Section 1: A short film from Dorktown

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  • Опубликовано: 24 июн 2022
  • The Pittsburgh Steelers of the 1970s won four Super Bowls and fielded some of the greatest teams ever assembled. However, the most important game they ever played was not a Super Bowl, but a 1976 playoff matchup against the Baltimore Colts. Though they couldn’t possibly have known it in the moment, lives were on the line.
    Written and directed by Jon Bois
    Written and produced by Alex Rubenstein
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @TheZakR
    @TheZakR Год назад +5191

    Imagine a final destination/ground hog day type movie where the Steelers head coach or quarterback has to keep re-living the game over and over until they beat the Baltimore so badly that no one gets hurt.

    • @JamesTobiasStewart
      @JamesTobiasStewart Год назад +487

      That would be an amazing weird mystical challenge, like they have been set this challenge and they can't simply warn anyone or the loop just resets, the only way to save those people, is to make it a humiliating blowout.

    • @TheZakR
      @TheZakR Год назад +417

      @@JamesTobiasStewart ooooo or even better, the Baltimore coach or QB has to try their best to throw the game and face the consequences

    • @davidmilroy8666
      @davidmilroy8666 Год назад +22

      this is ittttttttt

    • @EmmaBonn96
      @EmmaBonn96 Год назад +73

      Imagine Bert Jones having to lose

    • @TBone-bz9mp
      @TBone-bz9mp Год назад +10

      That would be incredible.

  • @JordynPi
    @JordynPi Год назад +214

    18:44 A punt from the opponents' 43 gets a base score of 9.29.
    Less than 1 yard remaining gets a multiplier of x1.0.
    Losing by 9 points gets a multiplier of x3.
    This happened in the 2nd quarter, for no clock multiplier.
    The surrender index of this punt is 27.88.

    • @theflev-matic4892
      @theflev-matic4892 6 месяцев назад +11

      Unironicallly pretty bad score

    • @tjestirr
      @tjestirr 4 месяца назад +23

      27.88 surrender index on a first half punt is INSANE

  • @Sam_Francis
    @Sam_Francis Год назад +1579

    My dad was at this game. He and his brother had left and were in the parking lot when the plane hit. They noticed “this idiot” flying low and watched the crash.
    I sent him this video and he called me. “Well that was a little overdramatized, wasn’t it?”

    • @joel29585
      @joel29585 Год назад +392

      love this haha such a "dad" response if there ever was one

    • @lavkian
      @lavkian Год назад +383

      This astutely exemplifies the point Jon was trying to make about what people were actually afraid of back then. That's so wild to me.

    • @maxnikolenko2302
      @maxnikolenko2302 Год назад +19

      Yeah, this episode really is overdramatized

    • @tw1nn319
      @tw1nn319 Год назад +237

      @@maxnikolenko2302 it seriously isnt, if the colts had won this game, hundreds of people wouldve been injured and many of them killed.

    • @JoeyVol
      @JoeyVol Год назад +19

      Lmao 🤣 that’s what Secret Base does

  • @ChiptuneGlitch
    @ChiptuneGlitch Год назад +2627

    I love how much this felt like a "Pretty Good" episode. This one was a real treat

    • @EE-gv9wt
      @EE-gv9wt Год назад +229

      It was fantastic. Like a merger of steve bono 76 yard run episode and larry walters has a bb gun and a lawn chair episode

    • @ChiptuneGlitch
      @ChiptuneGlitch Год назад +37

      @@EE-gv9wt You put it into perfect words

    • @badtotheappendixx
      @badtotheappendixx Год назад +24

      i know this is a video i’ll be coming back to a lot

    • @royalninja2823
      @royalninja2823 Год назад +47

      Not to discount Alex's contributions in any way, but Jon just has *such* a way with telling these stories. Bob Beamon's legendary jump in The Bob Emergency, or the entirety of Larry Walters' story, they're so emotionally moving. So was this! This video is, in essence, the description of the plays throughout a football game with a few tangents about what happened after, but I could not have been more on the edge of my seat hoping that one team would be beaten into the ground.

    • @ChiptuneGlitch
      @ChiptuneGlitch Год назад +24

      @@royalninja2823 Jon certainly does have more experience making these videos, as well as their set pieces, but I will say it honestly feels weird going back to older videos and not hearing Alex, for me
      Still, you're absolutely right. Somehow, so many of us are easily captivated by a Google Earth tour every couple months and it's always greater every time

  • @batler43
    @batler43 Год назад +1650

    OMG ... They timed it so the flight simulation hits the stadium exactly 6 minutes from when the scoreboard went final. I'm both impressed and not the least bit surprised. Love you guys.

    • @ChristopherBowenSuperbus
      @ChristopherBowenSuperbus Год назад +60

      Oh my God. To. The. Second.
      I am in awe.
      In AWE.

    • @serraramayfield9230
      @serraramayfield9230 Год назад +15

      @@ChristopherBowenSuperbus Noticed that. Incredible attention to detail.

    • @serraramayfield9230
      @serraramayfield9230 Год назад +32

      @@tBagley43 The crash happened 6 minutes after the game ended

    • @crazyluigi6664
      @crazyluigi6664 Год назад +10

      @@serraramayfield9230 Yeah, they clearly mentioned it during the introduction of the video.

    • @MrMali22
      @MrMali22 Год назад +30

      The entire flight they had up mirrored his flight. They did their research and then some.

  • @tzsitfhio
    @tzsitfhio Год назад +932

    This might be the only series on RUclips that I don't play when I first see it. I make sure i'm doing nothing else for 40 minutes and sit and enjoy it in full.

    • @NorrisJonesYT
      @NorrisJonesYT Год назад +37

      I do that for summoning salt videos

    • @mattallison5375
      @mattallison5375 Год назад +7

      I love summoning salt but I watch his videos to fall asleep x)

    • @jonassPH93
      @jonassPH93 Год назад +4

      Same, I only watch this with headphones, and with clear mind. Just pure art, and entartainment.

