +78

      @@ronstreet6706 Even with all the mitigating circumstances Imagaine trying to live with that on your conscience for the rest of your life. It would be game over for me for certain.

    • @RandomElement
      @RandomElement 3 года назад +65

      I feel like having honest, legitimate regret for something is what opens the door to forgiveness. The victims deserve all the sympathy and support in situations like this, but you'd need a heart of stone to not feel at least a little pity for someone who just signed up for a lifetime of guilt by making one bad choice.

    • @exrobowidow1617
      @exrobowidow1617 3 года назад +20

      @@ronstreet6706 The picture shows him in a wheelchair. It could be that his injuries left him medically unable to fly a plane, in addition to whatever regrets he may have felt.

    • @Wealllovekaira
      @Wealllovekaira 3 года назад +11

      This made me cry. That guy is going to die regretting that he ever learned to fly a plane.

  • @averyeml
    @averyeml 3 года назад +2420

    The survivor’s guilt the pilot must have felt is something I can’t imagine. Especially considering that it was families and children and that several probably died from burns which is a horrific way to go. This might be one of the most upsetting stories I’ve heard from this channel in a long time.

    • @thornepp6286
      @thornepp6286 3 года назад +109

      Same, I’d probably not want to ever get up out of bed after something like that, absolutely heartbreaking

    • @star-tc7xv
      @star-tc7xv 3 года назад +62

      @@danielbierwirth2190 i would honestly do the same. I don’t think I could ever live with myself if I knew that so many innocent beings who just wanted a snack died at my hands.

    • @seanbreheny9777
      @seanbreheny9777 3 года назад +36

      @@danielbierwirth2190 I think you have things a little bit mixed up - it was the owner of the jet who died in a high speed dive in a P-51 about a year after the original incident. I don't know whether that was suicide because there was a passenger, too, so it would be a doubly awful thing to for him to do.

    • @danielbierwirth2190
      @danielbierwirth2190 3 года назад +21

      @@seanbreheny9777 Is that what it was.... It was a long time ago. Now that you have stirred up the cobwebs in my brain, (thank you very much for that dust storm), you are right. I was 14 or so at the time. I don't know why I've always thought it was the pilot of the Saber Jet, but I remember many years ago, my dad telling me once I had it wrong. Well thanks for setting me and the record straight.

    • @danielbierwirth2190
      @danielbierwirth2190 3 года назад +32

      @@star-tc7xv I was just corrected, it wasn't the pilot who died in the Mustang by Suicide. My brain had 2 related stories crossed. It was the "OWNER" of the Jet who was killed about a year later in the Mustang. My brain combined those stories. So I wanted to admit my error up front. Its sad to get old and have your brain compact your life into a 3 minute video.

  • @NancyD2
    @NancyD2 2 года назад +331

    My former neighbor Kerri, who lost her twin, was the one that campaigned for and got the memorial installed. She was a lovely woman. You would not have known she had such a tragedy in her life. I remember when this happened. We were frequent customers of Farrell’s and Sacramento was a regular stop on family vacations. Kerri spoke of “the accident” but never elaborated. When I found out WHICH accident, my heart broke for her. I was sad to hear she had passed away several years after her family moved away. (Natural causes) The twins are together again.

    • @phantomf4747
      @phantomf4747 Год назад +13

      I was there. I'm from Sac too. I remember this like it was yesterday.

    • @TheMelamia
      @TheMelamia 10 месяцев назад +2

      I went to high school with Kerri.

    • @mikeworkman3593
      @mikeworkman3593 3 месяца назад

      How are they together if they're both dead?

  • @lillipop080501
    @lillipop080501 3 года назад +677

    I feel so bad for those grandparents who ran across the street to help and got hit my a truck. I bet they were so focused on the disaster that they didn’t even consider checking the street

    • @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043
      @gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 3 года назад +52

      As a grandparent, I can absolutely attest to that. I would run toward any kind of danger if any of my kids or grands were in trouble. Familial Love is like that, I’d die for any of them❤️

    • @05pittsd
      @05pittsd 3 года назад +28

      Does anyone know where she was when she was hit? I feel like a truck should have been going slow when there was that much chaos all over the street and surrounding buildings.

    • @masonmunkey6136
      @masonmunkey6136 3 года назад +46

      And for the truck driver, a person runs out in front of you and you carry the guilt of hitting them for the rest of your life

    • @masonmunkey6136
      @masonmunkey6136 3 года назад +41

      @@05pittsd No idea but a truck doesn't have to be going very fast at all to kill someone. About a year ago where I live, a cyclist collided with a truck that was getting ready to pull out of a parking lot and died from a head injury. The driver in this video could have been negligent but it's just as likely that it was out of their control.

    • @shade247
      @shade247 3 года назад +4

      @@gomphrena-beautifulflower-8043 lol the cycle of life 😂😂😂

  • @shannenredman9191
    @shannenredman9191 3 года назад +2290

    The one kid losing essentially their whole family in an instant just ripped my heart to pieces. I couldn't even imagine the grief and despair that little one had.

    • @rockhouse7485
      @rockhouse7485 3 года назад +35

      Hippity hoppity your family’s soul is now my property

    • @nickimbasciani7920
      @nickimbasciani7920 3 года назад +176

      @@rockhouse7485 why

    • @BritanniaPacific
      @BritanniaPacific 3 года назад +44

      Sounds like the story of a girl who lost her family in the crash of northwest flight 255

    • @clray123
      @clray123 3 года назад +12

      And he did not even mention the kid's ice cream!

    • @CBJKings2011
      @CBJKings2011 3 года назад +50

      I'm sure that kid got paid an ungodly amount. Still won't bring his family back tho

  • @TinyScorpion44
    @TinyScorpion44 3 года назад +722

    I'm honestly super impressed that more than a memorial plaque came out of this. A major charity being set up in response to this so that other burn victims can recieve better medical treatment is just about the best memorial possible

    • @davidcox3076
      @davidcox3076 3 года назад +28

      Agreed, Andrea. The Cocoanut Grove Fire and the Hartford Circus Fire (both also on Fascinating Horror) led to improvements in burn care. But a center that can perform continuing research is a huge benefit to medicine.

    • @DragonSt3alth
      @DragonSt3alth 3 года назад +17

      Agreed, every year on the weekend of the memorial the local fire academies have all of the cadets at street corners around the greater Sacramento area with fire boots to fill with donations for the burn center. They make millions of dollars every year from that alone.

    • @outrunthestars4938
      @outrunthestars4938 3 года назад

      @@davidcox3076 having a center is better than having to keep having terrible fires.

    • @thebewitchinghour831
      @thebewitchinghour831 2 месяца назад

      @@DragonSt3alth That's fantastic! It's sad that these tragic events take place, only to make something else better for later generations.

  • @guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248
    @guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248 Год назад +135

    I loved Ferrells as a kid growing up in the 70's. It was a magical place, I can't imagine such horror erupting from such a happy experience.

    • @bill944
      @bill944 Год назад +2

      I had only been to a Ferrells once and it was a sensation overload for me as a child. It was in Memphis and we were there on a trip from Atlanta. I'm the youngest of three and my oldest brother, without my knowledge, had told the waitress that it was my birthday. Next thing I know, there's all kinds of racket, bells, whistles and lights flashing with a string of employees coming to our table while singing. I was so embarrassed but grew used to being the target of many pranks from my older brothers and I gave them their fair share as well.

    • @babiejo59
      @babiejo59 Год назад +3

      Growing up as a child in the 60’s , Farrells ice cream parlor was our favorite place to celebrate our birthdays as kids! It was so much fun , with these humongous bowls of ice cream that we’d share with our friends and just be in ice cream heaven! Those were certainly the good old days that I’ll always treasure🥰✌🏼🍨🎂🍰🍦🍧

    • @guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248
      @guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248 Год назад +9

      @@babiejo59 Do you remember "The pig's trough"?

    • @babiejo59
      @babiejo59 Год назад

      @@guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248 Yes! That place was amazing! My brother and I couldn’t wait until it was our birthday to celebrate with our friends and dig into such deliciousness 🍨🍧🍦

    • @christinab9808
      @christinab9808 Год назад

      @@guntherultraboltnovacrunch5248Yes!!!! 😭

  • @joewilson4740
    @joewilson4740 3 года назад +1889

    Imagine losing both parents, grandparents and most your siblings in a flash. That’s the definition of losing everything

    • @JohnS916
      @JohnS916 3 года назад +43

      So, when you think the worst has happened to you, but you still have your health, think about what that kid went through and multiply it many times.

    • @paulcarpenter999
      @paulcarpenter999 3 года назад +78

      He was raised by his late father's brother, and by his two aunts on his mom's side, both of whom were also at Farrells and survived.

    • @LuizAlexPhoenix
      @LuizAlexPhoenix 3 года назад +11

      Hey, no one to fight over the inheritance... Silver lining?

    • @starkdilemma4916
      @starkdilemma4916 3 года назад +8

      I see this as a superhero origin story.

    • @danielfox3003
      @danielfox3003 3 года назад +19

      And his ice cream melted

  • @DragonSt3alth
    @DragonSt3alth 3 года назад +1390

    My dad's best friend was working at Farrells when this happened, he didn't like to talk about it, but one time he did tell us about how he ended up tossing children through a broken window to get them out of the burning building, he had burns all over his arms from it, such a terrible tragedy.

    • @kathy-t5q
      @kathy-t5q 3 года назад +14

      Sad

    • @retrowatches1655
      @retrowatches1655 3 года назад +6

      Tossing of children through a window? Dirty sod

    • @DragonSt3alth
      @DragonSt3alth 3 года назад +91

      @@retrowatches1655 please tell me you're joking, the building was covered in jet fuel and burning

    • @retrowatches1655
      @retrowatches1655 3 года назад +5

      @@DragonSt3alth it was you that said he was tossing children....

    • @DragonSt3alth
      @DragonSt3alth 3 года назад +57

      @@retrowatches1655 and?

  • @BlackLicoriceTea
    @BlackLicoriceTea 3 года назад +990

    Imagine just getting ice cream and out of nowhere a goddamn plane crashes into the place

    • @Ingestedbanjo
      @Ingestedbanjo 3 года назад +133

      I wanted a waffle cone, not a nose cone :(

    • @kratek56
      @kratek56 3 года назад +30

      @@Ingestedbanjo thats dark :)

    • @jsas2047
      @jsas2047 3 года назад +18

      Well not exactly out of nowhere haha. There was an airport next it after all

    • @AvengerII
      @AvengerII 3 года назад +6

      Only in California!

