Sheer Will vs Thin Air: Analysis of Jon Krakauer and Yasuko Namba's locations after 3:30PM

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  • čas přidán 20. 05. 2024
  • Compares Michael Groom's account in Sheer Will with Jon Krakauer's account in Into Thin Air of the time period between 3:30PM and 7:30PM on May 10, 1996.
    Significant differences exist between Groom and Krakauer's account, and Krakauer has changed his story over the years. It appears Groom's version is accurate with Krakauer having invented his version to push Yasuko further up the mountain so that it is not obvious that he abandoned her on the descent.
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Komentáře • 275

  • @michaeltracy2356
    @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +8

    Take the poll on Krakauer's book: www.youtube.com/@michaeltracy2356/community

  • @wildmanmountainjack3725
    @wildmanmountainjack3725 Před 2 měsíci +58

    That last line is so heartbreaking. Yasuko was so close to the tents.

  • @krispykremes2482
    @krispykremes2482 Před 2 měsíci +82

    God. You can see why Namba's husband couldn't accept the version of events he was told.

    • @QED_
      @QED_ Před 2 měsíci +2

      Cultural expectations probably different, too. I'd be interested in having someone speculate about that . . .

    • @christopherreinsmith1401
      @christopherreinsmith1401 Před 2 měsíci +5

      ​@@davidschneide5422Well, he did know, they were behind him, somewhere! He knew, who was on his team! Obviously, the storm, was the major problem! No doubt! But, we weren't there, so its hard to say!

    • @simbalantana4572
      @simbalantana4572 Před 2 měsíci +6

      My heart breaks for her husband.

    • @maddog8004
      @maddog8004 Před měsícem +15

      I was a young climber when „into thin air“ came out. It was a good read but own experience cast a shadow of doubt about Krakauers accounts. If you are a hero person trailblazing, fixing ropes assisting others you don't just hide in a tent and wait it out while around you people fight for their lives help others or die. Krakauer used all his oxygen he was panic sucking bottle after bottle Yasuko Namba had a full bottle (Groom) and was fine even outpacing him (Timeline) . I always wondered if he got his second „wind“ by abandoning Yasuko and taking her Oxygen bottle to save his own live thus his behavior of making up false statements not even remembering her in his book. No he lied and hid in his tent until the storm was over hightailed down the mountain to spread his narrative of the events.

    • @lightnesstraveling
      @lightnesstraveling Před měsícem +19

      There is a very strong and tight Japanese mountaineering community. Yasuko's story actually goes back to another, more famous Japanese mountaineer who disappeared on Everest in about the same area where she perished, in the winter of '82. She created the "Everest Club" in his memory, and that was where she and her husband met. Unfortunately, as the Japanese social landscape is very private, she was an easy target for Krakauer's misogyny.
      In 1997, her husband had her body brought down the mountain by a team of Sherpas. In a ceremony attended by her husband, she was cremated at the base of the mountain.

  • @georgetrue6660
    @georgetrue6660 Před 2 měsíci +81

    As a lifelong mountaineer (now in my early 70's) I have always been fascinated by anything to do with high altitude mountaineering in general and Mt Everest in particular.
    I vividly remember reading Krakauer's article in Outside and the subsequent book as soon as it was published. It was not until several years later when Anatoly Boukreev's book became available that I first realized that many things were seriously wrong with Krakauer's version of the 1996 events. In my view, Boukreev was not only the finest high altitude alpinist who ever lived, he was also a genuine hero who selflessly risked his own life multiple times that night, and did not deserve the scathing criticism leveled at him by Krakauer.
    Please continue with the yeoman's work you have performed with this series of videos in which you have been setting the record straight about the Mt Everest events of 1996.
    The truth matters just as much now, some 28 yeats later, as it did back then. Keep up the good work.

