The 1996 Crash of TWA Flight 800 | A Short Documentary | Fascinating Horror

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 3 тыс.

  • @mommarose7429
    @mommarose7429 Год назад +5799

    My niece and sister in law were on that flight. They were headed to Paris as a college graduation gift for my niece. My sister in law was a French teacher. We still think about both of them nearly every day. Two special women.

    • @musicalityrush
      @musicalityrush Год назад +316

      Im so sorry for your loss ❤

    • @tkemp2
      @tkemp2 Год назад +464

      My uncle and 16 year old cousin were lost as well. Maybe they came across each other at some point. I think about them every day as well.

    • @philipbarton3456
      @philipbarton3456 Год назад +274

      I lost an elderly aunt to it, she was a retired nuclear medicine technician. I was young at the time, so it was my first introduction to loss as a whole. In a unique turn of events a little under 10 years later my middle school teacher was a retired fireman who had moved out west to where I lived. He was one of the emergency responders involved in the recovery efforts.

    • @mommarose7429
      @mommarose7429 Год назад +66

      @@tkemp2 I'm so very sorry for your loss. 🥺

    • @olesmokey394
      @olesmokey394 Год назад +39

      Sorry for you loss least they died instantly

  • @TheKazragore
    @TheKazragore Год назад +3961

    That break up mid-air must've been utterly terrifying in those final moments for everyone. I can't even imagine.

    • @СолнечныйПарус-р7щ
      @СолнечныйПарус-р7щ Год назад +26

      And you don’t need to imagine, you just need to stop flattering your ego and stop flying planes (ego & hubris of those, who claim that planes are safe and who, for the sake of convenience and speed, use them!)😎

    • @nlwilson4892
      @nlwilson4892 Год назад +390

      There wouldn't be enough oxygen to keep them conscious so they would pass out in seconds.

    • @BradTheThird
      @BradTheThird Год назад +408

      @@СолнечныйПарус-р7щ No

    • @azzy-551
      @azzy-551 Год назад +436

      ​@@СолнечныйПарус-р7щ If you are privileged enough to not worry about time then good for you, but most people can't spend weeks driving just to see their family or for work. That and planes just aren't that dangerous soooooo...

    • @franksavage8031
      @franksavage8031 Год назад +286

      @@СолнечныйПарус-р7щ Calm down, Karen.

  • @IronMaiden756
    @IronMaiden756 Год назад +1237

    This video broke my heart. Dr. Ghassan Haurani and his wife Nina were on board on the way to Paris for their 25th anniversary. He was a vascular surgeon at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in the Detroit area and his skilled hands saved my mother's life. I will be forever grateful he saved her and I feel so sorry for his family.

    • @archlich4489
      @archlich4489 Год назад +27

      Respect.

    • @supersnake151
      @supersnake151 Год назад +15

      Wow! Such a small world, I'm from the Metro Detroit area!

    • @Psidawg
      @Psidawg Год назад

      was he a muslim terrorist? he might blew the plane up. solved

    • @W.H.A.P.
      @W.H.A.P. 8 месяцев назад +2

      🧢

    • @marlyb176
      @marlyb176 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@W.H.A.P.not everything is a lie

  • @vustvaleo8068
    @vustvaleo8068 Год назад +2681

    imagine the shock of the captain from the East Wind plane seeing the TWA Flight 800 suddenly exploded in front of his eyes, that memory will forever last with him.

    • @quantumevent
      @quantumevent Год назад +169

      The way story is told, it must've looked like flipping his lights caused the boom

    • @caraiya
      @caraiya Год назад +214

      And not just watching the explosion, but having to continue flying.

    • @jtgd
      @jtgd Год назад

      @@caraiyaand being unable to provide any assistance

    • @caustic1611
      @caustic1611 Год назад +69

      The Eastwind plane (not the same flight crew iirc) had a near-fatal rudder malfunction a month prior, same kind of rudder malfunction that caused the crash of several other planes.

    • @erikaswanson7072
      @erikaswanson7072 Год назад +63

      ​@@caustic1611That Eastwind pilot was in a MayDay episode about those rudder malfunctions and was the one who said he was pretty sure the investigators were happier to have the intact plane to study than him.

  • @juliefrank5980
    @juliefrank5980 Год назад +1734

    I went to an estate sale in the Detroit area in the months following this crash. I had purchased an answering machine and noticed the tape was full when I went to set it up in my home. I rewound the tape and played it, and it was really sad- progressively more and more messages expressing concern, that the callers knew this family was traveling abroad, and hoped they weren’t on TWA 800. Seeing as these were the only messages, and the entire contents of the home were being sold, I suspect it was.
    I had purchased some of their Christmas decorations as well, and I still set their ornaments on my tree every year and say a little prayer for them. 😔

    • @MilesL.auto-train4013
      @MilesL.auto-train4013 Год назад +55

      Hey, do you still have that answering machine?
      I'm wanting to do my own video on TWA 800 (I wrote the script for this video) at some point, and it would be crucial if something like this was preserved.

    • @johnnyk434
      @johnnyk434 Год назад +61

      @juliefrank5980- Wow, how thoughtful of you to continue to hang the ornaments. 👍🏽

    • @LKA-si7ln
      @LKA-si7ln Год назад +251

      Please don’t share that answering machine with the person who requested it. That is very tragic and personal. That should be kept private instead of someone’s pain being used for content. I wouldn’t want my sobbing, frantic messages to a loved one being shared and exploited.

    • @07foxmulder
      @07foxmulder Год назад

      @@LKA-si7lnYet you’re here watching a video about a disaster that killed 230 people for entertainment purposes. Sanctimonious weirdo.

    • @davidaugustofc2574
      @davidaugustofc2574 Год назад +27

      I agree, the person likely forgot to erase the tape due to the trauma of losing someone, leave it as ìs

  • @hdsrn1992
    @hdsrn1992 Год назад +183

    My dad graduated from Montoursville HS in ‘81. He knew several of the chaperones on Flight 800. The way a small town was so affected by this loss is truly heartbreaking. They have a memorial in town with 21 trees, one planted for each person loss.

  • @lonnarheaj
    @lonnarheaj Год назад +1456

    My husband worked for the electronics division at Boeing when this occurred. It was well documented that this plane had numerous episodes of non-functioning electrical components. Cabin lights, personal overhead lighting, random other electric switches, etc., would often flicker, completely cut off and then back on again, etc. Those are all clear signs of electrical short-circuits and faulty connections and wiring, conditions that should never be accepted as normal on any airplane.

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад +46

      All of this should have been caught in a D check.

    • @conndapierce5869
      @conndapierce5869 Год назад +93

      I was on TWA Flight 800 a month before in JFK going to Paris. As we were sitting there waiting to go the power went out three times. People were getting nervous and the captain came on and said oh we're running on the generator right now so it's not the same as when we're in the air.

    • @andyjay729
      @andyjay729 Год назад +34

      In fall 2012 I flew United from SFO to Tokyo on what turned out to be my last-ever flights on a 747. This was of course right while they were starting to phase them all out, so they were probably pretty old by then. On the return trip the inflight entertainment wasn't working, and maybe it was a false memory, but I seem to think some of the lights weren't even working. Left me a little nervous.

    • @jplayer073
      @jplayer073 Год назад +25

      Huge difference between something not working and it working intermittently because of faulty wiring. The latter is dangerous and a fire hazard. Something being off isn't dangerous. Lights and in-flight entertainment aren't crucial to flight operations.

    • @lethabrooks9112
      @lethabrooks9112 Год назад +13

      It seems this plane wasnt maintained properly.

  • @caraiya
    @caraiya Год назад +1008

    This was essentially the straw that broke the camel's back for TWA. Consumer confidence was already low by that point, and between all of the safety issues and debt, there wasn't much of a chance for them to recover. What also didn't help was Carl Icahn, who basically lined his pockets with the little that was left...at the cost of lives. TWA fell, and it fell HARD.

    • @stevenjlovelace
      @stevenjlovelace Год назад +54

      Carl Icahn is a monster

    • @princessmarlena1359
      @princessmarlena1359 Год назад +43

      @@stevenjlovelace To quote Dr. Hammond, “I really hate that man!”

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад +47

      And TWA had really old planes. They were one of the last major operators of the 747-100. Delta, for instance, had moved on to the much newer 767-300ER as had American, and United was receiving the brand new 777 at the time. Continental had 767s and 777s on order.

    • @edsutherland8266
      @edsutherland8266 Год назад +12

      ⁠@@AEMoreira81To be fair, TWA had started its own fleet renewal with 767s. They were just slow in doing so.