    • @channelsixtysix066
      @channelsixtysix066 3 года назад +9

      It wasn't to be the last one. Ten years later, a Cessna crashed in front of the same shop, this time in the parking lot.

  • @KingCarva
    @KingCarva 3 года назад +578

    Oh my god. I live in Sacramento, and my grandpa was a morgue worker all his life. He was on the scene of this, collecting the bodies. He talked about it as his most traumatizing moment at his job, in over 40 years of work. I've heard about this all my life, surreal to see a video on it

    • @leae3750
      @leae3750 2 года назад +2

      What did he say of the victims appearance?

    • @KingCarva
      @KingCarva 2 года назад +36

      @@leae3750 I dont think he'd ever truly say that, other than that it was emotionally breaking. He died 2 years ago so...I unfortunately can't ask him anymore.

    • @leae3750
      @leae3750 2 года назад

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters Pshhh say no more

    • @ZombieSazza
      @ZombieSazza 2 года назад +35

      My late step-father Hamish was a medical examiner most of his life, started working as a funeral director, got his medical education and degrees, then worked in a morgue at the city hospital where he worked with the bodies of those who’d passed and determine cause of death. He dealt with the Piper Alpha incident, massive incident that happened off the NE Scottish coast, it was a massive explosion on an oil rig platform where 167 died. It left him with PTSD and he developed alcoholism due to it, and despite loving his job as a medical examiner, the disaster made him leave his job, the trauma was just too much. I imagine Hamish’s experience is akin to your grandfather, Hamish didn’t talk about it in detail very often, he massively struggled with it, he’d mention it from time-to-time and would be extremely somber on the anniversary every year, but he never fully went into details, just said most of the deceased were not whole and it was mostly parts of people he saw. I don’t blame him for not wanting to speak about it in detail, I’m assuming your grandfather is much the same.

    • @mtlassen1992
      @mtlassen1992 2 года назад +35

      @@leae3750 I was 12 when this happened, and I watched it happen, then ran down Freeport Blvd to Farrells with my brother. We walked across Freeport into Farrells parking lot. There we saw men carrying bodies out and lining them up on the lot. We stood right next to the bodies, and my 10 year old brother said "It killed a bunch of black people". He didn't realize they were all burned unrecognizable. The bodies I saw were intact, just badly burned.

  • @effeilensucre
    @effeilensucre 3 года назад +1473

    Now this whole thing is a tragedy, but the grand parents getting run over by a truck trying to reach their grand children who weren't even there just broke me.

    • @michael69040
      @michael69040 3 года назад +100

      a passing car was hit by the jet as it crossed the highway. The two occupants were killed.

    • @Utubesanarc
      @Utubesanarc 3 года назад +5

      Don't forget the dozens of kids Mr obvious

    • @michael69040
      @michael69040 3 года назад +97

      @@Utubesanarc I'm confused with your response. I found the info about the car which was struck on a wiki entry. Many articles don't mention those two fatalities -they only mention a car was struck while the jet crossed the highway. The jet could have clipped the car with no loss of life. I' assume the jet was afire by then and set the struck car afire.

    • @cupcake18429
      @cupcake18429 3 года назад +93

      that poor grandmother likely died never knowing if her grand kids were in the restaurant or not. That truly is tragic.

    • @DapperDill
      @DapperDill 3 года назад +39

      @@Utubesanarc Thanks edgelord.

  • @loumoon7660
    @loumoon7660 3 года назад +720

    I really like how he talks about the aftermath and any changes that came from the disaster. Instead of leaving it so sensational, it’s good to remember good things that can come out of these tragic events.

    • @GuukanKitsune
      @GuukanKitsune 3 года назад +29

      The good thing that comes out of these tragedies, is that people horrified by the tragedy immediately do whatever they must to make it so another tragedy like it doesn't happen again.

    • @janicesullivan8942
      @janicesullivan8942 3 года назад +20

      I had completely forgotten about this tragedy, this accident is something out of a “Final Destination” movie. You just never know when it’s your time.

    • @pizzafrenzyman
      @pizzafrenzyman 3 года назад +2

      just like when car accidents continue to happen at a dangerous accident, until one epic tragic one, then they add a traffic light.

    • @archenema6792
      @archenema6792 3 года назад +1

      If my children had died in this incident, I would have killed the entire families of the pilot and the owner. That's the only "outcome" that matters.

    • @MJ100man
      @MJ100man 3 года назад +8

      @@archenema6792 What the hell is wrong with you?

  • @apollofell3925
    @apollofell3925 3 года назад +337

    My father grew up in Sacramento, and was about 11 years old when this happened. The way his generation remembers it, Farrell's was so popular most people in town could claim they had either recently visited the shop, or were planning to within the near future. "Either you had just come from Farrell's, or you were just about to go."

    • @sandraleichty1761
      @sandraleichty1761 3 года назад +8

      I still have the BD invitation for the free ice cream treat. Yes it was very popular place to be. Yes good thing we couldn’t make it. I can thank Mr Reagan for having my aunt work that day! ❤️

    • @reillymoore3257
      @reillymoore3257 3 года назад +7

      I'm really surprised to hear that they were around for so long - finally going out of business just two years ago.

  • @melaniebrooke7065
    @melaniebrooke7065 3 года назад +40

    Honestly part of why I love your videos so much is because you don’t just leave it at “well that was horrific!” You actually say what’s changed because of the accidents/incidents.

  • @blackosprey2219
    @blackosprey2219 3 года назад +640

    "Ice cream parlor disaster."
    Oh, it's gonna be a structural failure or fire or-
    [Picture of jet plane]
    Oh. Oh no

    • @polkadots716
      @polkadots716 3 года назад +34

      I had pictured something like the Great Molasses Flood, only with ice cream.

    • @polkadots716
      @polkadots716 3 года назад +7

      @Jessica Jujubean Now *that* would be a sticky predicament.

    • @isaned
      @isaned 3 года назад

      Prices are too high! FOX 2! FOX 2!!

    • @mxbx307
      @mxbx307 3 года назад +2

      I was honestly expecting a fire, and/or people being killed in some kind of crush because the building had a shitty design with the fire escapes welded shut etc.
      Seems fairly standard for the era.

  • @MegaHater93
    @MegaHater93 3 года назад +570

    A lot of regulations and procedures we have today are written in blood of our forefathers, especially in regards to aviation.

    • @gregoryschmidt1233
      @gregoryschmidt1233 3 года назад +35

      And there was always someone fighting against the regulations until carnage happened.

    • @aliensoup2420
      @aliensoup2420 3 года назад +9

      How often does anyone hear the phrase, "What could possibly go wrong"?

    • @lizettewanzer8650
      @lizettewanzer8650 3 года назад +12

      "Tombstone technology."

    • @toddrobertson1398
      @toddrobertson1398 3 года назад +4

      That’s the entire history of auto racing

    • @Gamble661
      @Gamble661 2 года назад +9

      I used to be a commercial pilot years ago; our nickname for the FAA was The Tombstone Agency because they never acted until someone died. And unfortunately oft times in aviation incidents it's a lot of people who die.

  • @curator3539
    @curator3539 3 года назад +502

    The idea that "well the obstacles already there haven't caused any problems, so we'll add more!" is crazy to me!

    • @PrezVeto
      @PrezVeto 3 года назад +27

      Well, the sign at least was only _slightly_ above the limit and was _shorter_ than what else was there already.

    • @ivangenov6782
      @ivangenov6782 3 года назад +20

      Sounds like "this isn't causing trouble, let's make it cause trouble" logic

    • @november382
      @november382 3 года назад +11

      Army something something "If it ain't broke, we'll fix it until it is"

    • @ConnorNotyerbidness
      @ConnorNotyerbidness 3 года назад +31

      The sign made no difference. After all, it was a ground level crash
      It just helps show how little care was taken in general

    • @ivangenov6782
      @ivangenov6782 3 года назад +7

      @@ConnorNotyerbidness it did make a difference, it and some trees at the end or something are what caused the pilot to take off at such a steep angel

  • @mollygoodwin4327
    @mollygoodwin4327 3 года назад +106

    Imagine going out for ice cream only to lose your entire family in just a few short moments, especially at such a young age. I hope that poor kid was able to live a full life afterwards, though I doubt anyone would ever be the same again after suffering that kind of trauma.

  • @Paradox_Incognito
    @Paradox_Incognito 3 года назад +1693

    The title: Ice cream parlor
    The thumbnail: A fighter jet
    Everyone with at least half a brain cell: Oh no, here we go

    • @Defectum138
      @Defectum138 3 года назад +126

      Tbh I didn’t know what Farrel’s was before this video so I just assumed that it was an ice cream parlor stationed in the shell of an old retired fighter jet

    • @thecaptainsnark
      @thecaptainsnark 3 года назад +98

      @@Defectum138 I thought for a hot sec the plane was like a mobile ice cream parlor.

    • @cohengamertv6548
      @cohengamertv6548 3 года назад +2

      So is this whwre the inspiration for the paris chase scene in the peanuts movie

    • @rayjr62
      @rayjr62 3 года назад +5

      Man, will you give that shit a rest?

    • @madkills10
      @madkills10 3 года назад +4

      @Making America Great Again - TRUMP'S DUMPED! no surprise your an American

  • @markfrench8892
    @markfrench8892 3 года назад +553

    We lost a friend and his daughter in this accident. He had taken her there for her birthday, along with several of her friends.
    The primary reason for the crash was the pilot using a short runway and the temperature which was high creating low air density on takeoff

    • @k10batmama
      @k10batmama 3 года назад +28

      So sorry for your loss

    • @triciasomogyi5431
      @triciasomogyi5431 3 года назад +11

      Horrible

    • @WLHS
      @WLHS 3 года назад +9

      Yes, the pilot decided to use a short runway, he wasn’t up to extending it to accommodate his airplane & didn’t feel like chugging across to a longer freeway. Sorry for your loss... I then saw blame also put onto new sign on ice-cream store distracted the pilot...!