    • @jfern6673
      @jfern6673 Před měsícem +2

      This man was a reporter or something, journalist or tv host.. He came along for a trip of a lifetime, and to get some work done.. He was faced with choices, most likely the same choices faced by Rob, Fisher, Harris,.. Save someone else while trying to save yourself, or, do what you can to get yourself down.. Now we can hate on Jon cause he decided to save himself, while the rest of them get respect cause they all perished? but somehow its just not the same, because they are on Everest, and in that place, its agreed before hand, you do this at your own risk.. to have agreed as a group its at your own risk, to then come back later to debate if it was right or wrong, is wrong to me, the agreement was done so the climb started, if they did not agree to that, there would be NO climbing correct?..

    • @vanzell1912
      @vanzell1912 Před měsícem +4

      Krakauer was a climber before he ever tried his hand at Journalism. He was a very experienced snow and ice climber. The evidence is that Krakauer abandoned the 90 pound Yasuko.

    • @rabarbarum
      @rabarbarum Před měsícem +4

      @@jfern6673It's not even that he left her, it's that he lied about it. Over and over and over.

  • @guernica4262
    @guernica4262 Před 2 měsíci +100

    So Krakauer and Yasuko are descending. Weather gets bad and Yasuko is going slower than Krakauer would like. He panics, worried about getting caught in storm and takes off, leaving Yasuko by herself. After the fact, he distances himself from Yasuko to hide the fact that he left her on the mountain. Does that sum it up pretty well?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +33

      Yep

    • @troopieeeeee
      @troopieeeeee Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@michaeltracy2356 Were they still together when Jon ran into Beck then?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +29

      From Grooms account, he sent Krakauer and Yasuko down before he went up to help Rob. That would be when Krakauer ran into Beck, as he and Yasuko descended. That is another problem with Krakauer's story. He claims he was in front of Groom and Yasuko, but then stopped, had a conversation with Beck and found his old oxygen bottle, and yet Groom was till too far behind him? Doesn't really make sense either, but the video was getting too long as it was and Krakauer hearing the radio call and Krakauer referencing Groom's account are enough to understand what he did. Krakauer's interactions with Weathers also have several different versions and Beck's account is not reliable -- he has Bidleman show up. I just took Beck's account as a rather confused estimate of what happened and it is not useful to compare to others. Groom was pretty lucid, was working the radio, and has a consistent account that makes sense. Groom then came back down, went over to Adams and then saw Krakauer and Yasuko down below -- so by that time, Krakauer's conversation with Beck was over. Immediately after that, Groom encounters Beck.

    • @teijaflink2226
      @teijaflink2226 Před 2 měsíci +20

      What a nasty person he seems and a lier.

    • @maryswinehart1247
      @maryswinehart1247 Před 2 měsíci +14

      Krakauer makes it pretty clear early in the book the contempt he has for anyone that he thinks doesn't measure up.
      I remember reading Into Thin Air when it first came out and still being horrified that he just gave up and collapsed.
      Lots of respect for Bukorov

  • @iR3vil4te
    @iR3vil4te Před 2 měsíci +51

    Naturally, it’s all Sandy Pittman’s fault.

    • @vanzell1912
      @vanzell1912 Před 2 měsíci +19

      Yes. I suppose Sandy must have been screwing around with a Quija Board at base camp.😂😂

    • @FabricofTime
      @FabricofTime Před 2 měsíci +39

      I heard Sandy made the blizzard with her espresso machine. Plugged it right into the Hillary step and tried to froth the snow. Can you believe it?

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +4

      ​@@FabricofTimelol!

    • @Tina06019
      @Tina06019 Před 2 měsíci

      Yeah, what a convenient target Sandy Pittman makes, it seems everyone needs to take a jab at her.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +14

      @@Tina06019 I think people here are joking. Most of us have discovered she was a competent climber who was scapegoated.