    • @mickcollins1921
      @mickcollins1921 Год назад +60

      The TWA implosion had major consequences for my hometown, Saint Louis. We were its biggest hub. Our airport, Lambert Field, was in the process of a major expansion to accommodate TWAs growth when they folded. American ended up shutting down all their international flights out of Lambert and the place looked apocalyptically empty for years with an entire terminal basically abandoned.
      We had been the 8th busiest airport in the country with flights to several international destinations, and suddenly we were a bright and shiny new ghost town.
      The ripples of TWA's demise went far in the STL.

  • @nickneuharth
    @nickneuharth Год назад +249

    My ex was part of the body recovery for this. He said everyone was still bucketed into their seats. Hopefully they all passed out and didn’t have to suffer 😢

    • @chrismorrison7
      @chrismorrison7 Год назад +2

      Can you pls give anymore details and what your ex said about they’re experience doing that😅

    • @derekgrayjr
      @derekgrayjr Год назад +46

      I think the investigation said that most died/fell unconscience after the explosive decompression. There were a few who were still alive when the wreckage hit the water as they had water in their lungs. Whether they were awake or not, no one knows.

    • @DepecheGuy99
      @DepecheGuy99 Год назад +17

      ​@@derekgrayjr Probably they regained consciousness in the water, injured or badly burned, panicked after realizing what happened and drowned.

    • @joeskis
      @joeskis Год назад

      they wouldn't survive the impact with the water @@DepecheGuy99

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 Год назад +3

      Irrelevant since none of them would have any memories of the event.

  • @aidanfarnan4683
    @aidanfarnan4683 Год назад +1983

    It's scary to think just how many small factors can come togeater to case a disaster like this. It really drives home the importance of the "Swiss cheese" model of safety planning.

    • @СолнечныйПарус-р7щ
      @СолнечныйПарус-р7щ Год назад +84

      theory of ordered chaos / snowball effect / domino effect / perfect storm - one must always make efforts so that the fluctuations of chaos do not become orderly and turn into a catastrophe.

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Год назад +44

      It really is.
      The one thing I don't get is them claiming the wires were too low voltage to cause any kind of sparks..
      I'm not sure how low you can go without sparks, but I'm fairly sure even 4 or 5 volts is enough to create a spark if 2 wires are close together

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Год назад +33

      Actually iirc you can short an AA battery (1.5v) and get sparks from it.

    • @YuBeace
      @YuBeace Год назад +41

      The wires being old and in poor condition is a recipe for fire problems, though... No matter where you are. Let alone inside a plane.

    • @charlieangkor8649
      @charlieangkor8649 Год назад +17

      Wiring in poor condition is not a small factor.

  • @kathyastrom1315
    @kathyastrom1315 Год назад +630

    Years after this happened, I found out that the youngest sister of a childhood friend was on this flight. Her mother became a prominent advocate for more information on what exactly happened.

    • @jonslg240
      @jonslg240 Год назад +68

      Just imagine seeing the car in front of you had a turn signal on.. so you flashed your high beams at it and it blew up.
      That had to he how that one pilot felt
      "I know that wasn't me but seriously wtf??"

    • @mriconoclast13
      @mriconoclast13 Год назад +5

      ...and she has had to contend with propaganda pieces like this video.

    • @erich930
      @erich930 Год назад

      Wdym “propaganda”? Do you buy in to be the BS conspiracy theories about this disaster?

    • @weightedtraininggear
      @weightedtraininggear Год назад +26

      ​@@mriconoclast13propaganda pieces?

    • @mriconoclast13
      @mriconoclast13 Год назад +9

      @@weightedtraininggear Repeating the government explanation against almost all of the eyewitness and physical evidence.

  • @janicesmith2475
    @janicesmith2475 11 месяцев назад +67

    Just three months before this happened, we lost my nephew. We’re from Williamsport, Pennsylvania, and several of his classmates lost their lives on that flight. It was very hard for my sister, as she was friends with many of the families and was still grieving the loss of her son. The two tragedies kind of blended into one for her. 🌹

    • @hollymartins6913
      @hollymartins6913 11 месяцев назад +5

      I'm truly sorry for your loss. I remember when this happened and it was especially heartbreaking, knowing about the students and how excited they must have been. May you find comfort in the memories of your nephew.

    • @AngelWest58
      @AngelWest58 7 месяцев назад +1

      🙏

  • @neonufo8039
    @neonufo8039 Год назад +550

    the way the plane broke apart is absolutely terrifying, whether you would be in the cockpit or the main part of the plane, seeing that looks like my worst nightmare

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +29

      The decompression was likely fatal.
      ...Or at least I hope it was.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +42

      @@grmpEqweer No, decompression in the atmosphere wouldn't be fatal. It might render people unconscious, though.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +12

      @@mournblade1066
      There was another crash in which the medical examiners opined that the decompression itself killed most of the passengers. They had massive bleeding in the lungs.
      Wanting to say that was in the 50's or 60's though, and that flight was at full cruising altitude?
      ...Edit: Meh.

    • @mournblade1066
      @mournblade1066 Год назад +3

      @@grmpEqweer Huh. I guess I'm wrong then. I didn't think the pressure difference would be that great, unlike, say, going from 1000 meters deep in the ocean to the surface. Then again, physics is hardly my area of expertise.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +4

      @@mournblade1066
      Me neither, so take it with a big lump of salt.

  • @prettypuff1
    @prettypuff1 Год назад +1045

    This was a really scary period in airline travel. It felt like planes were going down regularly

    • @dOlli3cOutur3
      @dOlli3cOutur3 Год назад +62

      What’s crazy is that I survived because it was the time in my life I flew the most!

    • @Argumemnon
      @Argumemnon Год назад +145

      It felt like it, maybe, but it was still a tiny number of crashes, proportionally. Was it a statistical anomaly? Or was it a symptom of complacency in that period?

    • @TheMouseAvenger
      @TheMouseAvenger Год назад +44

      ​@@ArgumemnonGood point, & good question...

    • @doctorrobert1339
      @doctorrobert1339 Год назад +37

      @@Argumemnon With how most of these stories always go, it seems to be the later tbh

    • @TinoNate
      @TinoNate Год назад +7

      Absolutely scariest thing on first jumbo jet in that time because the failure system still unknown until so many crash & failure start to show up and they(Boeing) improve their safety step by step.

  • @ZombieSazza
    @ZombieSazza Год назад +143

    The ATC for TWA 800 is heartbreaking, you’ve the controller trying to get in contact with them over and over, other pilots telling ATC what they’ve witnessed, and eventually after ATC tries contacting TWA again one pilot saying
    “I think that was them”
    “Yeah…”
    “God bless him”
    And ATC having to carry on helping other pilots land/take off, knowing what just happened and that he can’t just stop, and the East Wind pilot having to carry on like normal because he can’t just stop

    • @Caprabone
      @Caprabone Год назад +25

      Nowadays, once an incident happens, the controller is relieved of duty for the rest of the shift. Don't know if that was standard practice for this crash

    • @AreYouABadfishToo
      @AreYouABadfishToo Месяц назад

      You should check out the audio recordings from ATCs on 9/11. They were remarkable. They are the unsung heroes of that horrible day and deserve _way_ more recognition and respect.

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Год назад +216

    Incredible though how they managed to put the plane back together again after it was destroyed

    • @crazyleyland5106
      @crazyleyland5106 Год назад +26

      This has been done quite a number of times after unsurvivable airliner crashes. Such as the one at Staines, UK in the early 70s, or the Lockerbie bombing in 1988.

    • @mundanestuff
      @mundanestuff Год назад +7

      the ocean isn't really that deep off Long Island.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +30

      ...It is a common practice in fatal plane crashes.
      However, it's still pretty freaking impressive.

    • @jarigustafsson7620
      @jarigustafsson7620 Год назад +3

      And now it has been removed for good.

    • @themidnighttavern6784
      @themidnighttavern6784 Год назад +11

      That's a very common practice in air crash investigation. My grandfather, who spent most of his career as a Boeing engineer, would reassemble the plane to the best of their ability to put together a sequence of events and the root cause of the problem. For instance, if a certain part of the plane is discovered miles away from the rest of the wreckage, that essentially tells you the plane fell apart mid-air.
      So as an investigator, you try to figure out why that happened, and how to prevent it from happening in the future.

  • @extremegrieferbible
    @extremegrieferbible Год назад +1732

    I'm not surprised that conspiracy theories about this case were running wild. This is probably the most absurdly unlikely disaster in aviation history.

    • @nordisk1874
      @nordisk1874 Год назад

      There’s no conspiracy theory it was shot down.