    • @snarflcat6187
      @snarflcat6187 3 года назад +13

      @@WLHS
      "Distracted the pilot???"
      Ridiculous.
      Watch any video of ant big plane coming into San Diego International Airport.
      Steepest required landing angle on the US...and THOUSANDS of surrounding tall buildings and other distractions.
      Fortunately, the take off side is over the water.
      Which I imagine might also pose a distraction.

    • @rsinclair689
      @rsinclair689 3 года назад +10

      My deepest condolences, my family and I would have been there at the time but decided to go another day.....

  • @nancypine9952
    @nancypine9952 3 года назад +623

    I couldn't understand why I never heard of this, and then I realized that just two weeks before the Munich Olympics Massacre had taken place, and this must have not gotten the recognition it would normally have received.

    • @lizbrown6943
      @lizbrown6943 3 года назад +27

      National news wouldn't have covered it. Just 3 networks and 30 minutes each. The newspapers picked it up.

    • @carrielange2692
      @carrielange2692 3 года назад +35

      now i want to know what the Munich Olympics massacre was!

    • @Cosber9621
      @Cosber9621 3 года назад +23

      @@lizbrown6943 nonsense. A military aircraft crashing into a building killing civilians? It would have been everywhere.

    • @gilbert3672
      @gilbert3672 3 года назад +36

      @@Cosber9621 Yeah but so would a terrorist attack involving the olympics

    • @mick58kc72
      @mick58kc72 3 года назад +12

      @@carrielange2692 a bunch of terrorist killing a bunch of Jews. Same as it ever was.

  • @der-der7513
    @der-der7513 3 года назад +141

    Once I saw the title and the image, I immediately remembered my mom talking about the incident when I was younger. She was born and raised in Sacramento. Her and her friends were going to the ice cream store but her friend left her money at home. Her friend insisted they run home and get her money. When they came back, the plane had already crashed. I remember my mom got emotional talking about it. She only mentioned it once.

    • @forcewielder2000
      @forcewielder2000 2 года назад +10

      Grew up in Sacramento as well (though this happened a little over 4 years before I was born), and we'd drive right by the airport and strip mall to get to church (among other places during the week). My family was headed to church and arrived not long after it happened, and they had to detour around the area, not knowing until later (when they heard about it on the radio) as to what exactly had happened (though they could see the smoke, and my sister remembers getting enough of a view of the building that she remembers seeing a firefighter up on the roof trying to help fight the flames).

    • @danettejachalke5818
      @danettejachalke5818 Год назад +4

      Miracle

  • @flashy5150
    @flashy5150 3 года назад +551

    Interesting. I never heard about this one. I used to work at the end of a runway, at Pearson International Airport in Toronto,Canada. The planes used to shake the rafters and you couldn’t speak to your work partners when one flew over. Also, I was up on the roof one day and it was foggy, all I heard was a roar coming and it sounded like it was farther away, then all of a sudden, a 747 Jumbo Jet came right out of the fog, it seemed so close that I could see into the wheel bay doors as it landed. I just thought to myself, “if one of these jets loses control, we are all going to die”. We were situated at the exact angle and position to the runway as this Farrell’s Ice Cream shop was.

    • @ct6502c
      @ct6502c 3 года назад +47

      That's incredibly scary.😨
      I love planes, but one thing I have always resolved is that I do NOT want to live or work in a building near the end of a runway! Planes are statistically very safe, but takeoff and landing is where things can definitely go wrong!

    • @MadameChristie
      @MadameChristie 3 года назад +13

      I hope you weren't there day that Air France plane overran the runway and just missed crashing into the 407(Unless my memory fails me and it was the 401 XD)

    • @amandadunning8701
      @amandadunning8701 3 года назад +21

      Did you work at the Wendy's/Tim Horton's? I remember going through the drive-through there and having to wait while the plane landed in order to continue speaking.
      The Air France crash was on a runway going the opposite direction of the one flashy5150 is talking about (if we're talking about the same place, but I only know of one runway at Pearson that heads towards buildings), the Air France plane went off a runway that ran parallel to the highway and into a small ravine. (Source: I was born and raised 5 mins from Pearson airport and both my parents and I worked there in the parking department.)

    • @Danovio
      @Danovio 3 года назад +4

      maaan i would shit my pants.

    • @debshaw680
      @debshaw680 3 года назад +12

      Not remotely the same but we had an air show where I live. I’m about 5 miles from the small local airport so we hear some planes but it’s not usually loud. The runways handle small passenger jets from SouthWest airlines and private jets.
      Until the Blue Angels (military jet show off group) came to town. None of the neighbors or I knew what was going on but they were taking off right over us for three days. Their wheels were practically brushing our roofs. The noise was deafening. My whole building, made of cinderblock, was shaking. It wasn’t til after the first day they spent swooping super low over our neighborhood for 2-3 hours that we found out what was going on. It was honestly terrifying at first and my dogs were super traumatized. I can’t even begin to imagine what it was like to people who live closer!

  • @Disturban
    @Disturban 3 года назад +3855

    From watching your videos, I feel incredibly unsafe where ever I go 🤣

    • @marzipanmerci1068
      @marzipanmerci1068 3 года назад +79

      That is a fascinating kind of horror 🧐

    • @dr.loomis4221
      @dr.loomis4221 3 года назад +12

      Oh you do? You feel unsafe where ever you go?

    • @Studio23Media
      @Studio23Media 3 года назад +18

      It's always places you'd never expect!

    • @peka__
      @peka__ 3 года назад +16

      Fortunately your own videos help a lot to make me feel safer. ;-)

    • @FlentyOfPish
      @FlentyOfPish 3 года назад +6

      Great videos m8

  • @jdsteppenzyde
    @jdsteppenzyde 3 года назад +516

    Loved to go to Farrells in my hometown, Flint, MI. Worst disaster there was when the waiters tripped while carrying one of the giant bowls of ice cream. Plus it was in Flint, MI.

    • @DutchSteamboat
      @DutchSteamboat 3 года назад +37

      That made me laugh more than it should have.

    • @Hakumeiun
      @Hakumeiun 3 года назад +21

      This shouldn't be funny. And yet...

    • @caelidhg6261
      @caelidhg6261 3 года назад +13

      with the size of them.. that would have been a disaster "kid died/was injured, when huge trough of icecream is dropped on their head"

    • @noodengr3three825
      @noodengr3three825 3 года назад +2

      We had a place similar to Farroughs and the biggest disaster that happened was when the waitress sat the huge ice cream soda down and the bottom broke off and the mess landed in my classmates lap.

    • @messiahsbythesackful6267
      @messiahsbythesackful6267 3 года назад +4

      Grand Rapids. The worst there was an out-of-control ice cream fight that my friend started. Good times.🥴🙄😁

  • @rayjones4616
    @rayjones4616 Год назад +7

    I moved to Sacramento from San Jose in 1980 and had always enjoyed going to Farrell's in both cities. I had heard stories about the tragedy on Freeport Blvd., but never got a detailed story until this video. I'll try to visit the memorial plaque and pay my respects, as soon as I can. Thank you for the knowledge.

  • @CarriedAwayChannel
    @CarriedAwayChannel 3 года назад +274

    My first job was at Ferrell’s In Escondido, CA.. I worked in the candy shops, where the guests checked out and could buy old-fashioned candy on the way out. It was so adorable and nostalgic. A happy place to work for a 15 year old.🍨 🍦 🍭 🍬

    • @YvetteArby
      @YvetteArby 3 года назад +12

      I loved Farrell’s! I just wrote about the candy shop!

    • @clayton9136
      @clayton9136 3 года назад +10

      Now kids first jobs are only fans..

    • @nooneherebutuschickens5201
      @nooneherebutuschickens5201 3 года назад +12

      I loved that Farrell's. I went to the same summer camp in Julian for many years, and that was always our late lunch stop on the way home. We'd usually meet up with others from camp there, so it was one last extension of our week together before heading back to our normal lives. I was so sad to hear it had closed. Thanks to you and all the staff there for some wonderful memories.

    • @metalman_j
      @metalman_j 3 года назад +13

      I'm super bummed to hear that the chain is gone. This was the first time I'd even heard of it. Sounds like it was a fun place. :(

    • @MrGonzo861
      @MrGonzo861 3 года назад +1

      That legit sounds like a pretty awesome job lol

  • @snicksandstones
    @snicksandstones 3 года назад +709

    Man I feel so bad for the pilot, imagine the guilt he'd carry for the rest of his life

    • @GnosticAtheist
      @GnosticAtheist 3 года назад +132

      Probably better than losing everyone in your family... But I get it. I was not surprised when he said he never piloted again.

    • @stuarthall3874
      @stuarthall3874 3 года назад +147

      It was his fault. The guilt is appropriate. Those buildings didn't just appear from nowhere and he was aware of his lack of experience in the plane. I don't condemn him. We are all capable of causing someone's death by negligence in an instant. This is something I often forget when I'm driving my 4000 lb. car down the road at 45mph.

    • @jumpinjojo
      @jumpinjojo 3 года назад +9

      Øystein A. *losing, not loosing.

    • @chaunceyspringett5523
      @chaunceyspringett5523 3 года назад +3

      @@jumpinjojo I personally agree with you but a lot of Americans use double O in lose

    • @mklaebel
      @mklaebel 3 года назад +93

      @@chaunceyspringett5523 I say this as an American...they are still wrong. It's definitely lose. Our education system fails us.

  • @Maryroselan
    @Maryroselan 3 года назад +873

    "everything worth eating has calories" you know what? This is my new motto.

    • @JohnS916
      @JohnS916 3 года назад +6

      You might not think that way after they cut off your leg because you are morbidly obese and have diabetes and did nothing about it except getting fatter and lazier.

    • @bucknthebush8618
      @bucknthebush8618 3 года назад +16

      i eat how i want and agree 100% im 150lbs and eat like a horse, caloroes for life!

    • @mel-79
      @mel-79 3 года назад +3

      😂love the username

    • @Cold_Stream_Enby
      @Cold_Stream_Enby 3 года назад +37

      @@JohnS916 when being narcissistic is your entire personality.

    • @cavemanlovesmoke4394
      @cavemanlovesmoke4394 3 года назад +42

      @@JohnS916 damn dude its just a humorous comment ya debbie downer lol

  • @jeffpage1000
    @jeffpage1000 3 года назад +73

    This acident reminds me of one that happened here in São Paulo, Brazil. In July 17, 2009 a TAM airline plane was trying to land at the airport (I forgot the name), it was raining, the runway wasn't fully finished and didn't had means to drain the acumullated water. In the end, the plane couldn't stop in time, went through the whole runway and crashed in a building. 199 people died

    • @youtubegarbage7876
      @youtubegarbage7876 2 года назад

      Yeah, but they were in Brazil so no one cares. These were blonde American kids! Much sadder!!