  • @jjzap2935
    @jjzap2935 Před 2 měsíci +22

    Thank You Michael. I always appreciate your rational & unbiased thoughts especially on this tragic event!
    Since that time I've been trying to figure out how my "brother from another mother" Scott Fischer didn't come home. My last words when dropping him off at SEA-TAC airport "make it happen, have fun and see you when you get back" .

  • @2468bidw
    @2468bidw Před měsícem +20

    ‘an unorthodox passing move….” Pure Australian humour there

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 24 dny

      Or british understatement

    • @2468bidw
      @2468bidw Před 23 dny

      @@Bamboule05 sure, if only Groom was British & not Australian.

  • @geniexmay562
    @geniexmay562 Před 2 měsíci +28

    Thank You for putting this all on record. Anatoly Boukreev is the greatest Hero.

  • @momo1momo
    @momo1momo Před 2 měsíci +21

    I remember reading Krakauer's account when it was first published and thinking it a fine example of journalism. Forgive me for the sins of my youth.

    • @simbalantana4572
      @simbalantana4572 Před 2 měsíci +4

      I enjoyed the book, too. He tells a good story.

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 24 dny

      Am also guilty of buying the book snd hence adding to his wealth. Never again.

    • @johnnomcjohnno1957
      @johnnomcjohnno1957 Před 20 dny

      @@Bamboule05 Not me. I borrowed it from the library!

  • @QED_
    @QED_ Před 2 měsíci +36

    "Boukreev's book *The Climb* expressed profound regret at [Namba's] lonely death, saying that she was just a little 90-pound woman, and that someone should have dragged her back to camp so she could at least die among her companions. On a later expedition to Everest with the Indonesian National Team, Boukreev found Namba's body on April 28, 1997."

    • @lightnesstraveling
      @lightnesstraveling Před měsícem +16

      He also placed stones over her remains to protect them from scavenging birds and the elements, and collected some of her belongings that had been scattered in the wind. He later met her husband in a tea house to return what he had collected, to explain what he knew, and to apologize for not having rescued her. Infinitely more compassion than Krakauer, if not at least commitment to the spirit of mountaineering.

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 24 dny +1

      I doubt there are any scavengers at this altitude, but I get what you mean.

    • @lightnesstraveling
      @lightnesstraveling Před 24 dny +1

      @@Bamboule05 I've always thought the same. But "alpine chough" get blamed for the tissue-less conditions of exposed faces, and they've been filmed eating garbage in Camp IV. Perhaps just the effects of wind, and blowing snow and decomposed granite?

    • @paulhicks7387
      @paulhicks7387 Před 6 dny +3

      @@lightnesstraveling RE AB's apology, she wasn't even part of his tour. That he felt the need to apologize speaks volumes. Re Jon versus AB. Jon's gripe is that instead of going down alone and resting AB should have stayed and helped. Which is Jon's subconscious admission that he should have stayed and helped Yasuko. Somewhere in one of his vids MT reported that Jon did write that he felt bad about some things, plural. Taking as given that one was his report that he misidentified Andy Harris. Pretty sure that the second one is Yasuko.

  • @user-fm4hd3zw3q
    @user-fm4hd3zw3q Před 2 měsíci +35

    I don’t fault Krakauer for his actions on the mountain. Everyone is at the very edge of life and death up there so taking a decision to go on ahead and taking responsibility for himself and removing himself from needing to be saved is correct.
    Building narratives at the expense of others is what he deserves criticism for. Narratives that turn out to contradict and/or not be supported by objective evidence.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +4

      Agree. The story itself was compelling. He either is a jerk, or gave in to having the book tweaked.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem

      Particularly when at that point as far as Jon knows Groom, Hall and Harris will all be coming down after him to collect stragglers as was their jobs! Unknown to him, Rob and Andy are doomed due to decisions Rob made regarding Doug Hansen and a major storm is coming. Noting here it has been established post these events that Rob and Scott had knowledge prior that a bad storm that day was a high possibility.