    • @SunKnightDunkmaster
      @SunKnightDunkmaster Год назад +2

      Same bro, see it on my feed at work, waiting till before bed to finally dig in.

    • @adamcoe
      @adamcoe Год назад +4

      100 percent I always make it a point to not watch these pieces casually.

  • @jhucci
    @jhucci Год назад +2033

    Only Jon Bois and Alex Rubenstein could get me, a Ravens fan, to root for the goddam Pittsburgh Steelers. Well played, sirs. Another masterpiece.

    • @cbfire9987
      @cbfire9987 Год назад +84

      As a Browns fan who’s hated the shit out of Terry Bradshaw for my entire life, I concur.

    • @AlgernonCSwinburne
      @AlgernonCSwinburne Год назад +36

      Yinzer Nation strikes again.

    • @zkid001
      @zkid001 Год назад +2

      This comment got me excited

    • @jeremy28135
      @jeremy28135 Год назад

      Lol

    • @jhucci
      @jhucci Год назад +14

      @@cbfire9987 Amen to that. I did enjoy the brief newspaper clipping at 16:42 that referred to him as a dumb quarterback.

  • @peelslowly28
    @peelslowly28 Год назад +200

    That flight instructor who got up to find a phone and call the airfield about the rogue plane showed way more initiative than anyone else that day.

    • @meee_5155
      @meee_5155 19 дней назад

      Nice pfp
      Also I’d say Terry Bradshaw showed quite a bit of initiative that day

  • @FIFODavid
    @FIFODavid Год назад +659

    Reminds me of the "Miracle 3" story of the SEC Men's basketball tournament at the Georgia Dome where a small tornado blew thru downtown Atlanta. A 3 pointer sent it to OT, leaving fans in the stadium and not exiting while a tornado ripped thru.

    • @EthanNeal
      @EthanNeal Год назад +108

      I lived in Atlanta at the time. It wasn't a small tornado. It was rated an EF2, which is by no means insignificant, and it was at that intensity as it passed the CNN center.

    • @bernier42
      @bernier42 Год назад +162

      Or how about Game 3 of the 1989 World Series, which was interrupted by an earthquake. I’ve heard that so many Bay Area residents were at home waiting for the game to start, that normally-packed freeways had way fewer vehicles on them than usual when they collapsed.

    • @erikgonzalez1306
      @erikgonzalez1306 Год назад +8

      I had this exact thought, started telling my roommate about that one

    • @smoov22_sonic
      @smoov22_sonic Год назад +1

      oh shit that would be a great follow up

    • @Rayen015
      @Rayen015 Год назад +14

      @@bernier42 theres a 30 For 30 on that and its brilliant.

  • @HoloKnight
    @HoloKnight Год назад +821

    Every time I see "Dorktown" I feel joy that is impossible to put into words

    • @SikoMC
      @SikoMC Год назад +2

      every time i see a new Secret Base upload i feel the same

    • @xp8969
      @xp8969 Год назад +1

      That's how I feel when conservative judges die

    • @seanflynn8735
      @seanflynn8735 Год назад +1

      100%

    • @etnbtlh
      @etnbtlh Год назад +1

      I know right?!

    • @AndrewJW
      @AndrewJW Год назад +1

      No offense to Mr Rubenstein, but when I see "Jon Bois" I feel that joy

  • @CLOCKTHULHU
    @CLOCKTHULHU Год назад +1752

    despite it being smaller in scope than the recent Stieb, Falcons, and Mariners docs, this might be my favorite Dorktown piece? The stakes are so immediately clear it's tense throughout, and because it's not a story a lot of people are familiar with there's still suspense as to what will happen. Great job Jon and Alex!

    • @squillz8310
      @squillz8310 Год назад +47

      Right! Like, they make it clear in the beginning that a small plane WILL crash into section 1 at a specific time. Those are massive stakes lol

    • @hellocollegejason198
      @hellocollegejason198 Год назад +8

      Stieb will rank up there with Ken Burns Baseball for me

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 Год назад +24

      222-0 and this one are my favorite Jon Bois projects. The punting one was special too. All three have incredible storytelling and editing.

    • @PaperSmiles
      @PaperSmiles Год назад +16

      Masterful use of dramatic irony. We know what’s going to happen, and no one taking part in the story does. The only thing we don’t know is how hardcore the fans are, and that’s the only part that matters. Excellent film, and one that didn’t feel like a 40 minute watch.

    • @thrownstair
      @thrownstair Год назад +29

      This is actually a great demonstration of Alfred Hitchcock’s bomb analogy of suspense. The tension of knowing what the ticking clock is is far more engaging than if the plane crash had just happened out of seemingly nowhere.

  • @TheAlfrulz
    @TheAlfrulz Год назад +465

    From 34:32 to 40:32.
    They recreated the six minute lapse between the game ending and the plane crash as part of their storytelling. Bravo!

  • @HintzBrosLLC
    @HintzBrosLLC Год назад +1298

    The last 11 minutes of this video are paced and edited to perfection. Truly shows that you don't need a big budget to tell a story well. Excellently done Secret Base.

    • @azuretone8575
      @azuretone8575 Год назад +30

      and the best part about that is the fact that once the game ends, they let the 6 minutes between that and the plane crash play out in real time. it would be so easy at that point to say 6 minutes worth of meaningless fluff to fill time, or leave a lot more silence there, but they just don't, and it works fantastically
      how do they do it.

    • @paysonfox88
      @paysonfox88 Год назад +14

      They proved that Terry Bradshaw was on a mission from God that day. He played a game so perfect, that it forced enough people to leave that nobody died when the plane crashed. Not a bad time to have the game of your life huh?
      Saving the lives of several people in the upper deck of a stadium takes the phrase perfect passerating to a new level.

    • @notclintdempsey6106
      @notclintdempsey6106 Год назад +17

      There's that part from 39:22 and on: "Our institutions failed... Why is it Terry Bradshaw's job? Why is it Franco Harris's job? Why is it Mean Joe Greene's job?" that just keeps coming back to me, over and over again.