    • @psychoticAjAX
      @psychoticAjAX 2 года назад

      @@youtubegarbage7876 are you for fucking real? Doesn't matter if theyre American, Brazilian, or goddamn Afghanistani, every person is just as important as another. One American kids life is not worth any fucking more than one Brazilians life

    • @straits9260
      @straits9260 2 года назад

      ​@@youtubegarbage7876 or maybe just maybe, it is well known but your lazy ass just haven't go search it yet.
      It was covered on Air Crash Investigation, also known as Mayday! in some regions.

    • @donaldborbee7660
      @donaldborbee7660 Год назад +15

      @@youtubegarbage7876 WTF

    • @2394Joseph
      @2394Joseph Год назад

      ​@youtubegarbage7876 You have given yourself the right name. What a stupid comment

  • @willhall796
    @willhall796 3 года назад +316

    6:20
    Jesus Christ.... I feel so bad for the 9 year old who lost his parents, grandparents, 3 siblings, and a couple cousins..... I really pray they’re alright and were able to overcome that tragedy but wow man I feel so fucking bad for them, I literally can’t even imagine losing my entire family like that .... 😧😔i

    • @lisabarnes924
      @lisabarnes924 3 года назад +16

      Idek if he's out there traumatized from ice cream palors or jet planes. That's tragic. :(

    • @v-town1980
      @v-town1980 3 года назад +19

      That's what I was thinking. Christmas, birthdays, Thanksgiving etc...hell; anything regarding family would be shot.

    • @SyMyGuyy
      @SyMyGuyy 3 года назад +6

      @T Paine literally nobody cares

    • @raclark52
      @raclark52 3 года назад +4

      @@SyMyGuyy not true. Many care.

    • @TroubleHasFun
      @TroubleHasFun 3 года назад +5

      @T Paine how are you going to be all "Holy Roller" on everybody when you have songs like " I'm N Luv wit a stripper" "bootywork" "bartender" "Buy U a Drank" and "FBGM" shame on you T-Pain

  • @icefiredragon94
    @icefiredragon94 3 года назад +440

    "Felt like he mastered the controls after a few 1 hour flights" sounded like a recipe for disaster and it was. I'm so addicted to this channel right now

    • @Jolis_Parsec
      @Jolis_Parsec 3 года назад +44

      To be fair, it wasn’t entirely his fault as the video stated that regulations at that particular airport had been unacceptably lax for quite some time. I feel bad for that dude by the way since it was clear he was absolutely distraught over the damage he caused albeit accidentally following his removal from the cockpit of the plane, even going so far as to apologize profusely and beg anyone within earshot to rescue the poor souls trapped within. You can obviously tell it messed him up pretty badly after the fact if he refused to fly ever again. 😑

    • @Preservestlandry
      @Preservestlandry 3 года назад +11

      He should know he was at the wrong angle, and aborted take off, no matter which plane he's in.

    • @davidschaadt5929
      @davidschaadt5929 3 года назад +4

      Usually you can do it but if something goes wrong ....It's straight to Fascinating Horror.

    • @Chris-hq7nl
      @Chris-hq7nl 3 года назад +17

      Today any jet requires a specific type rating to fly, I believe. Not sure if that was the case at the time, but if he had that much experience flying contemporary aircraft to the F86, three hours’ transition time isn’t unreasonable if he is a seasoned pilot. The other thing to consider, regarding his attempted climb angle, is that he may have been trying to comply with noise abatement or obstacle clearance procedures at that particular airport, especially if residential and commercial properties had grown up around the airport.

    • @StudeSteve62
      @StudeSteve62 3 года назад +10

      @@Chris-hq7nl It sounds as if Bingham realized too late that the Sabre was on the roll too slowly, and tried to yank it into the air instead of going off the end of the runway on the ground. Perhaps he was hoping against hope he could either "leap" the fence and building or even go round a tight circuit and stay inside the perimeter. What clearly happened instead was that the Sabre stalled (aerodynamically, that is, not an engine stall like a car) and fell back onto the runway...tragically retaining too much momentum.
      Incidentally Crown Assets had sold Sabre 5 23275, which became N275X, for parts only. It was not supposed to fly again. That wasn't because there was anything actually wrong with the Sabre itself, but it caused tremendous regulatory trouble as the investigation progressed...

  • @barbaramcgee8933
    @barbaramcgee8933 3 года назад +106

    I grew up in Portland and went to Farrell's all the time. Never knew it was a chain. And was shocked to hear that the last one closed in 2019.

    • @micheleshively8557
      @micheleshively8557 3 года назад +9

      We had one in our local mall in Houston where I grew up. My friend worked there for several years. Great memories. So sad this one

    • @mommys3bratz
      @mommys3bratz 3 года назад +4

      When I was a kid we went to one in S CA. And I always thought it was the only one! I wanted to take my kids there but heard it had closed down many years ago, wish I had known they were everywhere! And sad to findout the last one closed in 2019 too!

    • @thefiercesiren
      @thefiercesiren 3 года назад +2

      Have birthday memories from one in San Jose. Don't recall this (too young I guess).. such a tragedy .

    • @Discokitty77
      @Discokitty77 3 года назад +1

      We had a Farrells in Eugene, Oregon and I never knew it was a chain either. I always thought it was the only one around. Lol It was the funnest place for birthday parties.

  • @jamesbone105
    @jamesbone105 Год назад +101

    My father and I were on our way to get ice cream there. I remember the fire trucks screaming by and we kept driving towards the ice cream parlor and as we drove by my father and I were in shock. It was a sad day and I am glad my dad took his time at Sears.

    • @joekulik999
      @joekulik999 Год назад +1

      You really should have planned better to get there in time. I hope that you have better luck the next time with your travel plans. Bon voyage !!!

    • @kaleido457
      @kaleido457 11 месяцев назад +17

      @@joekulik999 What a messed up comment.

    • @forcewielder2000
      @forcewielder2000 9 месяцев назад +4

      My parents and older siblings (I hadn't been born yet) were going to church at that day and arrived a few minutes after it happened. My sister remembers seeing a firefighter working his way along the roof. They heard about what had happened on the radio.

    • @stephenbendavid4161
      @stephenbendavid4161 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@joekulik999you are evil

  • @DarknetDude
    @DarknetDude 3 года назад +121

    Lately, I've become addicted to this channel. It makes me wonder where it's been all this time. I'm fascinated by historical events, as well as morbid curiosities, so it's basically a perfect channel for me. Well-restearched too.

    • @jessicaaudate
      @jessicaaudate 3 года назад +7

      With COVID, I think it got a huge boost in views

    • @MonTube2006
      @MonTube2006 Месяц назад

      Where have you been all that time

  • @cryptonite8495
    @cryptonite8495 3 года назад +2550

    The pilot likely spent the rest of his life wishing he had not survived.

    • @Mr1borrego2
      @Mr1borrego2 3 года назад +413

      the pilot spent the rest of his brief life drinking himself to death. He died while I was at UC-Davis . either 1979 0r possibly 1980.

    • @Dat-Mudkip
      @Dat-Mudkip 3 года назад +268

      @@Mr1borrego2 A shame, but sadly understandable.

    • @AK-jt7kh
      @AK-jt7kh 3 года назад +77

      @@Mr1borrego2 Wow. That’s so sad.

    • @Sedgewise47
      @Sedgewise47 3 года назад +23

      @@Mr1borrego2
      😔…

    • @paulcarpenter999
      @paulcarpenter999 3 года назад +196

      @@Mr1borrego2 Not true, as of the 40th anniversary of the accident in 2012 he was still living in Northern California. He was contacted by the Sacramento paper to make a statement, and declined.

  • @ridgecrestvarietyshow7324
    @ridgecrestvarietyshow7324 3 года назад +984

    Fascinating Horror has my vote as one of the most interesting RUclips channels. The narrations are always concise and clear. The content well thought out with extensive research. And the stories are truly fascinating and horrible! Well done. Please keep them them coming.

    • @allisonday893
      @allisonday893 3 года назад +5

      Me too. It truly is fascinating stuff 😊

    • @Nowhereoh
      @Nowhereoh 3 года назад +3

      @@allisonday893 Makes me think of the Wings episode where Joe is trying to get his brother to stop saying words like fascinating. Main producer writer of that show died on 9/11 plane. Here is bat biologist Bret Weinstein w/ mRNA vax inventor & optical mouse rich guy who talks too much revealing vax truth & generic treatments to save humans. Watch b4 it is taken down.
      I take the I med in vid. Will avoid the F. ( Columbine shooters ) Hope this info prevents bad things.
      ruclips.net/video/-_NNTVJzqtY/видео.html

    • @nickcharles6530
      @nickcharles6530 3 года назад +3

      Agreed.

    • @FelonyVideos
      @FelonyVideos 3 года назад +12

      I like the fact that the narrator does not waste energy trying to be emotional. The calm delivery does not shield the extreme empathy and sadness the viewer witnesses. Anything more would be pandering.

    • @tinyshawn1991
      @tinyshawn1991 3 года назад +1

      Agreed

  • @LockeRobsta
    @LockeRobsta 3 года назад +127

    "Have a glass of steam so you have something to blow off". Get REKT Nutritionists!

  • @BadDriversOfTheIllawarra
    @BadDriversOfTheIllawarra 3 года назад +58

    I saw the jet in the thumbnail, read the title. Looked back at the thumbnail, re-read the title.
    "Maybe he put the wrong image.... Surely... Oh god now I have to watch"
    And now I have to subscribe.

  • @reneewolfe1401
    @reneewolfe1401 3 года назад +241

    My mom was actually 12 or so when this happened. she had a neighborhood friend who celebrated her birthday that night at the parlor and my grandma changed her mind last minute. She had a few friends pass in that accident.

    • @youtubegarbage7876
      @youtubegarbage7876 2 года назад

      Thanks for just saying your grandma changed her mind, and not telling us Jesus came from the clouds and spared your mom. It's a rare US youtube comment that avoids that dreck.