    • @neonwired4978
      @neonwired4978 Год назад

      there are so many witnesses that independently reported seeing a missile, nearly a hundred witness testimonies taken by the FBI.

    • @ww1ww258
      @ww1ww258 Год назад +121

      Unlikely if the plane is properly maintained but not unlikely if it’s poorly maintained, especially like TWA 800 which was not well maintained, plus I’ve seen those ‘clips’ about a missile.....and there is no missile so they end up proving themselves wrong 😂

    • @jordanmince7613
      @jordanmince7613 Год назад

      ​@@neonwired4978eyewitnesses aren't reliable

    • @SAVarXX
      @SAVarXX Год назад +65

      @@neonwired4978 i mean if you see what the plane looked like during the incident, the plane itself would have looked like a missile durring its erratic climb, problem was the eye witness reports did not match what an actual missile strike would have looked like. NTSB did missile sighting tests as part of their investigation and found that these were required but missing from reports
      -a light from the burning missile motor ascending very rapidly and steeply for about 8 seconds
      -the light disappearing for up to 7 seconds
      -upon the missile striking the aircraft and igniting the CWT, another light, moving considerably more slowly and more laterally than the first, for about 30 seconds
      -this light descending while simultaneously developing into a fireball falling toward the ocean

  • @chocolatechip12
    @chocolatechip12 Год назад +178

    What could be more horrifying than surviving the initial explosion only to find yourself shooting into the sky with empty space where the cockpit should be.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 Год назад +1

      Only no one actually remembered it so it’s irrelevant.

    • @UC32UC32
      @UC32UC32 11 месяцев назад +47

      @@johnp139it’s not irrelevant… that is a horrible way to spend you’re last minutes…

    • @fredfredburger5150
      @fredfredburger5150 10 месяцев назад +6

      seeing the sky disappear and being replaced with the ocean getting closer and closer before it floods in through the empty space like a wall?

    • @krashd
      @krashd 10 месяцев назад +17

      @@fredfredburger5150 You wouldn't see the ocean, rapid depressurisation combined with the lack of oxygen would knock most people out within a matter of seconds and those seconds would be filled with confusion, howling noise and ice cold air tearing at your skin before your brain would turn off all your senses while it tried to make sense of the situation. In other words you would quickly faint and then be dreaming all the way down.

    • @fredfredburger5150
      @fredfredburger5150 10 месяцев назад +20

      @@krashd Not entirely true, people who pass out in depressurized jets at higher altitudes wake up again at lower altitudes, around 10,000-12,000 ft. 747 Pilot Kelsey @74gear says so in one of his videos.

  • @zuitsuit80
    @zuitsuit80 Год назад +460

    I remember seeing this in the news in New York. This was the inspiration for the first “Final Destination” movie. They used actual footage of the burning wreckage in the film when Devon Sawa is watching the news at home.

    • @zuitsuit80
      @zuitsuit80 Год назад +96

      It’s creepy that the captain was named “Kevorkian”. That name was synonymous with death during the 1990s because of a famous and controversial doctor.

    • @celieboo
      @celieboo Год назад +66

      The French club, too. 😢

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 Год назад +47

      Also, 800 and 180 (the flight number in FD) both have Paris as their 'final destination'.

    • @railfandepotproductions
      @railfandepotproductions Год назад +3

      @@Dystopia1111 800s final destination was in Rome

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 Год назад +12

      @@railfandepotproductions NY to Rome, then Paris.

  • @arifhossain9751
    @arifhossain9751 Год назад +727

    As soon as i heard the FBI was involved, I KNEW they'd do something stupid.
    Hats off to the NTSB for their diligence in solving for the root causes of this accident. I hope it provided some closure to the victims' families.

    • @samhouston1288
      @samhouston1288 Год назад

      There's only two things you can trust the FBI do do without fail.
      1. Do something stupid.
      2. Be used as a political weapon.

    • @BkNy02
      @BkNy02 Год назад +121

      Intergovernmental infighting was common and encouraged within agencies back in the day but of course it comes backs to bite us on 9/11. The 9/11 Committee specifically pointed at this infighting that prevented the discovery of the terrorists' plot. This crash in 1996 would have been a warning for agencies to work together instead of against each other.

    • @neilkurzman4907
      @neilkurzman4907 Год назад +88

      The NTSB doesn’t speculate before they know. Which means they are usually more accurate, but may not come up with the actual answer for months or years.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад

      The NTSB know what the f••k they're doing on planes. The FBI needed to go back to terrorizing environmental activists.

    • @Huesenheimer
      @Huesenheimer Год назад +63

      Especially because this was only a few years after Ruby Ridge and Waco. The FBI had a terrible reputation in the 90s.

  • @christopherberry3036
    @christopherberry3036 Год назад +55

    I remember reading that autopsies on a handful of passengers revealed that they had water in their lungs, indicating they survived the explosion and crash but had more than likely been severely injured or unconscious when they were in the water.

    • @maxismills
      @maxismills Год назад

      Unlikely. The plane exploded in the sky. It would’ve been a massive drop even if they had survived the initial explosion. They would’ve died on impact. Their mouths were probably open and water got into their lungs that way.

    • @jjtimmins1203
      @jjtimmins1203 Год назад +15

      Water enters the lungs of an immersed corpse

    • @brainiacalboi9049
      @brainiacalboi9049 Год назад +13

      damn, reminds me of JAL flight 123, some of the passengers survived the initial crash but help didn’t get there in time

    • @myzacky96
      @myzacky96 Год назад +6

      MY God, can you imagine the terror they must have felt?? Unimaginable

    • @cosmicyeti6804
      @cosmicyeti6804 5 месяцев назад +2

      Yeah, I have a few FBI friends….they didn’t believe the short-circuit story. They thought it was a friendly-fire incident with the US Navy.

  • @geigertec5921
    @geigertec5921 Год назад +205

    I was on board TWA flight 500 to Barcelona which departed just an hour before TWA 800, meaning I probably brushed shoulders with many of the victims, I distinctly remeber seeing the high school students on the field trip in the airport.

  • @jacekatalakis8316
    @jacekatalakis8316 Год назад +126

    This was the second incident involving a flight numbered TWA 800, the first being 22 years earlier in 1964 in Rome. Which probably if it hasn't been done already, deserves a video too since it is just as horrifying as the 1996 one

    • @cbo3
      @cbo3 Год назад +19

      Also a crazy coincidence how the '96 crash's final destination was the same airport in Rome where the '64 crash took place.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +21

      ...So don't get on a flight numbered 800.
      ...There was a flight that apparently crashed in the mountains of Pakistan, and the crash site is still lost, somewhere in the Himalayas.
      It was flight 404.
      Plane not found.

    • @ladysilverwynde
      @ladysilverwynde Год назад +3

      ​@@grmpEqweerAm I going to hell for laughing at this? Because I think I'm going to hell for finding that darkly hilarious...

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +4

      @@ladysilverwynde
      Well, I'll be right beside you.
      I'm tacky.

  • @Margann1987
    @Margann1987 Год назад +8

    I love your videos, Kristian. They are so well-researched and you make sure to include names of victims, humanizing so many tragedies, and the cadence with which you recount these stories is very calming.
    I do not know if you take requests for future videos but I have a few for your consideration:
    - Church of La Compañía fire (Santiago, Chile; December 8, 1863)
    - Laurier Palace Theatre fire (Montreal, Quebec, Canada; January 9, 1927)
    - Transvaal Park roof collapse (Moscow, Russia; February 14, 2004)
    Thank you again for these amazing history lessons.

  • @jaylockwood5030
    @jaylockwood5030 Год назад +192

    I still remember being in the car on the way back from tennis practice, hearing on the radio "a 747 has exploded off Long Island, no survivors." I naively thought that surely someone must be swimming in the water of clinging to wreckage.

    • @kingsnakke6888
      @kingsnakke6888 Год назад +58

      The depressing comfort of childhood ignorance

    • @alastairward2774
      @alastairward2774 Год назад +30

      I was young enough to imagine the same about the Challenger Shuttle disaster.

    • @grmpEqweer
      @grmpEqweer Год назад +9

      Unfortunately, when you hit the water that hard...💀

    • @gohawks3571
      @gohawks3571 Год назад +17

      I'm just clinging to the idea that the low oxygen and g forces caused them to pass out🙏🙏🙏

    • @TheJoannalicious
      @TheJoannalicious Год назад +1

      @@gohawks3571I like the cut of your jib!

  • @sharonsmith583
    @sharonsmith583 Год назад +332

    I remember a lot of people thought it was terrorism because I think the Lockerbie crash was still on everyone's mind.