    • @VinceLyle2161
      @VinceLyle2161 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@notclintdempsey6106 I know, right? And in the ensuing 47 years, our institutions have only gotten worse.

  • @oriolestragic-feelithappen4806
    @oriolestragic-feelithappen4806 Год назад +289

    This, as a Baltimorean, is one of the saddest stories in our football history. This game retrospectively marked the symbolic end of an era and the plane crash the beginning of a new one - one that saw us lose the Colts we loved so dearly.

    • @alaeriia01
      @alaeriia01 Год назад +18

      Hey, at least you got the Browns just as they got good.

    • @darrelleaster5381
      @darrelleaster5381 Год назад +19

      @@alaeriia01 And a bit later the 2012 ravens were born. I was only 7 and I still remember how good that defense was

  • @wutman9796
    @wutman9796 Год назад +461

    When we needed him most, Jon Bois came back pretty good

    • @sittinonthegodamcornerdoindope
      @sittinonthegodamcornerdoindope Год назад +24

      When the world needed him most…. Jon Bois got in a small plane and crashed it into a football stadium :(

    • @CyrogenicNation
      @CyrogenicNation Год назад

      @@sittinonthegodamcornerdoindope I can't believe Jon Bois planned to shoot his general manager for colluding in holding him back in free agency

  • @Dibbz_TV
    @Dibbz_TV Год назад +164

    Wow, Bert Jones played his power cards perfectly. I was not expecting such a strategic move that minimized all that risk when I saw his face. Smart dude

    • @dominicpancella3012
      @dominicpancella3012 10 месяцев назад +8

      Everyone looked like that in the '70s, it was a rough decade

  • @ChiseledAdonis
    @ChiseledAdonis Год назад +584

    This is an absolute masterclass production

  • @danshowlund
    @danshowlund Год назад +166

    I grew up in Memorial Stadium. Had my 6 year old heart broken by Willie Stargell and the Pirates in 79, but made whole again against the Phillies in 83. Watched my dad almost drink himself to death the day after Robert Irsay and his Mayflower trucks abandoned us in the middle of the night for Indy. Almost every one of my most cherished childhood memories was in that plain, ugly, dilapidated, wonderful stadium. Somehow I never, ever heard this story. Thank you so much to everyone who brought this story back to life.

    • @Dingosean
      @Dingosean Год назад +2

      This is why I love my Oakland Coliseum to this day… the last dive bar stadium in sports

  • @samsizer2919
    @samsizer2919 Год назад +287

    One of the police officers struck was a man named Joe Sacco. He couldn't leave early because of the close flybys and was hit by the plane. He spent a month or more in the hospital and retired from the police force four years later on disability. This could have been really, really bad.
    Also, I found this on one of the articles in the Baltimore Sun quoted in the video that further went on to talk about Kroner's "exploits" after the crash and short prison stay:
    "But Kroner's strange saga was far from over.
    He resurfaced four years later when he was charged with stealing two Greyhound buses from Dulles Airport in Virginia."

    • @qfmarsh64
      @qfmarsh64 Год назад +29

      SEQUEL

    • @UNHchabo
      @UNHchabo Год назад +80

      "stealing two Greyhound buses" -- this seems like a silly question, but did he steal them at the same time? Cause that totally seems like something this guy would figure out how to do.

    • @qfmarsh64
      @qfmarsh64 Год назад +60

      @@UNHchabo he stole one, dropped it off at a different terminal, and stole a different one 😂

    • @JMillz512
      @JMillz512 Год назад +17

      Why was this man allowed to roam so freely causing all this mayhem? What am I missing?

    • @forgottenfamily
      @forgottenfamily Год назад +33

      @@JMillz512 Because he didn't kill or intentionally harm anyone. His actions would be better classified as reckless so a jail sentence under 5 years actually does seem normal.

  • @draco2351
    @draco2351 Год назад +484

    Stories like these really let you appreciate local history and events. I’ve been a Marylander all my short life so knowing about Memorial Stadium is commonplace, but this story is special. This structure of storytelling is so riveting too, weaving in real life scenario and sport to see how all the pieces fall into place.

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Год назад +1

      The sport was real life too though

    • @artstsym
      @artstsym Год назад +2

      @@B3Band Wait, if you die in sport you die in real life? Ope.

  • @naka6940
    @naka6940 Год назад +117

    there is something immensely satisfying about the back and forth switching between jon's flight commentary and alex's game commentary

  • @bobodiddi
    @bobodiddi Год назад +366

    39:15 "Not cause of today, nobody remembers today." We now get to remember a story of this size thanks to the brilliance of Jon Bois and Alex Rubenstein. Every single Dorktown episode somehow eclipses the last for scale and wonder. Amazing video as always Secret Base!

  • @ratboy2713
    @ratboy2713 Год назад +120

    The opening of this feels like the mission briefing of a time travel movie, excellently written, had me cheering for the Steelers to save those fans

  • @oumondragon
    @oumondragon Год назад +347

    Less than 5 minutes in and we already have our first mariners doc crossover.
    Oh Dorktown, you never disappoint

    • @SimuLord
      @SimuLord Год назад +88

      The winking nod to the Surrender Index on that Colts 4th-and-inches in Pittsburgh territory was great too.

    • @kc7818
      @kc7818 Год назад +6

      When’s the reference?

    • @serraramayfield9230
      @serraramayfield9230 Год назад +17

      @@kc7818 That Colts punt mentioned in the above comment was one of the 10 worst punts on the Surrender Index - I believe it was #7?

    • @Rayen015
      @Rayen015 Год назад +9

      @@serraramayfield9230 couldn't have been surrender index video only calculated Punts in the 21st century (aka 2001-2018). Baltimore was #7 on the list but that was the ravens and this punt was in 1976.
      18:50 is the part in question.

    • @serraramayfield9230
      @serraramayfield9230 Год назад +1

      @@Rayen015 okay then, i misremembered

  • @RetroBaseball
    @RetroBaseball Год назад +65

    “Plane crashes in stands” Yep, this is what I will be watching for the next 42 minutes.