  • @StrabbyStrabby
    @StrabbyStrabby 3 года назад +386

    The fact that the pilot wanted his rescuers to go save others from the wreckage really got to me. He really did feel guilty. He genuinely cared more for the people who's lives he put in danger than his own, at that point.
    I feel that it was his fault, though I don't blame him. Everyone watching this video has heard it and is sick of it, but we aren't perfect. I'm not a pilot, but I feel it's safe to say that the way a pilot reacts to obstructions and too-short runways would most likely be 'get off the ground.'

    • @andrewfrench9391
      @andrewfrench9391 3 года назад +1

      0

    • @airplanemaniacgaming7877
      @airplanemaniacgaming7877 3 года назад +57

      this. the man had to deal with this event plaguing his conscience the moment that aircraft crashed into the parlour. when a pilot sees something on the ground, instead of just trying to turn it away (like you would swerve a car to avoid hitting something or someone in the road), a pilot cant do that, as the plane would just rotate, and more than likely just crash. the only choice? either pray like hell that you slow down fast enough, or you bank on speed and pull the hell up. he knew that Option A was not a possible one, so he tried to bank on speed. sadly, as we know, speed was not enough to prevent tragedy. that CL-13 served proudly in the RCAF, and was lost in mere moments due to the pilot not having that crucial training and experience needed to fly such a beautiful beast.

    • @Utubesanarc
      @Utubesanarc 3 года назад +2

      No sorry pilot was a dumb az

    • @StrabbyStrabby
      @StrabbyStrabby 3 года назад +13

      @@Utubesanarc well, you have your opinions, and I have mine.

    • @CrusaderSports250
      @CrusaderSports250 3 года назад +36

      @@StrabbyStrabby unfortunately making glib comments from the safety of your armchair is far too easy, I think it shows these people have never had to make a serious decision under extreme pressure, at take off speed the runway is dissappearing very fast, (60mph is 88feet per second, just a reference to think on), you don't get a lot of time to dwell on things, so when things go wrong you have but seconds, I wish people would think before they write.

  • @tpolerex7282
    @tpolerex7282 Год назад +13

    The young twins, Kerri and Kristi, were the grandchildren of our next door neighbors in Sonora, CA and even though I was a few years older I met and played with them a few times. I remember this crash and my parents telling me what happened and was very shocked and saddened knowing I wouldn’t be seeing them together again. The grandparents/neighbors of course, were utterly devastated. Such a tragic event.

  • @eighmie28
    @eighmie28 3 года назад +132

    Oh, wow. I'm having such a weird flashback. I went to college with a guy who said his older sisters had been killed in a plane crash at Farrell's, and that was the reason his parents had chosen to have him. At the time, I dismissed it (you hear lots of weird stories in dorms), but now I'm remembering that he was from Sacramento, and would have been born about two years later. 😔

    • @themostdiabolicalhater5986
      @themostdiabolicalhater5986 Год назад +1

      Lying weirdo

    • @shirlthegirl631
      @shirlthegirl631 Год назад +2

      @eighmie28 : did the guy have the same last name as any of the others who were killed listed in this video? Thanks for sharing

    • @eighmie28
      @eighmie28 Год назад +5

      @@shirlthegirl631 Yes, he did.

    • @markmarco2880
      @markmarco2880 Год назад +2

      I was there that day, nearby. We lived just around the corner, I remember…at Fruitridge and Florin Road. It was the last day for jets there, at the then-called Executive Airport.🌿🐇 It is very weird…to see the story reappear. Being just a kid…it was quite the experience for me, … to imagine how easily I could have been at that innocent birthday party.🌿🐇 My goodness.

    • @UneducatedGeologist
      @UneducatedGeologist Год назад +1

      Wow. Yes many grand stories in dorms, but this sounds legit

  • @firsttpt
    @firsttpt 3 года назад +680

    I loved Farrell's. I still remember eating a "Pike's Peak" (A four person sized sundae) the day before getting my wisdom teeth pulled.

    • @richardmcavoy6413
      @richardmcavoy6413 3 года назад +8

      What happened? Why did they go out of business?

    • @erinnelson434
      @erinnelson434 3 года назад +47

      @@richardmcavoy6413 Do you remember Farrell's? It was magical. When my kids were younger I heard there was a new one that opened not far from one that had closed many years prior that I remembered. I took my kids there for my son's 11th birthday and I was so disappointed. The ambiance wasn't there. Almost nothing memorable about the original was replicated. I remember the old-timey piano music playing and the neat old fashioned lighting and everything in there, dark wood furniture & bar where they sold all kinds of special candy. On birthdays a barber shop quartet would come out banging a huge drum and sing a capella in perfect harmony. The remake was just another restaurant and the hats they wore were the same style as the old ones but made of Styrofoam. They sold them for $16 each. My son said he wanted one and I told him no. I had told him previously about what Farrell's had been like before. It had class and style. I told him I could make a better hat for less than $16 and I did. I still have the hat I made for him just like the ones they used to wear.

    • @BlackDragonJazz
      @BlackDragonJazz 3 года назад +19

      I loved the "Pigs Trough" 😍😍 a group eat sundae.

    • @johnnyfox7743
      @johnnyfox7743 3 года назад +1

      Yes nice 😋

    • @weaselworm8681
      @weaselworm8681 3 года назад +13

      I never had one, but I remember those and the pig troughs. And the giant base drum for birthdays (1970s-1980 San Fernando Valley CA)

  • @ArchTeryx00
    @ArchTeryx00 3 года назад +121

    The root of it is that the pilot did not know the "flight envelope" of the aircraft he was flying. The flight envelope covers all combinations of altitude, attitude and airspeed, and defines the safe zone for a given plane to fly in.
    He thought, "I'm in a jet fighter, I can take off at a very high pitch!" Wrong. He tried to take off and instead "stalled" - reached such a high pitch the wings couldn't sustain lift any more and promptly quit flying. So close to the ground, he had no chance of recovery from the stall, and the plane became an unguided bomb aimed straight at Farrell's.
    The airshow was at fault too, however. The proper thing (done at many airshows nowadays) would have been to have him take off at a proper airfield, fly to the show, do his passes, and fly BACK to the original field to land, with proper runways and buffers. If the Sabre was a static display, they should have just hauled it off on a truck and not tried to FLY it out of the airport. Poor planning by both the airfield and the airshow assured the disaster would happen even with a more experienced pilot.

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 3 года назад +24

      Thanks for this. I don't know much about airplanes, but this makes a lot of sense and helps me understand why he did what he did.

    • @ArchTeryx00
      @ArchTeryx00 3 года назад +16

      @@daffers2345 A big problem with the Sabre was that it had small wings. That meant that it needed high speeds to fly in fighting trim. At low speeds, it was trying to get a brick into the air, and demanded great care in takeoffs and landings to prevent a sudden stall (and immediate crash). This pilot knew NONE of that. He was just about a passenger in his own plane once things started getting out of hand.

    • @P_RO_
      @P_RO_ 3 года назад +6

      @@ArchTeryx00 Sabre Dance. The pilots had a song about the Super Sabre:
      Don't give me a one-o-o
      It's deadly to friend and foe'
      That old 'Saber dance" made me sh!t in my pants,
      Don't give me a one-o-o

    • @mfree80286
      @mfree80286 3 года назад +2

      @@P_RO_ True, but that doesn't apply here. Super Sabres are F-100s, this was a Canadian version of an F-86 Sabre. Where the F-86 would passively try to kill you (stall), the F-100 would actively make the attempt (tip stall in ground effect).

    • @joevignolor4u949
      @joevignolor4u949 3 года назад +1

      @@mfree80286 Both the F-86 and F-100 were also underpowered. The turbojet engines of that era were heavy for the amount of thrust they produced. Taking off in a Super Sabre could be very tricky. You had to make sure you got it going fast enough before you lifted off or you could end up in serious trouble. The thrust to weight ratio was well below 1:1 so it would not accelerate going straight up.

  • @mikesmusicden
    @mikesmusicden Год назад +99

    My mom and I were at that Farrell's that day. My mom later told me that not long after we got there I was begging her to leave. I was crying and telling her that we had to go...now! She got really upset at me because we used to always go there and she wanted some ice cream as well. Anyways, just minutes after we left the plane hit. I remember looking out of the back window of the car and seeing a huge plume of smoke, but not knowing where it came from. My dad was a Sacramento police officer at the time and was one of the first officers on the scene, but my mom and I had left just moments before...

    • @arribaficationwineho32
      @arribaficationwineho32 Год назад +7

      Thank you for sharing that.

    • @UneducatedGeologist
      @UneducatedGeologist Год назад +4

      Wow

    • @DR-mq1vn
      @DR-mq1vn Год назад +3

      Oh wow! Do you remember crying and telling her that you had to leave now? Do you remember any of that?

    • @mikesmusicden
      @mikesmusicden Год назад +18

      @@DR-mq1vn Yes, I do. I was a kid so my memory is more like still pictures rather than a continuous "movie", but I do recall being there, waiting in the foyer for a table, being seated at the table, then pitching a fit and wanting to leave. I remember my mom being angry because she had just lit a cigarette (back when people smoked in restaurants) and she wanted ice cream. We finally left (after she finished her cigarette) and I was really impatient the whole time until we left. I also remember driving away from the restaurant and being on Freeport Blvd and on my knees looking out of the back window and seeing smoke (kids were not seat-belted back then - they just jumped around in the back seat like chimpanzees). Later, when I was older (maybe 15 or 16), I found out that my father was one of the first police officers on the scene and heard about the carnage. Makes one wonder...

    • @DR-mq1vn
      @DR-mq1vn Год назад +2

      @@mikesmusicden Thanks for answering me! I'm 55 so I remember how it was in the 70s. But what I wanted to know is if you remember your feelings that day. Do you remember if you felt something, and that is why you didn't want to stay? Can you remember any of that? And when the car was driving away, were you looking out the back window because you anticipated that something might happen? Also, have you had any other "gut feelings" since then?

  • @guineawuv
    @guineawuv 3 года назад +144

    That's so sad that those people were just trying to have a nice day with their families only to die that way. I can't imagine how that kid who lost his whole family felt. 😢

    • @ThePHYL
      @ThePHYL 3 года назад +13

      I have learned in my 74 yrs.....we can be gone in the blink of the eye, life is so short.....

    • @v-town1980
      @v-town1980 3 года назад +1

      @@ThePHYL took you that long to learn the obvious?