    • @charlieangkor8649
      @charlieangkor8649 Год назад +2

      I think it was, I think maintenance of airplane of this kind is terrorism.

    • @mchjsosde
      @mchjsosde Год назад +32

      ​@@charlieangkor8649the definition of terrorism requires a political motivation. If there is no political conflict which motivated the sabotage it isn't terrorism. Even if no one claims an attack, there has to be suspects

    • @miz_logo_lee
      @miz_logo_lee Год назад +18

      And that’s why the flight was held up due to a bag not matching with a passenger at first.

    • @bobwilson758
      @bobwilson758 Год назад +6

      They still do ! Many people & some authorities .

    • @michaelbeattie8106
      @michaelbeattie8106 Год назад +7

      ​@@mchjsosde What about the missile theory? Credible people saw one heading for the plane.

  • @solo.digital.gaming
    @solo.digital.gaming Год назад +51

    My mom was a flight attendant for TWA and often flew that route. She graduated in the same training class as one of the flight attendants that died in this accident.

    • @kyrafugate3365
      @kyrafugate3365 Год назад +12

      My mom was a flight attendant for TWA, and recruited new flight attendants. One day, my mom came across the a new recruit and the new recruit told my mom with excitement that she's going to Paris. That was the last time my mom saw her. I just hugged my mom 🤕

    • @jackburton2680
      @jackburton2680 9 месяцев назад

      Who cares?

  • @ethribin4188
    @ethribin4188 Год назад +295

    This is such a "pure accident" that left so little sources to find the reasons.
    These are the rarest of accidents.
    But also the most scary.
    They are the ones that "just happen"

    • @charlieangkor8649
      @charlieangkor8649 Год назад +14

      No that is not pure accident is leaving wires in poor condition where death is just waiting to happen.

    • @exsandgrounder
      @exsandgrounder Год назад +4

      ​@@charlieangkor8649The faulty wiring wouldn't have been a problem if the other issue- fuel vapours in a not quite empty fuel tank caused by running air conditioning for an hour thanks to a long delay- hadn't also happened.

    • @Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felin
      @Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felin Год назад +1

      @@exsandgrounder Just try to ignite diesel / jet fuel vapors. It's basically kerosene... (layman's terms).
      Aviation gas is an entirely different thing - think, muscle car racing GASOLINE...
      The two are so very different... yet the GovCo explanations don't mesh with reality.
      Wiring. Freaking wiring. You can put a sparking wire into diesel and have great difficulty getting it to ignite... explode? Nope.

    • @exsandgrounder
      @exsandgrounder Год назад

      @@Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felin Presumably the people at the NTSB, through some no doubt rigorous testing, found that it was possible to ignite a jet fuel vapour- air mix with a spark carried by poorly maintained wiring. Seems entirely plausible, under the right conditions.

    • @person.w9780
      @person.w9780 Год назад +5

      ​@@Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felinaight so why does the reconstructed wreckage clearly show an outward explosion in the area of one of the fuel tanks

  • @bbaskin6785
    @bbaskin6785 Год назад +85

    I recall when this happened as a child, it interrupted my afternoon cartoons, but it seemed so scary i felt nervous about it. Years later learning about how the aircraft was destroyed, the thought of those students and families trapped in the fuselage as the plane broke, and fell to the ocean still haunts me. Condolences all the families who lost their loved ones.

    • @Hobinator17
      @Hobinator17 Год назад +8

      Most everyone would have lost consciousness very early into the breakup

    • @MegCazalet
      @MegCazalet Год назад +2

      @@Hobinator17 Why would that have been? Seems to me that unfortunately unless they were mercifully knocked out by debris, those in the fuselage had time to suffer the whole horrifying thing. This was a VERY big news story, absolutely dominated the nightly news for weeks and the anniversary brought it up again each year after, basically until 9/11. The horror was dwelt on for ages, poor families. A local mother with two daughters was on board and there was even a nasty theory going around that the husband blew up the plane to murder them. The public really was demented by this crash, it was such a nightmarish event, and witnessed by so many as well.

    • @Hobinator17
      @Hobinator17 Год назад +4

      @@MegCazalet You pass out because of the force of the explosive decompression and lack of oxygen at that altitude. Along with the shock of 500 mph wind in your face

  • @TheeWandell
    @TheeWandell Год назад +13

    I have thought back to this a few times recently. My parents both worked in the airline industry and "TWA flight 800" is forever etched in my mind. Learning of the fact that planes can just never come back and that there were families who would never see their loved ones again. RIP to all those lost in this and many other tragedies

  • @Haysey_Draws
    @Haysey_Draws Год назад +71

    I was a child at this time and we were going on a once in a lifetime for us trip to Florida in Jan 97, my mom was terrified on the flight and i later found out this was why. To be fair if i'd known i'd have probably been scared to fly as well.

    • @NomadlifewithRae-ou5sc
      @NomadlifewithRae-ou5sc Год назад +4

      I was 12 at the time and the week that this had happened we flew up to MD from FL to visit our grandma for the summer , we watched all the live news coverage as it was happening my sister already had a fear of flying and this and the value jet accident didn't help.

    • @mariehdesroches191
      @mariehdesroches191 Год назад +1

      I was 15 back then and travelling from Montreal to Vancouver with my parents a few weeks after that crash. I was terrified.

  • @acheekymeesh
    @acheekymeesh Год назад +62

    Interesting fact, the eastwind plane that spotted the initial explision was the same aircraft that had the rudder hardover incident 2 years prior, that aircraft helped solve the mystery of USAir 427 and United 585

    • @rapidthrash1964
      @rapidthrash1964 Год назад +1

      Wait really?

    • @OwlRTA
      @OwlRTA Год назад +3

      Yep, but its hardover only happened a month before TWA 800. USAir happened 2 years prior

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад +3

      Same plane but a different pilot, N221US.

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад

      @@OwlRTA- US427 and UA585 had been unsolved to that point.

  • @larrydirtybird
    @larrydirtybird 5 месяцев назад +9

    I remember this so clearly. I was living in New York, and it was a huge story. I remember seeing photos of the kids from the French club who never made it to Paris in the New York newspapers. A few weeks after that plane crashed, I flew to Madrid, and the whole time I kept thinking About flight 800, because I had never been to Madrid and was so excited to go there, and it made me think of all the people on flight 800 who were excited to be visiting Paris for the first time.

  • @Mark-ux7yh
    @Mark-ux7yh Год назад +47

    man you know a channel is good when it gets over 1k views in under 15 minutes. congrats on your success, keep it up!

    • @lingricen8077
      @lingricen8077 Год назад +1

      why did you start by saying ‘man’ are you gay?

    • @patrickneil8045
      @patrickneil8045 Год назад

      I think it's because of the topic ..people are drawn to this case of the twa flight 800 ..no matter how many years have pass I think people still would like to hear a different angle on it or if some new evidence came forth .this is definitely one of the newest one,s I've seen in some time..

  • @TLGsOldTrash
    @TLGsOldTrash Год назад +234

    NTSB: “So, we have this plane crash. Let’s start investiga-“
    FBI: “TERRORISM”

    • @screenwriterjohn
      @screenwriterjohn Год назад +8

      Ha. But planes don't just fall apart in America. Except for this one time.

    • @alangrant5684
      @alangrant5684 Год назад

      @@screenwriterjohn Except they do -- planes have come apart in the skies for many reasons.
      In this case the FBI acted very unprofessionally thanks to its NY man in charge, whereas the NTSB was prudent from the get-go. The NTSB ended up solving the issue in spite of the FBI. Kallstrom had publicly stated at the onset: [quoted] "We feel very strongly that this is terrorism, without question".
      ... "without question" ... !! I know who I want leading air accident investigations.

    • @M.TTT.
      @M.TTT. Год назад +7

      Sounded like they wanted to blame a certain group for terrorism...hmmm

    • @zachmoore9974
      @zachmoore9974 Год назад

      Well when there's reports of an explosion...

    • @justrandomthings8158
      @justrandomthings8158 Год назад +7

      @@M.TTT.olympic levels of jumping to conclusions

  • @homersimpsonsfatguyhat9541
    @homersimpsonsfatguyhat9541 Год назад +15

    The summer of 1996 was wild. This happened during the Atlanta Olympics, and then there was the Olympic Park bombing. Eric Rudolph is a monster.

    • @jessicahitchens6926
      @jessicahitchens6926 11 месяцев назад

      You believe that stuff happened the way the media reported it? Sounds like priming the public for 9/11.

    • @kazamshah4543
      @kazamshah4543 11 месяцев назад +4

      The 90s were wild. Man, it all seems like a blur these days.