  • @Crayshack
    @Crayshack Год назад +92

    As a fan of deep dives into both sports history and air craft accident investigations, this feels like an amazing crossover episode.

    • @urint3902
      @urint3902 Год назад +5

      I didn't think there'd be two of us!

    • @mattsisoler6125
      @mattsisoler6125 Год назад +1

      Make it 3

    • @calzoneyyy
      @calzoneyyy Год назад

      4 now

    • @parkinggod
      @parkinggod 10 месяцев назад +1

      I've seen enough episodes of Air Disasters that I think I could credibly interview for a Go Team job with the NTSB. (of course I couldn't; that's just the Dunning-Kruger talking)

  • @QuietCat-en3vz
    @QuietCat-en3vz Год назад +56

    Just as Sick's Stadium was literally a sick stadium, by memorializing this event Jon makes Memorial Stadium literally a memorial stadium.

    • @CynicalCharlatan88
      @CynicalCharlatan88 Год назад +3

      Every stadium has some sort of memorial therefore every stadium is a memorial stadium

    • @QuietCat-en3vz
      @QuietCat-en3vz Год назад +12

      @@CynicalCharlatan88 According to Jon Bois, a Seattle area Lowe's has a memorial to Sick's Stadium. Therefore Lowe's is even a memorial stadium . . . a sick memorial stadium.

  • @weakestlink20
    @weakestlink20 Год назад +167

    Very glad you highlighted Bert Jones’ career. He gets lost in the shuffle too often when talking about the legacy of Indy’s great QB’s. He was on pace to be the next Johnny Unitas before injuries tore him apart. Truly a travesty of his era. Place him in an era with better medical understanding and he’d have a far greater career than he had.

    • @diggsfather
      @diggsfather Год назад +13

      it's tragic that his shoulder couldn't take the rigors of playing QB. he and Bengals QB Greg Cook are both hall of fame talents who had their careers ruined by torn rotator cuffs

    • @jamesdulany2176
      @jamesdulany2176 Год назад +12

      Bert Jones never played a single down in Indianapolis.

    • @dylanf3108
      @dylanf3108 Год назад

      @@diggsfather Chad Pennington should be thrown in there too

    • @hbdragon88
      @hbdragon88 Год назад +5

      @@jamesdulany2176 while I get that technically yes Bert Jones never played a down in Indianapolis, it's common to use the city as shorthand, the other option having to spell it out like "Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts". We understand that he's talking about the Colts team/history in general.
      The only time it would be 'wrong' is if it's like the Browns/Ravens, where the team history 'stayed' with Cleveland. So like records set by the Ravens in from 1996-99 would not count at all as Browns records.
      It can get complicated, like with the Hornets and Bobcats of the NBA. The Hornets retired Bobby Phills's jersey. it moved with them when they relocated to New Orleans, but when they 'relinquished' the team name to become the Pelicans, the Bobcats took back the name and its history from 1988-2002, including the retired number.

    • @penguinsfan251
      @penguinsfan251 Год назад +4

      The Colts had very good teams from 1975-77. It all fell apart in 1978 when John Dutton held out and was traded, and Bert Jones got hurt. The Colts went on a downward spiral. Attendance lagged and neither Baltimore City nor the State of Maryland was forthcoming about a new stadium. Irsay was one of the worst owners in the history of sports and he drove the Colts into the ground with ineptitude fueled by alcohol.
      Irsay originally bought the Rams in 1971 and teaded teams with Carroll Rosenbloom. Rosenbloom hated Memorial Stadium (later he hated the LA Coliseum) and wanted out of Baltimore.
      Indy built a stadium and offered Irsay what Baltimore would not, and Irsay bolted. The Colts have been in Indianapolis longer than they were in Baltimore.
      I remember this game well. Being a lifelong Steelers fan, 1976 was a rough ride. The Steelers started 1-4 and won nine in a row, but the only winning team they beat in that streak was the Bengals (twice). Pittsburgh just dismantled Baltimore that day. It was never close.
      It is worth noting that the Colts won the AFC East due to a tiebreaker with the 11-3 Patriots, who really were the best team in the AFC that year. The Patriots won in Pittsburgh and demolished Oakland, the Raiders' only loss of the season. The day before, the Patriots had the Raiders beaten but a terrible roughing the passer call on Ray Hamilton on a 4th and 17 gave the Raiders a lucky break. Little did anyone know that the Patriots would get revenge 25 years later due to the "tuck rule".
      Only after the Colts left, and a decade after the Baltimore Bullets left for DC, did Maryland get its act together and formulate a plan to replace Memorial Stadium, which the Orioles hated almost as much as Irsay did.
      I was 360 miles from Baltimore when the Steelers won that game, and when the Pirates won two World Series over the Orioles. I had no idea at the time I would end up working in Washington, DC for six years and would find a shabby but roomy apartment 17 minutes from the Inner Harbor. I moved back to Pittsburgh a few months before Art Modell moved his team to Baltimore. Life is crazy.

  • @Verlisify
    @Verlisify Год назад +1161

    I love how Dorktown finds the most unbelievable stories. When Kroner was introduced things got 100x crazier and it just keeps on going

    • @super8bitvideos
      @super8bitvideos Год назад +25

      Kroner is literally a 70s cartoon villain, just getting into nonsense hijinks that are moderately dangerous

    • @FixedFunction
      @FixedFunction Год назад +34

      Hey aren't you that pokemon guy that abused your girlfriend and forced her out of her own apartment? What was that all about?

    • @JanembaFreak
      @JanembaFreak Год назад

      @@FixedFunction Yeah! He also said some really awful shit after the Charlottesville attacks, and also said some really transphobic shit in his TemTem vid. He's only commenting here to fuel engagement because he only wants money and doesn't care about who he hurts along the way, like the greedy monger he is!