    • @Snezzleify
      @Snezzleify 3 года назад +4

      @@v-town1980 don’t be an ass 🙄

    • @tmmartinesq.6216
      @tmmartinesq.6216 3 года назад

      Fate

  • @genderchaotic
    @genderchaotic 3 года назад +20

    That two minute transition from "fun and lively atmosphere!" to "the legal height limits on buildings at the time were..." was such a jarring and well executed transition. I love this channel, you literally made learning safety regulations and law fascinating!

  • @sweetistweeter
    @sweetistweeter 3 года назад +39

    I have to say thank you for this channel. There's a tendency these days to have podcasts and channels about tragedy and crime, and I largely dislike the content. But this channel has something those things don't: hope. Wherever you can, you find the positive - like the living memorial, which is very important (as a burn victim I'm endlessly grateful for burn clinics) and the ways in which policies have been changed and loopholes resolved. Thank you for sharing this.

    • @tracymurray6840
      @tracymurray6840 3 года назад +5

      I like to learn about crime and tragic events that happened in the past, even from recent years, but I like to hear about the positive outcomes that come out of those horrific incidents, like new safety laws and better infrastructure.

  • @floopismcfloorpus4396
    @floopismcfloorpus4396 2 года назад +31

    This tragedy is literally the stuff of my nightmares! Imagine going from just trying to enjoy eating ice cream with your family to then immediately being the sole survivor of your entire family in a matter of mere seconds…

    • @garyb6219
      @garyb6219 9 месяцев назад

      Imagaine that. Thanks, I wasn't.

  • @Swampzoid
    @Swampzoid 3 года назад +44

    Losing one family member is heartbreaking enough. I can't imagine losing 9.

    • @cannibalbunny
      @cannibalbunny 3 года назад +3

      And being a young child, on top of that

    • @willissudweeks1050
      @willissudweeks1050 3 года назад +2

      Yeah for real I’d imagine all their memories would just go through your mind and you’d never be happy again

    • @BritanniaPacific
      @BritanniaPacific 3 года назад

      Ever heard of northwest airlines flight 255? Similar story, but the little becomes the only survivor in the crash.

  • @zadieb5273
    @zadieb5273 3 года назад +68

    "Instant carnage" - two words that convey so much meaning

  • @GraveTime
    @GraveTime 3 года назад +90

    I drive by this location everyday going home from work. You can't drive by that spot without think about what happened there. It was way before my time, but definitely made a mark in Sacramento history.

  • @bigbiff38
    @bigbiff38 3 года назад +38

    Additional information: Kerri Francis McCluskey was almost 4 when her twin sister Kristi died in the plane crash. Kerri herself had a broken leg and some lighter wounds. As an adult, "McCluskey led the drive for a memorial rose garden, with its two metal benches, stone obelisk fountain, concrete marker and two metal plaques with the names of those killed. It was dedicated March 15, 2003, 'in loving memory' of the deceased."
    The pilot, Bingham, has declined to be interviewed, but has lived with this tragedy every day, and will continue to do so until he dies.

    • @paulcarpenter999
      @paulcarpenter999 3 года назад +8

      Kerri sadly passed in February 2019, she was buried next to her sister.

    • @brewerrkjb
      @brewerrkjb 11 месяцев назад

      Here's an anomaly, I looked and didn't see Kristi McCluskey's name on any of the lists or on any of the memorials for the deceased . Did anybody else spot it?

    • @garyb6219
      @garyb6219 9 месяцев назад

      @@brewerrkjb @9:13 First one top left. Different last name.

  • @auxaus4613
    @auxaus4613 3 года назад +291

    Dad from the other room: "New Fascinating Horrors!!"

  • @mtlassen1992
    @mtlassen1992 3 года назад +397

    I was also 12 then, and was at the airshow all day, and watched the entire crash unfold. Earlier that day, I watched that F-86 racing a small yellow biplane all around Sacramento to promote the airshow. I was standing on an electrical box just below the tower to get a clear view. The jet got probably halfway down the runway and the nose went up, then the plane got around 25 feet high, then dropped. I then saw black tire smoke as he locked up the brakes, then a cloud of dust as it went off the end of the runway, slid around a 1/4 mile, still had a lot of speed at this point, hit the 10 foot embankment at Freeport Blvd where the fuel tanks exploded in a huge fireball. Even at 1/2 mile I was from the explosion, I felt the radiant heat instantly. I lost sight of it there, then saw the smoke coming from Farrells. My brother and I ran down Freeport towards the crash. We got there before any fire or rescue vehicles probably due to the traffic. I saw the hedges on Freeport burned, along with the street and sidewalks blackened. From there, the jet flew another 100 yards across the parking lot, but only 3 feet high, because all of the roofs of the cars had been sheared off by the plane, and the paint of the cars was blistered by the heat. My brother and I walked through the parking lot as fire department and police arrived. We were never told to leave, as I am sure they thought we must have been inside Farrells. Firemen carried bodies out and lined them up right in front of us. The bodies were all burned and unrecognizable.
    This is the actual crash( ruclips.net/video/xdwk00AwNdg/видео.html ) It is my understanding that the pilot Richard Bingham later crashed a P-51 on final.

    • @megatuanis
      @megatuanis 3 года назад +34

      Thank you for sharing this fascinating eyewitness report! I'll check out the link you posted.

    • @beththompson2188
      @beththompson2188 3 года назад +16

      Wow that plane looked like it didn’t even leave the ground. I imagined it at least up in the air a bit.

    • @mtlassen1992
      @mtlassen1992 3 года назад +29

      @@beththompson2188 Its been many years, and I still remember it clearly. But, it may have been 10 feet up for all I know, but the angle I saw it from, it was definitely off the ground for a second.

    • @mtlassen1992
      @mtlassen1992 3 года назад +35

      @limelight81 I have now seen 8 planes crash, all at airshows. The last one was the P51 crash in Reno into the spectators. I was a mile out standing on my camp trailer, saw the whole thing. Just makes you sick. We knew it was bad.

    • @paulcarpenter999
      @paulcarpenter999 3 года назад +24

      Bingham was alive as late as 2012, living in Shasta County. The Sacramento Bee contacted him for a comment on the 40th anniversary of the crash, but he declined.

  • @businesscat4435
    @businesscat4435 3 года назад +411

    Farrell's need to come back. They were the BEST and there's never been anything like it.

    • @the_rover1
      @the_rover1 3 года назад +25

      yeah, their comeback would be a _banger_ !
      sorry for that, I'm taking myself out the door.

    • @eyesofstatic9641
      @eyesofstatic9641 3 года назад +3

      There is one is Cali iirc

    • @maninacoffinofficial63
      @maninacoffinofficial63 3 года назад +9

      Times are changing kids aren’t interested in a classic ice cream parlor from what I’ve seen

    • @Cold_Stream_Enby
      @Cold_Stream_Enby 3 года назад +32

      @@maninacoffinofficial63 coldstone is pretty good, it's semi classic for ice cream places

    • @mikeg4972
      @mikeg4972 3 года назад +8

      Had one in walking distance from my middle school in the 70's.
      Great place!

  • @liberty-matrix
    @liberty-matrix 3 года назад +33

    The Brumit's, from Meadow Vista, CA. where the couple killed in the car the jet hit crossing the road that day. Sadly they we're going to visit their son Terry in the hospital due to his being in a serious go-kart accident. I moved away shortly after that and always wondered how Terry Brumit coped with type of loss.

  • @cereyza
    @cereyza 3 года назад +50

    thank you so much for not artificially deepening your voice, or putting on a cheesy "creepy" cadence to your speech to try to make it scarier or something. it's usually very cringy and ruins the atmosphere.
    regular speaking voice + the content in your videos makes for a MUCH creepier video!

    • @frala2398
      @frala2398 3 года назад +3

      Plus no music!

    • @frala2398
      @frala2398 3 года назад +3

      I must be hard of hearing.

    • @daffers2345
      @daffers2345 3 года назад +4

      It's one of the reasons I love this channel. I also like that he doesn't add his own opinion or try to bias things because he thinks a certain way. It's very factual, and that's scarier than any haunted house or horror movie, I think.

    • @ClickClack_Bam
      @ClickClack_Bam 3 года назад

      I think he over-pronounces every word & ever letter in every word.
      You'd never talk to somebody this way face to face.

    • @ironnoah9461
      @ironnoah9461 3 года назад

      @@daffers2345 Well, outside of his coverage of The Goiania Incident.

  • @behindthespotlight7983
    @behindthespotlight7983 3 года назад +8

    At 2:40 minutes into this, in the picture of the waitress serving the child’s birthday party, that’s me! I am the second kid on the left. My best childhood friend is the first kid, looking directly at camera. His birthday was Jan 6th. The location is Farrell’s in Fremont, CA. Most likely January 1977 or ‘78. What a truly strange feeling to be watching Fascinating Horror and within seconds realize you’re looking at yourself from 40 years ago! Truly strange.

  • @evanmonster1117
    @evanmonster1117 3 года назад +265

    I remember my dad would tell me this story whenever we would go to the Jack in the box that the Farrells was replaced with, I would sit in the drive through scared a plane would hit us. Edit: I know now that the Jack in the box isn’t in the same exact location just what I thought as a kid

    • @charlosrossi
      @charlosrossi 3 года назад +30

      lol total dad thing to do

    • @LuckyBaldwin777
      @LuckyBaldwin777 3 года назад +8

      Actually Jack-in-The-Box is across 35th Av from where Farrell's was.

    • @Tiger_Pumper
      @Tiger_Pumper 3 года назад +6

      @R.C. Collins *_BIG BRAIN MOVE_*

    • @the_rover1
      @the_rover1 3 года назад +2

      I like your dad! really caring person isnt he?

    • @davidmorgan1872
      @davidmorgan1872 3 года назад +2

      the Fire/Police station across the street is actually the site...there is a memorial plaque there... Your father sounds like mine though lol.. always dramatic in a hilarious/funny way

  • @socratesbsd
    @socratesbsd Год назад +10

    Just found this and whoa... I was there that day with my brother and we wanted to go to Farrells after the show. My grandmother and aunt had brought us to the show and were tired after a long day, saw the wait (line) and said "no", We ended up going to a drugstore down the street that had a soda fountain. As we were leaving we heard the "boom" and saw the fire. My brother and I wanted to go back and see what was happening but my grandmother floored it and got us home where we saw on tv what happened

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 3 года назад +100

    "The biggest sundaes on offer were delivered on stretchers borne by multiple servers."
    OMG the Pig Trough was the bestest ice cream sundae ever. Of course I never had enough friends for the Zoo.