    • @georgeandritsakis1482
      @georgeandritsakis1482 4 месяца назад

      Don’t forget the Valujet crash earlier that year

    • @homersimpsonsfatguyhat9541
      @homersimpsonsfatguyhat9541 4 месяца назад +1

      @@georgeandritsakis1482 forgot about that. The pilots had no chance to save the plane.

    • @mediaguy4037
      @mediaguy4037 2 месяца назад

      @@homersimpsonsfatguyhat9541the plane took a nose dive into the swamps at about 800mph

  • @C2K777
    @C2K777 Год назад +208

    This, imho, is a prime example of why law enforcement agencies should be frozen out of initial investigations. The NTSB is more than proven in its ability to ensure preservation of evidence and accurate & thorough investigative work. Of course there's always reason for them to look at things afterwards but creating a circumstance where different Gov Agencies ( often with little commonality OR with so much overlap they could be 'competitors') are working to an outcome rather than trying to discover if that outcome was even a reality is always going to hamper efforts & lead to impacting the public

    • @westsidewheelmen
      @westsidewheelmen Год назад

      If only they could apply their efforts to cars.

    • @jmfong76
      @jmfong76 Год назад +5

      Although, the NTSB was formed in the late 60’s, it was normal to have other agencies assist the NTSB in the 70’s/80’s and 90’s. In the 90’s and in to the 00’s, only the NTSB is called for accidents now.

    • @DeathknightDragon
      @DeathknightDragon Год назад

      You forgot that the NTSB/FAA has proven itself just as corrupt as any other alphabet agency. They *SHOULD* be forced to have additional, local, jurisdiction to keep them in check.

    • @philipbarton3456
      @philipbarton3456 Год назад +7

      In all fairness, the US government was under a high tension. The World Trade Center had had its first terrorist attack only a few years earlier and the Olympic games were just 2 days away (which was subsequently bombed 10 days after the TWA 800 incident, to give a fair hint as to the state of tensions at the time). In retrospect an initial investigation made by NTSB would have been beneficial, but I imagine the FBI were seeking a quick response to give answers as fears would have been heightened. Not defending their actions of course, but having a clearer understanding of what was going on at the time does help to clarify the actions taken.

    • @exsandgrounder
      @exsandgrounder Год назад +15

      The FBI signed a memorandum of understanding with the NTSB as a result of this investigation, basically they agreed that they'd stay out of the way until an NTSB report suggesting foul play emerges.

  • @adriennejames9120
    @adriennejames9120 Год назад +49

    Sir, you tell these stories with such sensitivity and respect for the victims... and you always focus on the lessons learned. Thank you for providing such wonderful, thought-provoking content.

    • @MilesL.auto-train4013
      @MilesL.auto-train4013 Год назад +2

      I wrote the script. I tried to mimic his way of storytelling, and I'm glad to see that I succeeded in doing so. His voice was born for this role.

  • @TTSantiago821
    @TTSantiago821 11 месяцев назад +5

    I'll never forget this. We were coming back from europe on twa and landed in jfk the same day this flight took off to head to Europe. We were coming back from a family vacation, my mom n I going to Italy, the Uk and Paris. By the time we got home back to Michigan from JFK, this was on the evening news. I was 14 years old and had a complete meltdown. I couldn't believe it.....we were just there 😢 rip to all the lives lost.

  • @ocko8011
    @ocko8011 Год назад +73

    Ah the 90's, when planes still exploded due to mechanical failures. This story was on the nightly news for the rest of the summer that year. Looking back it's hard to imagine being one of the family members waiting on the 6 and 11 pm broadcasts to find closure.

  • @hightreason7934
    @hightreason7934 Год назад +355

    I think that the biggest reason so many people continue to insist that TWA 800 was taken down by a missile, is the sheer horrifying notion that it really could've been a freak accident. People don't want to face that possibility. It's less "predictable" than some guy pushing a button.
    For defending the "official story," I'm often accused of "burying my head in the sand" or "not wanting the face the truth" or some such sentiment. Far from it. I find the "freak accident" scenario, which happens to be supported by the known facts, to be far more disturbing.

    • @drrocketman7794
      @drrocketman7794 Год назад +18

      I remember the earlier broadcast saying that witnesses saw what appeared to be MANPADS...

    • @DanielRichards644
      @DanielRichards644 Год назад

      bet you think covid came from the wet market and the jabs are totally safe and totally effective too.

    • @jobdylan5782
      @jobdylan5782 Год назад +15

      Idk buddy i'd rather get got by an accident than get blowed up by the government

    • @KVW110
      @KVW110 Год назад +26

      I'm an aricraft mechanic, and I do know that stuff breaks without warning all the time. There are freak accidents. However, I had a boss years ago(retired Navy Chief) who made a strong enough case for me, that I have since believed in the conspiracy. Basically, there is too much controversy for me to believe this was a pure accident. Also, there are many other instances of this happening in aircraft, resulting in damage and loss of life, that are way more credible. TWA 800 gets all the attention because of how catastrophic it was.

    • @michaelallen1396
      @michaelallen1396 Год назад +49

      I've been an airline aircraft mechanic for 32 years, I've worked on planes with packs running for hours and hours in 115 degree weather, it doesn't affect anything, the air they use from the APU at about 500 degrees F is cooled as it runs through the air cycle machines (packs) for air conditioning of the plane, they are isolated from the center fuel tanks and vented to atmosphere they will not overheat the tanks. A reporter found missile fuel residue on the seat covers samples he had tested where a missile went through the cabin at the wing root, him and his flight attendant wife were prosecuted for obtaining it. There was a shock wave on the air data instruments consistent with an explosion. Planes do not climb when weight is removed from the front they stall immediately, the CIA mickey mouse video of a zoom climb to cover up the missile arc witnessed by over a hundred witnesses and a helicopter pilot is absurd. The FBI stepping in front of the NTSB gave it away, it was not an accident and their coverup is atrocious. This video is an absurd repeat of all the lies.

  • @J1995M
    @J1995M Год назад +2

    Im always so impressed by the people who investigate and can figure out that wiring was damaged before exploding and falling into the ocean. I know its a job you train for like any other but its still so impressive to me.

  • @Razer_-fe9mo
    @Razer_-fe9mo Год назад +88

    Crazy that they recovered and rebuilt the plane with wreckage from the ocean!

    • @dfuher968
      @dfuher968 Год назад

      Its even crazier, that despite them going so far above and beyond to solve this incident conclusively there are still conspiracy theorists denying the proven findings, insisting on various nefarious (and factually disproven) "explanations". Some ppl just dont want to know the truth.

    • @chillyourself5208
      @chillyourself5208 Год назад +21

      The Challenger Shuttle was also mostly recovered and rebuilt to find faults.

    • @Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felin
      @Le_Comte_de_Monte_Felin Год назад +4

      Hey, plenty of pieces to be found elsewhere to 'fill in the blanks'.
      Remain calm. Nothing to fear. Your government is watching out for you.
      Literally.

    • @Ferdrew-fj6xv
      @Ferdrew-fj6xv Год назад +1

      The amt of wk dd !!! 😮😮
      👍👍👍

    • @FoxSullivan
      @FoxSullivan Год назад +3

      It was probably due to the water being way more forgiving than solid land when something crashes on it

  • @tmomo7265
    @tmomo7265 Год назад +27

    I moved from Germany to the USA 1 day after the crash flying into JFK for our lay over we saw rescue crews pulling bits and pieces out of the water. It was terrible then our connection flight had engine trouble and we sat for hours thinking we might crash too😔 I will never forget twa flight 800.

  • @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski
    @JozefLucifugeKorzeniowski 9 месяцев назад +9

    I can't believe it was seriously considered that a naval ship had accidentally shot it down. Even when they do exercises near shore it's never gunnery exercises. They go way far out to sea if they're going to fling dummy rounds at rafts.

    • @druidriley3163
      @druidriley3163 8 месяцев назад

      Yup.

    • @NostalgicGamerRickOShay
      @NostalgicGamerRickOShay 8 месяцев назад +1

      What about a stinger from the ground? Or a stinger from a man on a speedboat?

    • @druidriley3163
      @druidriley3163 8 месяцев назад

      @@NostalgicGamerRickOShay *What about a stinger from the ground? Or a stinger from a man on a speedboat* What about it? A missile strike would still leave massive evidence physical and chemical. And they found none on the fuselage of the plane or the bodies of the victims. You know, the same sort of evidence they found on that Malaysian flight that got shot down over Ukraine?