    • @Verlisify
      @Verlisify Год назад +1

      @@FixedFunction Weird how losers on the internet just exist to spread lies. Haven't heard this one before

    • @FixedFunction
      @FixedFunction Год назад +1

      @@Verlisify Once upon a time in Colorado... :)

  • @PunchFaceChamp9
    @PunchFaceChamp9 Год назад +64

    This is my first of several hundred viewings. Looking forward to having this memorized.

  • @Bw2000
    @Bw2000 Год назад +42

    Just found out my dad was in that section. Thanks for the existential nightmares Jon! (Great video)

  • @CheapAbyss
    @CheapAbyss Год назад +49

    I honestly love how Dorktown has become sort of the combination of the best of both Pretty Good and Chart Party

  • @gatienlaurol5793
    @gatienlaurol5793 Год назад +60

    For those wondering:
    Donald Kroner’s affinity for spectacles didn’t stop here. He was arrested for stealing a Greyhound bus in 1980. Kroner died in 2013.

    • @toweypat
      @toweypat 8 месяцев назад +5

      Well, that sounds about right.

  • @brucedillon8358
    @brucedillon8358 Год назад +41

    Game Ends: 34:33
    Plane Crashes 40:33
    I shit you not, exactly 6 minutes.

  • @fizz0514
    @fizz0514 Год назад +93

    I wasn't born until a little more than a decade after this happened, I've never heard this story. I am not quite 26 minutes into this episode, and my stomach is CHURNING. I have consumed anything Bois has made like I am an addict, and pairing with Alex for Dorktown has been a wonderful partnership that I've enjoyed a ton from the very beginning. This is no exception, but my god is it PAINFUL.

  • @coverkillernation
    @coverkillernation Год назад +97

    1976 might as well feel like a whole different planet by comparison to 2022. I've been a Steeler fan since the 90's and never once has this story crossed me. I love this series because it brings these moments to the attention of hundreds of thousands of me's who would've never known about them without Jon and Alex's research and trademark delivery.

    • @B3Band
      @B3Band Год назад +15

      Yeah, women had abortion rights back then

    • @WheresMyInhaler
      @WheresMyInhaler Год назад +10

      @@B3Band imagine watching this video then reading the comments , and replying with something completely unrelated. Jesus dude

    • @jordonez42
      @jordonez42 Год назад

      @@WheresMyInhaler ya well he’s not wrong and if you go to Bois’ twitter he would agree with him. Dire times and if you don’t like hearing about it, that’s your problem you fucking baby

    • @georgeford3687
      @georgeford3687 Год назад

      They still do, I love how you nut jobs have no ide what Roe was.

  • @autzenisheaven
    @autzenisheaven Год назад +20

    Nothing hits quite like Jon Bois talking over wireframe graphics on top of slow zooms and pans in Google Earth.

  • @jlhitz35
    @jlhitz35 Год назад +28

    Babe wake up, new Dorktown dropped

    • @xp8969
      @xp8969 Год назад +1

      She's in jail for buying condoms

  • @testsubject199
    @testsubject199 Год назад +171

    Add “Literally saved the lives of an entire section of fans” to the already expansive list of things the 70s Steelers accomplished.
    Thank yinz for the Pittsburgh related content 😊

  • @KalenCarslaw
    @KalenCarslaw Год назад +46

    The stretch that starts at 29:57 and ends a few minutes later with the simulated take-off and tension-ratcheting track is awesome.
    Short film is wholly deserving of nominations and awards next time those come around!

    • @dersimonyt9560
      @dersimonyt9560 8 месяцев назад +1

      Also, the Scoreboard hits FINAL at 34:34, exactly 6 minuted before the plane crashes

  • @FDSignifire
    @FDSignifire Год назад +34

    One day I'm gonna figure out where yall get this 90s synth jazz from

    • @mauricewilson7116
      @mauricewilson7116 Год назад +3

      He (or Jon Bois fans like myself) has a playlist set up on Spotify and I think Apple Music
      Love your vids FD

    • @HaitiSpaceAgency
      @HaitiSpaceAgency Год назад

      Wondering the same thinf

  • @razaahmad9133
    @razaahmad9133 Год назад +11

    I have to say that Memorial Stadium’s nickname as “The World’s Largest Outdoor Insane Asylum” has to be the greatest stadium nickname ever

  • @AddaeAkono
    @AddaeAkono Год назад +38

    This was a nice short film on one of the most bizarre moments in NFL history. I was on the edge of my seat the entire time as it felt like the Steelers were on a secret mission to get the fans out of the stadium as quickly as possible. Nicely done Secret Base.

  • @AlgernonCSwinburne
    @AlgernonCSwinburne Год назад +55

    As a Pittsburgh native and a fan of the Baltimore Marching Band, I never knew that the Steelers saved lives in Memorial Stadium back in 1976. Truly a miracle. Well done as always, SB!

  • @CarolineBearoline
    @CarolineBearoline Год назад +300

    I love getting these kinds of breakdown from you guys... history, stats, and an engrossing, yet professional gravitas for the subject matter ❤

    • @berniemac3535
      @berniemac3535 Год назад +2

      U are beautiful

    • @danceyrselfkleen
      @danceyrselfkleen Год назад +1

      You're giving me a little gravitas in my pants, if you know what I mean.

    • @thedumbdog1964
      @thedumbdog1964 Год назад +1

      We meet again, beautiful

    • @berniemac3535
      @berniemac3535 Год назад +3

      @@thedumbdog1964 her boyfriend and me are hers lol

    • @CarolineBearoline
      @CarolineBearoline Год назад +2

      @@thedumbdog1964 hey bud ❤️ I miss you guys

  • @GerritCoulter
    @GerritCoulter Год назад +46

    This may be one of the greatest videos in SB history, and that is saying a lot.

  • @SomeOfTheJuice
    @SomeOfTheJuice Год назад +72

    I've heard of the end of this story and seen the picture, but I never heard the buildup or much about the game, only the pure luck that no one was killed. Adding all that context in, and I'm actually holding back tears. Especially with Jon's last lines of whether someone can be a hero by accident. This should have never happened, and knowing the FAA and how they fortunately have long been an organization that does take accidents and learn from them instead of saying "oh, it'll never happen again" and doing nothing, hopefully it will never happen again.