    • @LadyAdakStillStands
      @LadyAdakStillStands 3 года назад +13

      Did you get the ribbon award "I Made a Pig of Myself at Farrells?"

    • @orbs1062
      @orbs1062 3 года назад +4

      I think you may have missed the point of the video.

    • @mikethebike2456
      @mikethebike2456 3 года назад +9

      🏍️ Also deviating from the point ; i delivered a few Pig Troughs back in '82.

    • @t.a.ackerman4098
      @t.a.ackerman4098 3 года назад +1

      In my area they were called a Zoo. My family loved Farrell's when I was a kid.

    • @sherilynn1310
      @sherilynn1310 3 года назад +7

      I had the Zoo. First grade? It must have been. I was required to invite the whole class as well as my brother's friends. So I liked at least one other person there. The Zoo was amazing and I wish I still had the little plastic zoo animals and other accessories. Is it McDonalds or the backyard for kids today? sad, sad, sad.
      The gift shop had a thousand kinds of candy. Rock candy that looked like real rocks of different colors. The big fat licorice ropes that probably gave a fair percentage of us dangerously high BP. No HFCS, no palm oil. The real deal, candy by candy.

  • @Ulqui_210
    @Ulqui_210 3 года назад +81

    Man I can't imagine losing every other family member in the same disaster at such a young age.
    I hope that kid managed to recover after this

    • @robynpeace9048
      @robynpeace9048 3 года назад +12

      it happened recently in Italy in a cable car accident, only a 5 years old survived 😞

    • @pwareham61
      @pwareham61 3 года назад +1

      So Do I

    • @SpicyTexan64
      @SpicyTexan64 3 года назад +1

      I'm quite sure they did not.

    • @avacatherine5646
      @avacatherine5646 3 года назад +1

      Seriously, that sounds awful.

    • @davidschaadt5929
      @davidschaadt5929 3 года назад +1

      Imagine being at an AA meeting trying to explne why you drink .and this poor guy starts talking .

  • @jeffs6809
    @jeffs6809 3 года назад +84

    My parents took us to this Farrell’s every year after going to CalExpo, the California State Fair. What a horrifying ending to a memory, and tragedy for all the families

    • @davidmorgan1872
      @davidmorgan1872 3 года назад +2

      pretty far from CalExpo. 25-30 minute drive, there was a Farrells in Arden by CalExpo, probably the one you are thinking of.

    • @jeffs6809
      @jeffs6809 3 года назад +2

      @@davidmorgan1872 You are right - my mistake!

  • @cambaker2330
    @cambaker2330 3 года назад +36

    I've watched quite a lot of your videos at this point and I must say I really appreciate the fact that you highlight the new safety regulations and other positive outcomes that result from such incidents. Great work, I do hope you continue making these videos =]

  • @billsmith5166
    @billsmith5166 3 года назад +89

    I'd never heard of this. I'm surprised because it's such a absolute nightmare.

  • @Lori_M
    @Lori_M 3 года назад +49

    I grew up in the 1970s, and one of my favorite places was Farrell's Ice Cream Parlor. Such wonderful childhood memories, and so sad that my own kids and grandkids never got to share those memories. I had never heard of this tragedy!

    • @YvetteArby
      @YvetteArby 3 года назад +6

      I had heard of it, but it didn’t happen in Torrance (my home town) even though there is an airport there. I have very fond memories of Farrell’s from when I was a kid and into my teens. Three friends and I ate The Zoo, so we got awarded ribbons for having made pigs of ourselves at Farrell’s. Good times...

    • @itrthho
      @itrthho 3 года назад +2

      @@YvetteArby a private airplane crashed in front of the Torrance Farrell’s in 1982. 2 dead on the plane but no damage to the ice cream parlor.

    • @TechGorilla1987
      @TechGorilla1987 3 года назад +3

      Me too, SoCal born and raised. It was a childhood treat as was the random weekend Disney trip.

    • @YvetteArby
      @YvetteArby 3 года назад

      @@itrthho Wow! I was still living there at that time!

    • @LisaBowers
      @LisaBowers 3 года назад +1

      @@YvetteArby Farrell's was the greatest! My cousin wanted a ribbon so bad that he finished a _huge_ thing of chocolate ice cream all by himself. When he stood up, he threw the whole thing up. He still got that ribbon though. 😄

  • @laughingseagull000
    @laughingseagull000 3 года назад +257

    Farrell’s went out of business? Darn. It sounded really cool.

    • @mikeodonnell11
      @mikeodonnell11 3 года назад +29

      It was awesome, I remember going to one in Minnesota in the 70s as a kid

    • @markmcknight2467
      @markmcknight2467 3 года назад +24

      It was so nice! I celebrated several of my best birthdays there. My brother worked at ours in Birmingham while he was on college breaks. I had always wondered what had happened to the neat place. Well, I guess that I know what happened to one of them, unfortunately. Such a sad story. It did result in several improvements for the area, however. My prayers are with the victims and the survivors who were affected.

    • @prettyshinyspaghetti8332
      @prettyshinyspaghetti8332 3 года назад +10

      Haha "cool". Because its an ice cream parlor!

    • @lotusplague
      @lotusplague 3 года назад +20

      Ya that was my take away. “What?! I never get to visit a Farrell’s?!”

    • @ApexHardcore
      @ApexHardcore 3 года назад +37

      For those of you that are interested, there is one remaining Farrell's location inside Mountasia in Santa Clarita California if you're ever that direction and want to go

  • @jenniferlundquist1712
    @jenniferlundquist1712 Год назад +8

    I just want to say I appreciate those of you were open to share your personal experiences it is fascinating and I am sorry for this tragedy.

  • @jamessimmons8525
    @jamessimmons8525 3 года назад +45

    My wife and her sister were supposed to be at a birthday party there, but were late, fortunately. But their father did not know that. He was a Fire captain, a first responder who expected that his children had perished. There are photos of him at the scene in utter despair.

  • @ct6502c
    @ct6502c 3 года назад +65

    Oh my God, the poor kid who lost their entire family that day! 😔

  • @timc333
    @timc333 3 года назад +83

    High respect for that last part of this video (when youtubers use their influence for good) , citing the firefighters burn foundation it true CLASS , and will help them , I don't have a thing to do with them I'm on the other side of the map , but your including this PSA in the end of you video is priceless and I for one very strongly THANK YOU for doing such things , not only are these videos very well researched and edited , they as well can do continued good for those who want to help and serve . Again So Very Well Done , Keep up the good work for sure ! 👍🤙

  • @SILENTXNINJA7
    @SILENTXNINJA7 3 года назад +10

    firefighters have a saying "drive it like you stole it" that department that crashed through the gate truly did drive it like they stole it.

  • @519forestmonk9
    @519forestmonk9 3 года назад +76

    To say that the restaurant had a “lively atmosphere” on that day would be an understatement.

    • @rainygay
      @rainygay 3 года назад +7

      more of a deadly atmosphere really

    • @rgmusicom
      @rgmusicom 3 года назад +7

      Certainly would be a unique take on baked Alaska.

  • @519forestmonk9
    @519forestmonk9 3 года назад +37

    We would always eat at Farrell’s at the Staten Island Mall in New York City back in the 70s and 80s. I miss that place.

    • @ultimatedbz2
      @ultimatedbz2 3 года назад +1

      At least we still have ralph's

  • @mememefinally
    @mememefinally 3 года назад +134

    I have learnt from "Fascinating horror", that in the good old times, when there were no stupid safety laws or regulations and all kind of restrictions, the world was just as safe as it is today EXCEPT for: trams, bridges, amusement parks, waterparks, concert halls, theatres, clubs, shopping malls, ferries, beaches and ice cream parlors. And a few other places.

    • @DopamineDecor
      @DopamineDecor 3 года назад +5

      😏

    • @mondenkindqueen
      @mondenkindqueen 3 года назад +35

      Safety regulations are written in blood.

    • @metalman_j
      @metalman_j 3 года назад +9

      It was safe most of the time - when everyone got lucky and nothing went wrong.

    • @mememefinally
      @mememefinally 3 года назад +4

      @@metalman_j Oh good to know! Life is safe when nothing goes wrong.. gotcha! :)

    • @mikhailiagacesa3406
      @mikhailiagacesa3406 3 года назад +5

      I never recalled the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s being particularly good times.

  • @garboil
    @garboil 3 года назад +43

    Farrell’s was a great ice cream parlor.
    We went there often as kids.
    This story was super tragic - I remember it well.

    • @PuffKitty
      @PuffKitty Год назад +1

      I went as a little kid in Portland Oregon and it was thrilling when you were from a small town 🎉

  • @jsnification
    @jsnification 3 года назад +75

    Went to a farrels in fl, in the 80s, as a kid. That place was awesome.

    • @clayton9136
      @clayton9136 3 года назад +1

      Do you mean friendlies?

    • @messiahsbythesackful6267
      @messiahsbythesackful6267 3 года назад +5

      Ours was by the movie theater (great location) and it was always packed. Rock candy on a string by the cash register and the everpresent Happy Birthday! Gads, but I miss that place....

    • @kelf114
      @kelf114 3 года назад +3

      @@clayton9136 No. Farrell was a chain restaurant. There were many all over.

    • @jsnification
      @jsnification 3 года назад +2

      @@messiahsbythesackful6267 yup.

  • @mierbeuker8148
    @mierbeuker8148 3 года назад +46

    detritus /dɪˈtrʌɪtəs/
    noun: - waste or debris of any kind.
    Learned a new word, thanks for that.
    Can't even imagine how bad that pilot must have felt. 😰😰😰

    • @tamfuwing1
      @tamfuwing1 3 года назад +2

      Wreckage is probably a more appropriate word here.

    • @HO-bndk
      @HO-bndk 3 года назад

      @@tamfuwing1 Yes, fragments flying at lethal velocities off an exploding aeroplane are not "detritus"

    • @pullt
      @pullt 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, any scraps laying about now are detritus....fresh scraps, not so much.