    • @Azazel2024
      @Azazel2024 3 месяца назад

      A sub isn't " near the coast? "

    • @windsorpatb
      @windsorpatb 2 месяца назад

      Navy "Seawolf" Submarine tested a newly developed missile which was intended to lock on to a Drone being towed by a P3- Orion aircraft. Over 700 witnesses observed a smoke/flame trail ascending toward TWA800. Overwhelming evidence pointed to the missile accident. Retired NTSB investigators have admitted that the FBI pressured them to "suggest" a fuel tank problem. It is widely known, internationally as well , that the errant Missile Test was the cause of the crash.

  • @ryanhogan931
    @ryanhogan931 Год назад +16

    One of my very favorite channels. Love seeing new content. Keep up the great work.

  • @tigerwoods373
    @tigerwoods373 Год назад +15

    I'm amazed how you can continue to find fascinating and mostly unknown stories for so long. I've watched your channel for years now and it's this one of only a couple I get excited about new uploads.
    Great work as always. Appreciate all the hard work you do.

    • @-bubby9633
      @-bubby9633 6 месяцев назад +1

      I mean tbf this one isn't mostly unknown. TWA 800 is one of the most famous aviation accidents in all of history - it's the only plane that's every just exploded in mid air due to technical issues.

  • @danc3488
    @danc3488 11 месяцев назад +14

    I am from Long Island. I was on my way to karate class that night and I remember this so well, as it was immediately on the radio news shortly after it happened. I had always wondered about the "missile trail" theory. Of course, the FBI had to screw things up with the "explosive residue" report. They just couldn't wait for the NTSB to finish their own investigation...

    • @MontyGumby
      @MontyGumby 6 месяцев назад

      I was working summer job as waiter in posh E.Hampton that summer I would often go fishing, even at night. After this happened, no more fishing.

  • @seandelap8587
    @seandelap8587 Год назад +5

    I always make sure to tune in on Tuesday mornings and I'm never disappointed

  • @imtheprofessor
    @imtheprofessor Год назад +67

    I know they’re rare and so many safety issues are in effect because of incidents like this but man human error still terrifies me with planes.

    • @v8matey
      @v8matey Год назад +14

      One of the most terrifying plane accidents that scares me. Is the auto pilot light blew on the console.
      They accidentally turned it off thinking it was on.

    • @caraiya
      @caraiya Год назад +9

      ​@@v8mateyAnd the one where a pilot actually lit his teenage kid take the helm. 😠

    • @themidnighttavern6784
      @themidnighttavern6784 Год назад +4

      ​@@caraiyaOr the one where a thrust reverser turned on in flight, and air crash investigators said it was so violent, that the only way to survive would have been to fix the issue in 6 seconds, after that, all hope was lost.
      Or a mid-air collision where the air traffic controller caused the crash by giving pilots the wrong instructions to avoid a collision with the other plane.

    • @v8matey
      @v8matey Год назад +2

      @@themidnighttavern6784 Also that accident where the window seals or screws were wrong. And the pilot ended up being outside of the cockpit during flight. And was only survived by his copilot holding onto his ankles.
      British Airways Flight 5390.

    • @themidnighttavern6784
      @themidnighttavern6784 Год назад +4

      @@v8matey Terrifying for sure. But at least everyone survived.

  • @maivaiva1412
    @maivaiva1412 8 месяцев назад +10

    People's inability to deal with the uncomfortable reality that bad things sometimes happen without anyone being behind the scenes, secretly in control, is really wild.

    • @IrinaZumba
      @IrinaZumba 4 месяца назад

      Okay, but sometimes there's evidence that points to that. No one has a hard time believing that sometimes bad things happen. That's an outrageous claim. Possibly because you can't imagine a world where powerful people and governments do evil things for their own benefit and have the power and resources to get away with it. 🤷‍♀️

    • @relton66
      @relton66 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@IrinaZumbait ain't that deep
      The whole world isn't out to get you

    • @IrinaZumba
      @IrinaZumba Месяц назад

      @@relton66 not the whole world. Greedy evil people are not that many, but they weild a lot of power. A topic I'm sure you're well versed in. 🥴🥴🥴

    • @relton66
      @relton66 Месяц назад +1

      @@IrinaZumba this wasn't a shoot down. It was a freak accident.

  • @rheverend
    @rheverend Год назад +18

    I remember flying TWA to Spain a couple years after this happened. It was still heavily on our minds because there had been so much news coverage.

  • @ancientmaverick13
    @ancientmaverick13 Год назад +12

    This is a fantastic breakdown of an incredibly complex investigation. Well done.

  • @Muonium1
    @Muonium1 Год назад +1

    The most important outcome of the disaster isn't even mentioned! After the cause of the explosion was identified, the NTSB required all new aircraft built after 2010 to have center tank fuel inerting systems installed which continuously purge the headspace above the fuel with non-flammable, inert nitrogen. All aircraft built after 1991 were required to have these systems retrofitted onto them by 2017. It is now impossible for an accident like this to happen again on commercial jet aircraft.

  • @morgank5942
    @morgank5942 Год назад +53

    I didn't know that the initial incident in Final Destination was inspired by an actual tragedy. How sad for everyone involved! Thank you for covering this.

    • @Classycar
      @Classycar Год назад +3

      I was just thinking about that

    • @lunayoshi
      @lunayoshi Год назад +5

      Yep. Glen Morgan and James Wong were going to make it an X-Files episode, but they left the show before it could be made, so they just made it into a movie instead.

    • @robloxgirlwithadog
      @robloxgirlwithadog 9 месяцев назад

      I watched the clip. I am not getting on an airplane anytime soon.

  • @Miss-Kitty-Cat
    @Miss-Kitty-Cat Год назад +12

    I remember the Mayday episode on TWA 800, such a complicated case. I'm impressed you got all that info into 11 minutes! The Mayday episode is worth watching, but I don't think there'd be any new info in it.

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад

      That’s what surprises me about this and also The Flight Channel.

  • @ceejayrox23
    @ceejayrox23 Год назад +1

    Now the delay of a flight where we had to disembark and wait back inside the terminal makes more sense. Well done, Kristian. This accident was always a mystery til now.

  • @SonicKoolaid
    @SonicKoolaid Год назад +45

    This is the crash the first Final Destination film is based off of and easily one of the most terrifying plane crashes in history. I can't even imagine what those poor souls on board went through in their final minutes...

    • @ats-3693
      @ats-3693 Год назад +8

      ​@@sharp14xThe explosion blew off the front section of the aircraft which then continued to climb upwards until it stalled and then tumbled down and broke up, other than a few sitting near the front who would have either been killed instantly or rendered unconscious by the fuel tank explosion the majority of the passengers would have been left sitting in their seats looking forward through the gaping hole where the cockpit and forward galley used to be and would have experienced the entire climb, stall and aircraft breakup, it would have been a horrific last few minutes before they died.

    • @smorris281
      @smorris281 10 месяцев назад

      The only problem is, this wasn’t a crash, it was a mid-air explosion.

  • @haileybalmer9722
    @haileybalmer9722 Год назад +21

    I remember when this happened. It was a breaking news sort of situation, and every network was basically saying it was probably a terrorist attack. When it became clear it probably wasn't they got bored and stopped reporting on it. As a result, I was under the impression that flight 800 was taken down by a terrorist organization until just after 9/11 happened. Everyone kept saying nothing like this had ever happened, and I was like "what about that TWA flight in the 90's?"
    Yeah, the news was pretty good at getting us riled up back then, too. I was a kid, but it worked pretty well on adults.

    • @DanielRichards644
      @DanielRichards644 Год назад

      "back then" the television "news" has never been about facts, it's about getting people scared into watching or anger watching, you wanna see some things that will make you question the mainstream media's ethics? See how many of the shows that tell you the jabs are safe that are sponsored by Pfizer, try to get the names of the 100 media organizations the Joe Biden presidency paid to promote the jabs, then watch the selective edits of things Trump said vs what he actually said, take the part the media uses to brand him a racist where in reference to Charlottesville he said "there where very fine people on both sides" but then the media cuts the very next line where he says "and i'm not talking about the neo-nazis and the white supremacists they should be condemned totally", the media is not your friend, they are highly politicized and only care about their agendas and how they can spin things to push their views.

  • @bvb3546
    @bvb3546 Год назад +16

    The French club that was on TWA 800 is from my home town. It was really devestating for our small town. It still affects many today. Montoursville still doesn't have teach French, 27 years later.

  • @AquariusSoul
    @AquariusSoul Год назад +15

    Being from LI, NY I remember when this happened. Absolutely devastating. May all who perished be at peace.

    • @AC-ih7jc
      @AC-ih7jc Год назад

      Same here. I remember coming home from roller skating that night. Some of the monitors at the rink had been tuned to the news and had been showing clips of the crash, but there was no way to tell if the plane had come down in New York, New Delhi, or New Guinea.
      it wasn't until I got home to see my mom watching this on the news that I found out that it had happened only ~50 miles away.
      Such a tragedy.