    • @Aliceintraining
      @Aliceintraining Год назад +4

      FAA learns its lessons in blood, but it never forgets them for the sake of the future.

  • @willklepko762
    @willklepko762 Год назад +40

    Throwback to a Pretty Good type of story and characters, with dorktown visuals and setting. What a blending of eras, a thoroughly enjoyable piece!

  • @constonks
    @constonks Год назад +5

    The picture-in-picture with the flight and the game was great, but the plane actually visible on the BROADCAST made me gasp.
    (Amazing storytelling as always.)

  • @TheyreStillOutThere
    @TheyreStillOutThere Год назад +19

    The fact that the stats and star talent alone are enough to make this video a compelling piece of retrospective sports journalism, but then to have the madman in an airplane on what is essentially a delusional kamikaze mission to crash into the stadium looming over us like the in-game clock in Majora's Mask as we watch really puts it over the top. I have never heard of this story and cannot believe it's never talked about, regardless of the fact that nobody died. Absolutely my favorite piece of storytelling so far out of all the Dorktowns. There is nothing like this brand of storytelling anywhere in the media landscape and this would get an easy Emmy if it were on TV. Dorktown shits on anything sports related in traditional media and it's not even close. This is perfect storytelling.

  • @COBALTCOVERT
    @COBALTCOVERT Год назад +7

    As a steelers fan, knowing my team was once so good it saved peoples lives, kinda awesome

  • @natedrizzydaruler2654
    @natedrizzydaruler2654 Год назад +15

    I grew up in Baltimore and was 2 weeks old when this happened. I remember my dad telling me about this. I’ve went to games and sat in that section not realizing this is where the plane crashed.
    It was awesome to see some of the neighborhoods my family and friends lived in during the flyovers.

  • @edalder2000
    @edalder2000 Год назад +14

    I grew up near Baltimore and was 4 years old when this game happened. Seeing the plane in the upper deck of Memorial Stadium is one of my first memories.

  • @emeraldaly7646
    @emeraldaly7646 Год назад +12

    Jon is such an S+ tier storyteller (and heck, I'd give Alex A-tier). I respect the heck outta both of them for the immense work I'm sure they do that isn't immediately obvious in the final video too. These videos might just be the best thing on the internet.

  • @warpdrivefueledbyinsomnia8165
    @warpdrivefueledbyinsomnia8165 Год назад +7

    It's these types of stories that get lost in the annual churn of sports season after sports season. I'm so glad these guys give attention to stories that aren't just stats, win-loss totals, and post-game interviews.
    The players live their lives to play the game they love. Quite often, the fans do the same to watch it. And, in the intersection of all of this is a rogue pilot who almost killed some people with his antics, but didn't because of cosmic forces, fate, or just pure chance. There's something so human in this.

  • @exploding_cat3336
    @exploding_cat3336 8 месяцев назад +2

    The framing device that if the Steelers don’t destroy the colts, people will die. Was so engaging and brilliant, amazing video

  • @fredbobberts5753
    @fredbobberts5753 Год назад +36

    This game was an anomaly in that the Colts were in the middle of a very successful streak but did not show up against The Steel Curtain. It’s unusual because Bert Jones was in the middle of his incredible run. Jones might just be the best QB you’ve never heard of.
    Bert Jones, the 1976 NFL MVP, burned across the NFL landscape very quickly and vanished just as quickly. He lost 15 of his first 18 starts, made just one All NFL team and one Pro Bowl, threw for 3,000 yards only once in a winning season, never won a playoff game, and his last full season he won 2 and lost 13 games. The ELO Rater puts him in with Willie McGinest, Dave Grayson, Cliff Harris, and Harold Carmichael, around 350th on the list of NFL players. This vastly underrates him as player, at least in term of peak value, because for a brief moment when he was healthy, Bertram Hays ‘Bert’ Jones was the best player in the NFL.
    If you followed football in the mid 1970s, you know that more glowing prose was heaped on Jones in the sports pages than just about anyone else besides OJ Simpson, who peaked a little earlier and burned out sooner. I think a lot of this came about because he was a Colt, and he seized the mantle of Johnny Unitas in Baltimore right at the time that the club needed this. He did not timidly fill the spot- he redefined the position with sheer physical power, he was ‘The Ruston Rifle’, equipped with a slingshot arm and equally strong legs. Bert Jones did not just run with the ball, he ran with purpose, and at 6’3’ and 210 pounds he was as dangerous on the run as he was in the pocket. Like RGIII he had a hell for leather style that you knew could lead to disaster, and it finally did, but while he played his teams followed him fearlessly into the heart of the battle. It did not hurt that they won, either. They won a lot.
    Well - not at first- he was drafted second in 1973 to join a team that was just awful. He was 1-4 in 1973, and 1-7 in 1974. The old guard Colts had all left and what was left was a young and inexperienced squad that played very badly up until the middle stages of 1975. After a 1-4 start, they beat the Jets in New York on October 26th, and suddenly they gelled, winning their last nine games of the year.
    But the Colts and Jones at that point were just getting started. The next year - this year for the film- they were 11-3 with Jones winning an MVP award, and in 1977 they won a third consecutive division title at 10-4. During that run the Colts were 30-7 with Jones under center; the one thing that escaped them was a playoff win. In an era that rewarded mistake free signal calling Jones was one of the most careful quarterbacks of all time, throwing only 32 interceptions in 1214 attempts in the 49 games between 1975 and 1979 while fumbling only 8 times. That’s what made him special- he made a lot of big plays and almost no miscues; overall at his peak he was 35 and 9.

  • @Hummabubba
    @Hummabubba Год назад +46

    Jon Bois and sportsball. What more could any person want from life?

    • @xp8969
      @xp8969 Год назад +2

      Our bodily autonomy back, and the Supreme Court seat that the Republicans stole

    • @brickwallblitz
      @brickwallblitz Год назад +3

      More of it

    • @oaketree
      @oaketree Год назад

      Love and affection?