    • @LadyWhinesalot
      @LadyWhinesalot 3 года назад +1

      @@HO-bndk the word is correctly used. Synonyms for detritus: ashes, debris, flotsam, remains, residue, rubble, ruins, wreck, wreckage

  • @YvetteArby
    @YvetteArby 3 года назад +12

    I loved that place! My favorite was the Gibson Girl sundae. The huge one was called The Zoo and it was usually for birthday parties. The waiters ran around the whole restaurant with it before coming to the table, all the while they had a siren playing and a big bell ringing. They also had a trough of ice cream, and if you ate it all, you got an award and they announced that you had made a pig of yourself at Farrell’s.
    It’s so sad what happened there. This was a place of so much happiness so this is absolutely tragic. 😭😭😭

    • @frala2398
      @frala2398 3 года назад +3

      When I was a kid and knew they were coming to our table with a ‘zoo’ I wanted to hide under the table! I got embarrassed easily! They had ‘clown sundaes’ and my favorite was the apple pandowdy sundae. Tasted like apple pie a la mode😋💕

  • @897firefly
    @897firefly Год назад +4

    A huge contributing factor in this accident from my memory of this, having been there that day, was that the pilot requested and was granted a midfield takeoff on a different runway than the one being used in order to avoid the line of planes waiting to take off after the show. The length of the primary runway in use was plenty long for the jet. The length of the runway from the intersection point he started his departure was not and he should never have attempted it.
    Had he waited in line and not been in a hurry, this wouldn’t have happened.

    • @markdavis9148
      @markdavis9148 Год назад +1

      This is why I read the comments section. To find out what really happened. Thanks!

    • @897firefly
      @897firefly Год назад

      @@markdavis9148 My dad was in aviation at the time and I remember him talking about this. He said the pilot rotated too early in an attempt to take off and actually came back on the runway before yanking it off at the last moment. There is a rise just passed the end of that runway, a road (Freeport Blvd) runs basically perpendicular to it which is higher than the runway, and he barely cleared it but never got airborne.

  • @jarchibald74
    @jarchibald74 3 года назад +21

    The little girl who survived the ordeal is ten years older than me. It happened 4 days and 2 years before I was born. Very sad. I hope she has been living a good life filled with new family that fill her life with happiness.

  • @plumdutchess
    @plumdutchess 3 года назад +81

    "Issues never caused any problems before, meaning they are perfectly fine." Logic at its finest...

    • @Zyphera
      @Zyphera 3 года назад +6

      That seems to be a core philosophy of us human. That's why so many rules are written in blod.

    • @leinbajr
      @leinbajr 3 года назад +3

      There’s even a technical name for that: “normalization of deviation”.

    • @nicolea8205
      @nicolea8205 3 года назад +1

      @@Zyphera humans are really dumb.

    • @OwenGee21
      @OwenGee21 3 года назад

      Honestly though, as the world evolves and expands so does the risk and potential ways for disasters to happen.
      When someone made the scissors for the first time I highly doubt they considered the amount of people that would trip whilst holding them and stab theirself, they were more thrilled about the convenience of the invention.
      We all get chanced throughout our lives, I guarantee you that we've all been in a position where a freak accident could of happened, but we never realise it or if we do, we think a long the same lines as the person who ignored the sign height reccommendation, because the probability is sooo high that it hasn't even happened to anyone yet so we basically run the lottery.
      You are blessed to be in a time where this happened over 50 years ago, where you have the foresight of collective human knowledge gained since this event that allows you be on this pedestal.
      I say it like this because this channels comment section, whilst amazing, is full of people on a health and safety pedestal, talking about times where health and safety were lesser known and less respected due to the lack of accidents.

    • @OwenGee21
      @OwenGee21 3 года назад

      Basically, to ramp up my point to the extreme; it's like me saying Cavemen and Neanderthals were stupid and I can't believe they couldn't start a fire and when they did they'd most likely burn down whatever they had. Like, just start a fire and don't get burnt, is it that hard?
      Super easy for me to say when I'm living in a time where I have a lighter in my pocket, more than 30 IQ, a developed brain, a sense of threat and danger, and a fire service that will save my ass if an accident happens.
      There must be a word that describes ignorance to privilege and hypocrisy. Because that's what that is. Not flaming you, but mindless comments that are used with a sense of ego (whether knowing or unknowingly) with holes in bug me idk why.

  • @frognamedjog
    @frognamedjog 3 года назад +260

    Imagine trying to explain to your insurance company that your car was hit by a plane

    • @imfromthegovandimheretohelp
      @imfromthegovandimheretohelp 3 года назад +15

      Huge headache no doubt

    • @ollieh98
      @ollieh98 3 года назад +36

      Imagine going out for ice cream, and YOU get hit by a plane.

    • @gdubya83
      @gdubya83 3 года назад +10

      A few months ago a plane crashed into and Suv near Hollywood, Florida. Killing the driver of the Suv although a kid in the Suv survived

    • @ImperialistRunningDo
      @ImperialistRunningDo 3 года назад +38

      Imagine trying to explain to your insurance company how your car was hit by a whale.
      How could a car be hit by a whale, you ask? Dynamite. Obviously. 20 cases, to be precise.
      November, 1970, Florence, Oregon.

    • @caelidhg6261
      @caelidhg6261 3 года назад +14

      At Farmers insurance, we have seen it all.......................................................................

  • @georgemallory797
    @georgemallory797 2 года назад +9

    Farrells came to my town in 1973, when I was 6. It was all the rage at that age, with a cool gift shop and its graduated size selection of jaw breakers, plus hats, whistles, candies, etc. Kids had birthday parties there, to which I remember attending a couple. They'd even run a bass drum and a siren out to sing Happy Birthday. If someone ordered a giant, party-sized "Zoo," they got the same treatment. It was great. Fast forward to summer, 1984, and it was my first part-time job. Place was disgusting. I was a bus boy and was treated like dirt. It had aged 20 years in its 11 years. Cock roaches, terrible management, poor maintenance, etc. I remember thinking of calling the health department but found out a couple years after I'd quit that they had shut down. Place was demolished and rebuilt as something else, which was also demolished. Worst job I ever had. Good riddance. Great memories as a kid, though.

  • @Scavenger82
    @Scavenger82 3 года назад +119

    "For several years, the Farrell's at Crossroads operated without incident, until......"
    Unfortunately, most people don't think about what could go wrong...... until it does.

    • @suomenpresidentti
      @suomenpresidentti 3 года назад

      3 is not several...

    • @Scavenger82
      @Scavenger82 3 года назад

      @@suomenpresidentti I'm just quoting what the narrator said.

    • @suomenpresidentti
      @suomenpresidentti 3 года назад

      @@Scavenger82Yep, I realize that and my comment was actually for the narrator/script writer.

    • @tanoshii1134
      @tanoshii1134 3 года назад +3

      To be fair, I don’t think most people who operate an ice cream parlour ever even remotely anticipate an incident more serious than a dropped cone… let alone 22 dead and 28 injured.

    • @MrKdr500
      @MrKdr500 3 года назад

      @@suomenpresidentti 3 can be defined by several.

  • @loam6740
    @loam6740 3 года назад +14

    This channel reminds me that true accidents are rare and there is almost always something or someone at fault

  • @masonmunkey6136
    @masonmunkey6136 3 года назад +63

    5:06 Grim reminder to be mindful of your own safety when trying to rescue others :(

    • @767driver4
      @767driver4 3 года назад +2

      It is all too easy to get tunnel vision under those circumstances. Can happen to anyone.

    • @dougaltolan3017
      @dougaltolan3017 3 года назад +2

      Strange that the traffic was still moving. 1 car that had had a jet plough through it, that same jet blazing and stuck in the side of an ice cream parlour, but the traffic was still moving...

    • @gary1961
      @gary1961 3 года назад

      @@dougaltolan3017 Maybe the vehicle had seen the carnage and turned around to drive away from it and the couple running across the road weren't expecting a vehicle to be coming from that direction? Just a thought.

  • @ro4eva
    @ro4eva 3 года назад +7

    *This channel is simply outstanding! Thank you for highlighting these lesser known, yet still important from a regulatory amendments point-of-view, historical disasters. You're contributing thoroughly premium content to RUclips. Keep up the stellar work, good day!*

  • @Tephlosion
    @Tephlosion 3 года назад +71

    It’s just so unfortunate that these events have to happen for oversights to be taken seriously. It’s just upsetting and I can’t imagine what these families go through…

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael 2 года назад +2

      My first career was 14 years in General Aviation. It was there that I learned everything is a technicality until something goes wrong.

  • @candiigurl7893
    @candiigurl7893 3 года назад +32

    This was so sad to hear. None of those people and families in that parlor had any idea what they would be up against that day.

    • @gator9339
      @gator9339 3 года назад

      They were expecting ice cream..
      They got wings instead

    • @LetsTalkAboutPrepping
      @LetsTalkAboutPrepping 3 года назад

      @@gator9339 bruh that's not right.
      At least some of them got the engine

    • @codydoinkdoink9165
      @codydoinkdoink9165 3 года назад

      Instead of chocolate syrup, they got jet fuel

    • @OwenGee21
      @OwenGee21 3 года назад

      I mean yeah I don't too often go out for Ice Cream thinking about planes crashing into the same building. It makes the strawberry sauce taste funny.

  • @twistoffate4791
    @twistoffate4791 3 года назад +21

    I grew up in Northern Virginia in the 70s celebrating birthdays at Farrell's & after soccer games went to Friendly's. But Farrell's atmosphere was simply magical, and as we kids walked up the ramp we couldn't wait for the fun to begin. Oh, the whistles & singing was crazy fun for kids & the memories are still with me now.

    • @derekjtaylor
      @derekjtaylor 3 года назад +1

      Springfield Mall! That was the one I used to go to. I had my birthday parties there a few times.

    • @erinnelson434
      @erinnelson434 3 года назад +1

      I remember so many great memories of birthdays at Farrell's. I responded to someone's question in a previous thread saying the same thing. It was magical. The dark wood furniture with the big wooden bar that they sold all that special candy behind. The old-timey piano music playing in the background, the old fashioned lighting, but maybe the best part was when it was time to serve some birthday guest their dessert, a full barber-shop-style quartet would come out in full regalia, one banging a huge drum strapped onto the front of him and then they would sing a capella in perfect harmony.

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 Год назад +6

    I herd about this tragedy when I was station at McClellan AFB back in the 1990s. So sad that many were family's members who died together there. May they all Rest In Peace. Good video.