  • @hippopharm
    @hippopharm Год назад +22

    Good job telling this story. Could you cover another plane crash, EgyptAir 990? Love your channel.

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад +1

      If you want that, perhaps AT630, TM470, and 4U9525 should be covered as related as well as MS990. All are suspected to be suicide by pilot. In fact, unlike here, the NTSB said it was handing over the investigation of MS990 to the FBI.

    • @shawnmiller4781
      @shawnmiller4781 Год назад +1

      If he doesn’t that his channel will get banned in Egypt.
      Their are still hypersensitive to the concept a pilot from their national airline could dive an airplane in

    • @basshead2003
      @basshead2003 Год назад +1

      How about Swissair Flight 111? One of my parents’ friends was among the first people out on the water searching for any survivors. He saw some pretty gruesome things. 😢

    • @hippopharm
      @hippopharm Год назад

      All of these suggestions are good ones. I hope they get covered in future stories on this channel.

  • @valeriemangan2064
    @valeriemangan2064 Год назад +9

    I remember this like it was yesterday, as a Long Islander. Tons of boats went out to the wreckage to see if they could find help or find anyone. The stories of the victims were incredibly sad. This one will always hit close to home.

    • @chrismorrison7
      @chrismorrison7 Год назад

      What were some stories of the victims? I’m just finding out about this

    • @valeriemangan2064
      @valeriemangan2064 Год назад +1

      @@chrismorrison7 I’m thinking of a story about a man who put his wife and 2 little girls on the plane, and was going to join them the next day. That one always sticks in my head.

  • @QT5656
    @QT5656 Год назад +86

    I seem to remember there were eye witnesses who claimed they saw a missile shooting up. It was later determined that what the witnesses saw was probably the back of the plane shooting up after the explosion. I was in school when this disaster happened. I couldn't remember it until the fuel vapour was mentioned. Horrific.

    • @QT5656
      @QT5656 Год назад +11

      @@diegofondoo1780 thanks yeah, the theory that the US Navy shot it down accidentally is mentioned in the video. It doesn't surprise me that some people thought it was a flare. It's really hard to judge size and distance when looking up at the sky.

    • @BertPaulson
      @BertPaulson Год назад +5

      Maybe what they saw was just swamp gas and a weather balloon

    • @QT5656
      @QT5656 Год назад

      @@BertPaulson True for at least 95% of the witnesses but that last 5% is always difficult to completely dismiss... 👀

    • @ae2948
      @ae2948 Год назад +5

      People in different locations on Long Island all thought they saw the plane destroyed by a missile. There were even videos. "The back of the plane shooting up after the explosion" doesn't disprove the missile theory at all. Or the bomb theory.

    • @Cory_Springer
      @Cory_Springer Год назад

      There's a reason eyewitness testimony is one of the weakest forms of evidence.
      Human sight, perception, and memory are all very flawed.
      Studies

  • @connorredshaw7994
    @connorredshaw7994 Год назад +24

    The students on the twa800 became used somewhat in the first final destination movie along with footage of the burning debris you see in the film on Alex's TV after the crash.

    • @bufogeist
      @bufogeist Год назад +8

      I love FD, and I knew the movie was based on this crash, but isn't using the footage just disrespectful as shit to the victims?

    • @lingricen8077
      @lingricen8077 Год назад +1

      @@bufogeistThats americans for you

    • @connorredshaw7994
      @connorredshaw7994 Год назад +2

      ​@@bufogeist when you see the footage of the burning debris I thought the same thing honestly a bit disrespectful since over 200 people died.

    • @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
      @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid 10 месяцев назад

      @@bufogeist Kinda, but also meh.
      Someone who gets upset over things like that = someone who's just looking for a reason to get upset.

    • @PikAvr502
      @PikAvr502 7 месяцев назад

      Isn’t that the movie that all shows them burning while breaking apart?

  • @lanafonseca5565
    @lanafonseca5565 Год назад +1

    This was really well put togeter and concise , thank you for telling this story.

  • @momv2pa
    @momv2pa Год назад +8

    I can remember seeing this on the evening news. All those lives lost. How terribly sad.😢

  • @aceckrot
    @aceckrot Год назад +21

    My Tuesdays always begin with "I wonder what today's Fascinating Horror story will be?"
    This is a disaster that I am well aware of, so tragic and frightening. I can't imagine the horror the victims must've experienced in those final moments. And to think that this disaster may never have happened if the passenger and their bag hadn't been identified as a mismatch.

  • @Cameatsmarbles
    @Cameatsmarbles 4 месяца назад +2

    So glad this got recommended to me 4 hours before my flight

  • @molybdomancer195
    @molybdomancer195 Год назад +7

    When I was a kid in 70s I did a lot of international air travel due to my dad’s job. I remember flying TWA and PanAm both of which are no more.

  • @HoshimachiNova
    @HoshimachiNova Год назад +18

    I remember watching a documentary of this accident made me fear being inside a delayed flight with the aircon running.

  • @nuevoHughHoney
    @nuevoHughHoney 2 месяца назад +1

    I've said it before and I'll say it again: TWA 800 is a perfect example of Occam's Razor- the simplest explanation is likely the correct one

  • @michaelroloson2389
    @michaelroloson2389 Год назад +12

    When I was in the military back in the 80's I flew a lot of miles. Mostly on Delta. Now when I see things like this I think WOW, and count myself blessed. May they all RIP.

    • @lingricen8077
      @lingricen8077 Год назад +2

      …ok? how is that relevant?

    • @michaelroloson2389
      @michaelroloson2389 Год назад +3

      @@JohnfromWaterFrontVillige My comment was an example of how anyone that has flew just takes saftey for granted. If you ever got on a plane I am sure you have done the same thing.

  • @RepresentWV
    @RepresentWV Год назад +5

    I work on airplanes it's a pretty brutal job unfortunately. Wiring and sheet metal get corroded on jets and that's why they have to be on a continued airworthiness maintenance program to inspect stuff every so often. They also don't put wires in the fuel tanks anymore and always route wires above water lines when possible. This 747 is brought up very much in training, especially with electrical systems. I want a different job.

    • @lt.frankdrebin3317
      @lt.frankdrebin3317 Год назад +1

      My first thought is WTH would you run wires through a fuel tank? Unless it's through a vapor-tight conduit...

  • @benjaminlambert8944
    @benjaminlambert8944 Год назад +1

    Finally! I remember this crash so vividly when I was working July ‘96 renting bikes in a park as a 15year old. The news fascinating, so much confusion.

  • @Esteban69129
    @Esteban69129 Год назад +6

    I was active duty military in the NYC area when this happened. A few of us where tasked with making several thousand boxed meals for the first responders on short notice. Terrible tragedy.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot Год назад +60

    This air disaster was definitely the inspiration for the airplane explosion and crash on the first Final Destination movie.

    • @Crochet_kitty
      @Crochet_kitty Год назад +2

      That's what I was thinking.

    • @wolpertingera5829
      @wolpertingera5829 Год назад +14

      Although the filmmakers always denied this there are interesting parallels. My guess is they had to say "Of course we didn't took this as an inspiration" because it would have been in bad taste.

    • @harryx3424
      @harryx3424 Год назад +3

      Well, if you look into what the plane had to go thrugh throughout the whole accident sequence you could say the passengers of TWA 800 went through much more horrible stuff than the movie depicts the crash.

    • @nigelmurphy6761
      @nigelmurphy6761 Год назад +8

      Not only that but the footage that you see of the burning wreckage in that movie is the actual burning wreckage of TWA 800 too. Absolutely horrific

    • @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid
      @ThisHandleFeatureIsStupid 10 месяцев назад

      @@wolpertingera5829 They used TWA800 wreck footage *in the movie.* lol

  • @Khanjikai
    @Khanjikai Год назад +3

    I couldn't watch this one. Coming from Montoursville and knowing some of the deceased students, this story breaks my heart. I'm glad lessons were learned, but I miss my schoolmates.

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 Год назад +6

    Remember that event well. The time that it took for the NTSB to arrive at their conclusion seemed interminable. Excellent video (as always). Thanks!

  • @Pawzeez92
    @Pawzeez92 Год назад +4

    Your channels awesome and I find your voice soothing cheers brother 😊

  • @daonlyzneggalz7522
    @daonlyzneggalz7522 Год назад

    I swear, some people complain about various channels covering the same aircraft accidents/incidents, but the more I watch, I realize there are some new things that I didn't hear in other videos (such as the fact that 800 was originally supposed to be flown by a 767- to think that if that plane didn't have an issue, this may not have occured!). Keep it up, and definitely staying tuned for more!