    • @alexiell10
      @alexiell10 Před měsícem +4

      @@Tenebarum and what a character development there would be if he had said the truth - mysogonistic ashole thinkin he is better than others because he has the power of pen and paper redefines himself and becomes mysogynistic ashole coward who actually have a power because he survived and pen and paper is very powerful weapon and you can portrait yourself as a hero trying to safe some lives helping those who passed because they cannot debunk things you are saying... That might be a draft character to my first book :D "Every similarities to living people is accidental"

    • @paulhicks7387
      @paulhicks7387 Před 6 dny

      If you haven't aged out and there is ever another draft, well, hopefully you fail out but if not, please flee the country. Go and learn what this means, No one gets left behind.

  • @WinnieCPT
    @WinnieCPT Před měsícem +13

    Wow. Accepting this version makes the rivalry/hatred between Krakauer and Boukreev so easy to understand: no wonder Krakauer, who abandoned his teammate, hated Boukreev, who seemed to do the same at first but then went back out, risked his life, and saved a bunch of people.

    • @baze3SC
      @baze3SC Před měsícem +7

      ...maybe Krakauer felt a bit guilty and he subconsciously blamed Boukreev for not saving Yasuko? It's pure speculation but it sort of makes sense. Technically speaking it wasn't even Boukreev's job to look after Adventure Consultants' clients, though obviously in a survival situation that's not the main concern.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +3

      @@baze3SC it wasn't Jon's job to look after Yasuko either. He would have assumed that Rob, Groom and Andy Harris were all on their tails and would gather the stragglers in the group as they came down. As Rob told Beck he would do and as was their job as guides! Whilst I understand Michael's angle in the video I think it is wrong to extend that to indirectly blame Jon for Yasuko's death. She was a fellow climber who had slowed down and Jon needed to push on. All the clients were under the responsibility of Rob and his guides. Rob meanwhile was making poor decisions higher up regarding Doug Hansen. Decisions which directly contributed to the deaths of himself, Doug and Andy noting that if not for the storm I reckon no-one dies at all.

    • @baze3SC
      @baze3SC Před měsícem +4

      @@davidgeisler9885 These are valid points and I even stated in another comment that I don't blame Krakauer for wanting to save his life. However, it's interesting to note that Rob Hall is portrayed as a tragic hero in his book whereas Boukreev is described as a neglectful guide. Although deeper analysis shows that Rob's decisions also contributed to the tragedy, perhaps even more so than Anatoli's.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +1

      @@baze3SC Anatoly’s actions in racing back down solo and waiting to be called on to help rather than actually helping with the descent do seem strange to me too. I know that’s a whole other debate. Maybe not for here!

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 23 dny +2

      @davisgeisler Boukreev had worked all day, securing ropes at the hillary step and preparing the trail through deep snow to the summit. He had to rest, and rightfully so. He was a very experienced high altitude mountaineer, I had the impression he was much better at preparing the climb than his boss, he thought ahaid.

  • @7phyton
    @7phyton Před měsícem +9

    These videos are excellent research, and as far as I can tell, accurately illuminate key details of the events that actually occurred. But I am struck again, as I was back in 1996/97, at the utterly chaotic and disorganized guiding situation. Clients going up, down, every which way on their own or in combination with other people. Guides either sticking (responsibly) with one client or another, never mind about the other clients in their party; others just climbing up or down, staying unnecessary HOURS on the summit when there is a storm coming (whether they knew it or not - there is ALWAYS a storm coming in the high mountains). Telling people to do one thing or another (e.g., telling Beck Weathers to just stay at a particular spot, period), without any contingency plan or schedule. It's so incredibly random. To me, utterly incredible for a guiding organization or individual guides to run a climb this way. Finally, multiple guides and clients left other people on their own on several occasions through the whole saga, both on the way up and down. Unless at risk of imminent incapacity and death yourself, as long as someone is on his or her feet, you just do not leave them out in the mountains. Period.