    • @Hummabubba
      @Hummabubba Год назад

      @@oaketree Not possible. This is the best substitute a person can have.

  • @jstyxx4110
    @jstyxx4110 Год назад +19

    This is like a mix between Pretty Good and Dorktown I love it.

  • @nicholaspeterson5925
    @nicholaspeterson5925 Год назад +9

    One of the craziest stories I've ever heard. As a colts fan for more than 30 years I'm embarrassed that I didn't know it. Thanks for making this excellent video.

  • @lastsinnersa8002
    @lastsinnersa8002 Год назад +24

    Dorktown - always providing you with stuff you end up wanting to know but didn't know you wanted to.

    • @etnbtlh
      @etnbtlh Год назад

      YUP!

    • @BillHFA
      @BillHFA Год назад

      That's very accurate!

  • @TekkamanBlade
    @TekkamanBlade Год назад +17

    As someone who doesn’t watch football, this was one of the most intriguing and well done videos I’ve ever seen. Absolutely amazing

  • @user-jw5qj8kv2y
    @user-jw5qj8kv2y Год назад +26

    The Steelers of the 1970s, led by Terry Bradshaw, were truly a powerhouse team, and that era was the golden age of the Steelers.

  • @davidjohnson156
    @davidjohnson156 Год назад +12

    This is masterclass story telling. I was hooked from jump. Like I'm pretty no one is going to die from jump, but the way they tell story has you lock in because of the race against time that is being presented. Jon Bois is just too good right now.

  • @SUBMACHINEGOTH
    @SUBMACHINEGOTH Год назад +15

    Jesus christ, i'm hanging in the edge of my chair all this video. This is AMAZING. Jon and Alex are truly geniuses, the whole atmosphere and pacing are near perfect.

  • @Skipmunk85
    @Skipmunk85 Год назад +3

    when Jon said "did you hear it?" I actually rewound to listen closer and got chills down my spine

    • @AuraHero
      @AuraHero Год назад +5

      The video footage from the field late in the game was even more ominous.

    • @Skipmunk85
      @Skipmunk85 Год назад

      @@AuraHero you're right but I wrote this comment before I got to that part

  • @retrodad418
    @retrodad418 Год назад +5

    Quite possibly the greatest RUclips video I've ever seen. Utterly astonishing.

  • @dyingrabbit
    @dyingrabbit Год назад +9

    This is an insane story, and this is somehow the most compelling way of telling it. Never stop doing these. Bravo.

  • @MisterMeteor
    @MisterMeteor Год назад +9

    Some of the best sports documentary work ever made.

  • @durianhead
    @durianhead Год назад +14

    i have no knowledge, context or exposure to american football and i'm already hooked within the first two minutes
    edit: holy shit the editing is phenomenal. i cannot believe they maintained actual suspense from beginning to end while spoiling what happens in the first two minutes

  • @anthonydaniel9534
    @anthonydaniel9534 Год назад +20

    I am legit shocked this is the first time I'm hearing about this. Kudos to Secret Base. Heck of a story.

    • @JWex-jy7sk
      @JWex-jy7sk Год назад +1

      I remember hearing about a story of a small plane that crashed into the upper deck of Memorial Stadium after a Colts playoff game.
      I always thought the story of the crash was it was a freak accident.
      Had no idea up until now who Donald Kroner was and that he was intentionally showboating around and through Memorial Stadium that day.

  • @pa28cfi
    @pa28cfi Год назад +8

    As a pilot, good job on presenting this the way you did without over-sensationalizing it and getting the aviation part of it almost 100% correct. As a sports guy who was only 2 at the time, thanks for another great video.

  • @PendragonDaGreat
    @PendragonDaGreat Год назад +7

    This is one of those stories that I knew the outcome going in, but the way you told the story had me on the edge of my seat the entire time.

  • @shogunhogun
    @shogunhogun Год назад +3

    this is one of the greatest youtube videos ever

  • @ScholarlyHiccup
    @ScholarlyHiccup 5 месяцев назад +1

    This film is so damn good. All the work on this channel is. The ppl who run the show here also all seem to be rly good folks. Never seen a channel be quite popular and still massively underrated.

  • @Jayram2K
    @Jayram2K Год назад +2

    Dorktowns are the best sports documentaries ever

  • @phyrexiancoffee6324
    @phyrexiancoffee6324 Год назад +5

    Full stop, as a Steelers fan there are few QBs I respect more than Bert Jones. The man fought tooth and nail for his team, on and off the field, and managed to do so well at both he rallied his team back from the brink of collapse to a Playoff contender.

  • @sjarcadeaosmtgedhgames5563
    @sjarcadeaosmtgedhgames5563 Год назад +3

    The opening 2 minutes and 22 secods is literally a work of art. You boys are MASTERS of the craft

  • @pokehybridtrainer
    @pokehybridtrainer Год назад +5

    I'm just yelling "how" when the Ep starts, and "HOW?!", as it ends. Just, woah. These are the stories of humanity summed up in sport.

  • @vespulazer
    @vespulazer Год назад +1

    Immaculate storytelling

  • @madd0911
    @madd0911 Год назад +5

    Never thought I'd care so much about football until I came across this video. And as a Marylander never have I cheered so hard against Baltimore. Amazing doc

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +5

    Very Twilight Zone-ish. Like when the movie star named Bunny mysteriously appears and adamantly cancels the town gathering at the fairgrounds, crushing everyone’s spirit, but saving their lives as her plane then crashed on it. Only this was real life. Downright eerie! …
    And wonderfully researched by you! Excellent job.

  • @joshuapatrick682
    @joshuapatrick682 Год назад +2

    I seriously couldn’t stop watching this, it’s enthralling!

  • @dogcowrph
    @dogcowrph Год назад +3

    I grew up a Steelers fan in the seventies. This was my high school days. Yes remember the news coverage after the game. I watched the game on television at my parents home.
    I’m sure someone has this game snd coverage on tape. I wouldn’t buy a VCR until 1982. I had thousands of old games on tape starting in 1982 but this, of course, wasn’t one of them.
    Thanks for making this video.