  • @thefisherking78
    @thefisherking78 Год назад +4

    Thank you for publishing this. I had never heard the final explanation, despite being mystified by this incident and even going back to look for info on it years later. The sensational speculation is easier to find than the plausible explanation given here.

    • @nancyharman4795
      @nancyharman4795 7 месяцев назад

      Likewise, I heard about the crash at that time, but not until decades later have I finally learned the details of what actually caused it. I'm grateful to this channel for the exposition.

  • @marcialynn3469
    @marcialynn3469 Год назад +4

    Hola from Baja. Good video! The entire Paris Gay Men's Chorus was on this flight, having competed in San Jose International GALA festival, I also performed in (solos)with Ft Lauderdale's Lambda Chorale. The flight crashed over my Mom's house on Long Island. She had plane parts in her pool. She gave me her miles the next day, and refused to fly afterwards. I flew t Paris...

  • @Vintagecharm57
    @Vintagecharm57 Год назад +1

    Thank you for this video. I remember all of the rumors and disinformation. You gave a succinct and factual accounting of what actually happened.

  • @MilesL.auto-train4013
    @MilesL.auto-train4013 Год назад +26

    Dangit Kristen, I was just about to go to bed XP
    This one was hard to write, prolly the hardest script I've written. Hopefully, it gets the point across.
    TWA is one of my favorite airlines, and the details surrounding this incident are certainly something to behold.
    Also to everyone commenting it, yes, this served as a partial inspiration to Final Destination's own plane crash, combined with Pan Am 103.
    Edit: the amount of people pandering the missile theory is dumb but expected. It wasn't a missile, cope.

    • @tifKh
      @tifKh Год назад +1

      Well done

  • @RuhrRedArmy
    @RuhrRedArmy Год назад +6

    It can't be understated the amount of experience in that cockpit

  • @JulesMarsTM
    @JulesMarsTM Год назад

    I've been binge-watching your videos over the past few days. Love them! 🩷

  • @koltinn
    @koltinn Год назад +12

    There were two Norwegians onboard the plane named Lars and Svein
    So Lars was a drummer with Norwegian Travelling band and instructed at a achool and Svein was a bus driver, helped with baggage and loading instruments but was not a musician also was Lars's neighbour.
    They were on holiday, supposed to arrive before the band but couldn't get tickets so they extended their trip by three days after the band was due to leave
    They was in Midwest for 14 days in Minneapolis but went to see New York and flew back on the TWA 800.

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Год назад +1

      I know this is horrible to say but the way this read, initially I thought it was going to be a joke.

    • @iracingaussie
      @iracingaussie Год назад

      They could of got married these days. Born 25 years too soon.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 Год назад

      Do you want to build a snowman ☃️?

    • @iracingaussie
      @iracingaussie Год назад +1

      Correct this is a made up joke, because all plane crash videos have about 90% of the seats on board, being related to various comments posted, from people BSing that they knew victims. So come out and joke around with the liars on here I say 👍🏼

  • @petercarioscia9189
    @petercarioscia9189 Год назад +7

    I grew up on Long Island, maybe 20 minute drive where this happened. Was such a wild time. Drove by the memorial more than a few times (it's quite off the beaten path)
    I was only 11, but I remember the news reports quite clearly

    • @DannielleK-cg9vl
      @DannielleK-cg9vl Год назад

      What do you mean off the beaten path? It’s right next to the main road when entering smith point park

  • @cadoo5591
    @cadoo5591 Год назад +16

    I think this is considered the most horrific plane crash ever because of the passengers being aware of what was happening.

    • @nursepatience8876
      @nursepatience8876 Год назад +1

      This crash was without a doubt terrifying for passengers and crew but watch Japan Airline flight 123😢

    • @depalma13
      @depalma13 Год назад

      They didn’t know what happened. Almost all were killed instantly and the few that did survive the explosion were instantly knocked unconscious.

    • @johnp139
      @johnp139 Год назад

      @@depalma13And none of them have any memories of this so it’s irrelevant.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Год назад +2

      The Alaska airlines that lost flight control off pt magu, CA….they flew inverted for a while. I mean upside down in the cabin? Also that one that got got hit by a vertical stabilizer over Switzerland…they had a long crash.
      There was also one that hit 6g in a recover attempt, I mean six g is a lot for a sustained time….or the suicide Egypt air one…a nice 30,0000 fr dive, tearing the plane apart from aerodynamic forces….

  • @belphy205
    @belphy205 Год назад +9

    I remember watching the air crash investigation episode of that. The futility as the pilots tried to pull up not knowing that there was no plane to answer their inputs is sad. They tried

  • @littlejogger95
    @littlejogger95 Год назад +23

    If you want a more detailed video on this incident, I would recommend The Flight Channel. His flight simulator recreation videos are top notch 👍🏻

    • @Dystopia1111
      @Dystopia1111 Год назад +3

      Good recommendation. The Mentour Pilot and Disaster Breakdown channels both put out some good 'when aviation goes wrong' content as well.

    • @AEMoreira81
      @AEMoreira81 Год назад

      I had watched this before there. The Eastwind pilot was the first one to say that he thought TW(TWA)800 went down.

  • @ButterBallTheOpossum
    @ButterBallTheOpossum 8 месяцев назад +2

    When i was a small kid i witnessed a small plane lose power and crash into some trees near my families property. I remember it was fathers day and by the time i got to the crash site the families of the men killed were all there screaming and crying. The men aboard were skydivers and were wearing skydiving jumpsuites but their bodies were so mangled i remember thinking that it was a sleeping bag filled with something heavy but when i saw the helmet i realized it was a man. My neighbor was a school nurse and pronounced all of them dead. I was the only witness that actually saw the plane crash from that side of the runway so i was interviewed by a blonde woman from the NTSB. She was so sweet and caring I'll never forget how much better she made me feel.

    • @gcrichman53
      @gcrichman53 8 месяцев назад

      What year did you witness the plane crash, what state and city was it and how old were you?

  • @djpeekay25
    @djpeekay25 Год назад +12

    I remember when this happened. The controversial theory was that the US army shot it down by mistake.

    • @dapeach06
      @dapeach06 Год назад +6

      Navy, not army

    • @djpeekay25
      @djpeekay25 Год назад +1

      @@dapeach06 yes, you are right. I stand corrected.

  • @marilynkirby-roach187
    @marilynkirby-roach187 Год назад +4

    How terrifying it would be sitting there in your seat and all of a sudden you just see the first half of the plane fall way and all you see is sky for a brief few minutes.

  • @kyleshockley1573
    @kyleshockley1573 Год назад +5

    If this is what happened, it goes to show that even trace amounts of a substance can lead to a false positive of sorts. Which in turn leads to a rush to declare something definitively or to oversell a theory, due to the agency involved having their own wheelhouse bias in formulating certain kinds of conclusions.

  • @patrisha3
    @patrisha3 Год назад +5

    I was on a flight to Peru. “The captain came on & said 3 people have checked their luggage but have not boarded the plane, we r now in the process of removing their luggage” scary ❤️🇨🇦

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Год назад +1

      I’ve been through this than once and I never felt it was scary. It’s almost always caused by a baggage handling mistake by the airline or by a passenger screwing up and not getting to the plane in time for whatever reason. Either way the plane won’t go anywhere until it’s resolved.

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 9 месяцев назад +2

    RIP
    To the passengers and crew of TWA Flight 800

  • @marcelosoto-quiroga1965
    @marcelosoto-quiroga1965 Год назад +8

    I remember this tragedy and how it was strongly believed as a missile attack at least during the first weeks.
    On a side note, in less than 3 months it will be the 40th anniversary of the Byford Dolphin disaster in the North Sea. Perhaps having a video of that tragedy on this channel would be a respectful tribute to the 5 workers dead on that day (Nov-4-1983).

    • @emilyanderson9559
      @emilyanderson9559 Год назад

      yeah people saw the rocket. fired by 2 guys in a small boat as i recall, this was debunked many years ago

    • @jayjaynella4539
      @jayjaynella4539 Год назад

      I have heard about that and it would be great to see a video on it.

  • @robertartac1853
    @robertartac1853 Год назад +3

    Records from maintenance indicated multiple write-ups for flickering lights on the engineers panel, where the fuel flow indicator is located. The lights were described as flickering as lights would on an out-of-phase AC circuit. The exact wiring bundle was later located and the point of arcing identified and was indeed AC high-voltage generator current arcing to the low-voltage lighting system for the engineers panel.