    • @Tommykey07
      @Tommykey07 Před měsícem +5

      Yep. With Hall recklessly taking Hansen to the summit and then Andy Hall going up to try to help Rob, two of three Adventure Consultants guides were unavailable to help the rest of the clients.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +3

      exactly right. I think Jon being just a client was not there to save other clients. If Yasuko started to flag she and Jon may have concluded quite reasonably that Groom, Harris or Hall would soon be down to collect stragglers. Meanwhile as we now know Hall and Harris never came back down and that blame lies surely with Rob. Rob made a decision regarding Doug that then lead to Andy going back up and the flow on effect was Rob's clients not getting the expert guiding down they needed.

  • @michaelamans2780
    @michaelamans2780 Před 2 měsíci +19

    Great analysis, impressive and amazing amount of work you must go to to put your videos together. I hope Krakauer sees these.

  • @thebeccafly
    @thebeccafly Před měsícem +6

    More! More! More! I am not a climber and yet am forever captivated by documentaries and acted-out recreations of actual expeditions. It must have been the moment the motion picture Everest was released, that a non-climbing climbing fan like myself first caught wind of what controversial and contradicting stories had been told of what happened on the 1996 climb; particularly the climbing community bitter that the film mostly relied on Krakauer’s version. NEVER have I seen such detail by detail, side by side; moment by moment, comparison as you have so clearly done in these series of videos. I am subbed and notifications filled in and just waiting for your next one! Thank you for all this info and making it so easy to follow along. 🙏🏼💜

  • @PaulFurber
    @PaulFurber Před 2 měsíci +17

    This is a remarkable piece of detective work Michael, perhaps your best yet. And I have devoured all of your previous videos.

  • @rabarbarum
    @rabarbarum Před 2 měsíci +42

    Wow...just wow. Jon Krakauer is a fucking weasel.
    Seriously, man. Thank you for these videos. I've been looking for a solid analysis of this topic for years, ever since I got hooked on mountaineering stories. Read and reread Into Thin Air, The Climb, and After the Wind over and over, until I learned it by heart. I even went to obscure climbing forums from the 90s (thus discovering Cesare Maestri's saga of Cerro Torre). And things still didn't make sense.
    Parts of Into Thin Air always felt theatrical or fake. Krakauer's literary persona is ever at the forefront, and other people are turned into familiar archetypes. Sandy Pittman is easy to stereotype as the dilettante, almost like the shrieking dolled-up woman from Indiana Jones: The Temple of Doom (thanks for addressing this misogynistic bullshit!). Boukreev was made into the Russian brute from Rocky IV. And Krakauer's own account of getting stoned in Katmandu after the tragedy is very similar to the opening scene of Apocalypse Now.
    It's hard not to notice how he distances himself from his fellow climbers, how he tries to assume the role of a guide, as if to prove that he's better than all this commercial mess of paid Everest expeditions. Even though his own presence as Rob's walking, talking publicity machine was the most commercial part of it all.
    And yet questions remain, big and small.
    How come that the biggest tragedy of Everest at that time also involved an embedded journalist ready to record it? How did his presence impact Hall and Fischer's behavior? Or anybody else's for that matter? Kasichke writes that "the sense of betrayal by Rob was very real".
    Why does K. completely gloss over his own collapse on the Southeast Ridge? It wasn't until I read Kasichke's book when I realized how serious it was, and that Groom probably saved his life there.
    Why was it gravely irresponsible for Boukreev and Lopsang to not use oxygen, but when Mike Groom eschews his to help Jon Krakauer, sudenly that is no longer to be "overly concerned" about?
    Why tf was Yasuko left alone?
    Why does K. treat the fact that Harris apparently make him lose his oxygen like no big deal?
    Yeah...
    His attitude towards Boukreev is also egregious. Look, I'm Polish, and we don't exactly love Russians around here recently, but I can totally relate to the cultural alienation B. must have felt around Americans. And it has nothing to do with "coddling the weak". In Central and Eastern Europe we show respect by being serious, acting distant, avoiding small talk, underpromising, and understated praise - almost like the Japanese. That was even stronger in Soviet times. The American culture of Pan Am smiles, thank-you notes, chit-chat and referring to everything as "fascinating", "amazing" and "blessed" must have been completely unintelligible to an introverted, scientifically-minded, direct Russian guy. It's also evident that Krakauer found the language barrier frustrating (same with Lopsang), and that he didn't cut non-Westerners any slack. To the contrary, he weaponized this as much as he could.
    I could go on but I'll stop here. Good stuff, man. Glad I discovered this channel, and looking forward to watching the M/I story now.