  • @johnchiu
    @johnchiu Год назад +9

    I will never get over how you Secret Base dorks make us care so much about these truly hidden gems. You guys don't tell sports stories. You guys tell stories of humanity, served with a side of sports.

    • @BigBlack81
      @BigBlack81 Год назад +1

      And honestly, that's the key: human stories are captivating, but sports make them more so when told well.

  • @jackduff7194
    @jackduff7194 Год назад +15

    I’m glad Bert Jones is getting his love, those Colts teams got buried in the 70s by so many factors in an out of there control, but all the old Baltimore people I know have nothing but praise for the great Bert Jones. Great story and great series

    • @johnchedsey1306
      @johnchedsey1306 Год назад +4

      Moreover, Bert Jones is the perfect archetype for Ridiculously Handsome Quarterback. I'm straight AF but that dude was a total dreamboat.

    • @qfmarsh64
      @qfmarsh64 Год назад

      For real. Who the fuck thinks Joe Namath looks good compared to Mr. All-American?
      Too bad he got outclassed by a balding goofus.

    • @lazylegolars
      @lazylegolars Год назад +1

      @@johnchedsey1306 Would be played by Ryan Gosling, if he had to be cast for a movie.

    • @FreshPrincex4
      @FreshPrincex4 Год назад

      @@johnchedsey1306 too bad injuries took over, from seeing his highlights. He was damn good

  • @zekedeblaay4211
    @zekedeblaay4211 Год назад +10

    This is one of the greatest sports stories I’ve ever heard. You all did an incredible job, this may be your very best work. Thank you so much for making this

  • @phyzyks
    @phyzyks Год назад +11

    I dunno about Alex, but I know Jon HATES the Steelers, so I was convinced we'd never see a Steelers story from them unless it was us getting crushed. Pleasantly surprised!

  • @theguywithpants
    @theguywithpants Год назад +12

    Wow, absolutely wow. I don’t care at all for Football, not one bit. Terry Bradshaw is the only name I recognized but that did not matter. This was a masterpiece of story telling, you painted a perfect picture and set the stakes and had me hooked. It was about halfway through the video I realized, yeah, this is one of *those* videos. The one you come across every few months, just so well made, there aren’t words. Thank you this was a great experience!

  • @stephentobey8556
    @stephentobey8556 Год назад +4

    I was thinking about this recently. For some reason I thought it happened after the Colts’ 1977 overtime loss to the Raiders. Thanks for doing this video.

  • @ardsam6922
    @ardsam6922 Год назад +2

    This is amazing. I have never seen something like this.

  • @yabbadabbindude
    @yabbadabbindude Год назад +1

    I've always loved the deep rewind series for how much it tension it builds up for the moment in history. and as someone who wasn't around for so many of them, it makes for great viewing but this doc. is something truly special

  • @CJKeene06
    @CJKeene06 Год назад +41

    “Does this remind YOU of anything? Sound off in the comments.” - The Loser Machine
    Why, no fellas, the story of a man who gave authorities every reason to be suspicious of him and (rightfully) confiscate his pilots license, who had made prior threats of violence, and yet was still able to have access to aircraft reminds me of nothing from the real world.
    Brilliant stuff. Keep up the great work.

    • @cranapple3367
      @cranapple3367 Год назад +4

      And, in a similar fashion, the good guys can't just win. They need a blowout, or all is lost.

    • @eugenegreen2285
      @eugenegreen2285 Год назад

      is this a 9/11 reference?

    • @AuraHero
      @AuraHero Год назад +7

      @@eugenegreen2285 It's more an allegory to gun control, or rather, the lack thereof, in the United States.

  • @chiefjustchief
    @chiefjustchief Год назад +3

    stories like this make me convinced that there is some sort of higher power in the universe. The sheer amount of outcomes that had to happen, combined with the craziness happening simultaneously, ALSO combined with the fact that everything that needed to happen did, in fact, happen, IN ADDITION to the fact that Terry Bradshaw and the Steelers played their best statistical game ever, HOW CAN ANY OF THAT POSSIBLY BE RANDOM??

  • @onebigadvocado6376
    @onebigadvocado6376 Год назад +2

    Stunning. I misread the length of the vid, thinking it was 7 mins long when I pressed it. I only thought, "Hey, this seems longer than 7 minutes, at THIRTY NINE minutes". If that's not a testimony to its quality and pacing, nothing is.

  • @jedlockett52
    @jedlockett52 Год назад +29

    That was incredible, just what I needed following a rough week. Thanks so much for inspiring those of us who want to tell great stories in unique ways.

  • @Fatpocketsbruh
    @Fatpocketsbruh Год назад +7

    Oh Jon & Alex. I woke up this morning looking to do chores. I’m now stopping my chores to watch how a blowout saved thousand of lives. Thank you.

  • @AnimeSunglasses
    @AnimeSunglasses Год назад +3

    Maaaaaaaaaaaaaannn, the '70s were WILD...
    Also, I ended up here by chance and algorithmic blessing, because I watch a steady stream of aviation content, including many air accident reports. You guys have an excellent presentation style and were a real pleasure!

  • @thenumberquelve158
    @thenumberquelve158 Год назад +1

    It's amazing how many stories you guys dig up that seem like they SHOULD be remembered so much better, but were it not for you, most people would assume it was completely made up.
    It's amazing how well it turned out, with zero deaths and the lunatic finally arrested.
    And giving us the real time six minutes to let the plane do its final dance after the game, as so many have pointed out, is just genius.
    They definitely would've partied WAY longer than that if they'd won, and probably taken about that long to collect themselves after a close loss, let alone to walk in a pack out of the stadium.

  • @tiggerpete
    @tiggerpete Год назад +4

    I'm not sure why, but I needed this. Always love dorktown, and the subject is usually something I never experienced or even heard of before, but is presented in painstaking detail with a level of analysis that is both impressive and insightful and helps to make you appreciate the subtleties of sports.