  • @timmethy
    @timmethy Před měsícem +4

    I read Krakauer's original Outside article (on the internet) and have watched a lot of the videos since the CZcams algorithm decided to hook me on this. He was there to write an article on the pitfalls of commercial Everest climbs vs the advantages of experienced, trained climbers who can act much more as a team than can paying customers. He certainly made that point pretty clearly, which was his job.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +4

      Certainly, that was his job, but it is less clear whether that was reality. Doug Hansen was, by Krakauer's own account the type if "experienced" climber who was "supposed" to be there. And yet, he is the one that caused all the deaths. Krakauer went there with an agenda, and he wrote about it even though the real story was sort of the opposite of what he was saying. But people like the "inexperienced climber" myth. So, give the people what they want.

  • @benbishop4197
    @benbishop4197 Před 2 měsíci +12

    This is absolutely fascinating stuff!

  • @ComfortingColourlessLight
    @ComfortingColourlessLight Před 2 měsíci +11

    It is really sad that in all the recent videos I saw about that event nobody but you mentioned the contradictions anout the decent or the oxygen story...

  • @Gollumfili
    @Gollumfili Před 2 měsíci +2

    So glad I found this channel, but now I've binge watched all the videos I'm hungry for more.

  • @somjasa
    @somjasa Před 2 měsíci +5

    I appreciate the work you put down gratefully and looking forward to learn and get new insight about these tragic events.
    I'm shocked to find out so much "everything but the truth tape-salad" going on, to hide selfish reasons in high altitudes. It feels like "Into Thin Air" been held up and shaken, making all letters falling down into something looking like a broken cuckoo's nest...
    I'm happy you sort them out.

  • @Cromwellbear333
    @Cromwellbear333 Před 2 měsíci +8

    Always fascinating and insightful.Thanks.

  • @KitsuneVoss
    @KitsuneVoss Před 2 měsíci +24

    If you can save another's life, paying or not, it is your duty as a human being. I understand that if you are concerned about your own safety, I understand it is a tough choice. I am sure Krakauer's brain was not working. If he said that if he thought he would die if he stayed with Namba, right or wrong, I would understand. I respect Simon Yates not denying that he cut Joe Simpson's rope for his own survival.

    • @samiamgreeneggsandham7587
      @samiamgreeneggsandham7587 Před 2 měsíci +8

      Well put. But I suspect that Krakauer’s editors wouldn’t have liked their author acknowledging responsibility for a somewhat understandable failing like this. Can’t risk sales revenue suffering from the potential readership’s dim view of the author’s morals.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +10

      ​@samiamgreeneggsandham7587 I'm not sure he was wrong for leaving her, but did he need to paint her as incompetent and lie about her in his book?

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +7

      @@Tenebarum I suspect Jon K will take the details about his descent with Yasuko to his grave. If she'd hit the proverbial wall and began collapsing in his presence, he'd likely have remembered to include that detail in Into Thin Air. More plausibly, she hit that wall after JK was no longer in her vicinity.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +10

      @brucerorty4014 Yes. But he did lie about her abilities. He said she didn't know how to use crampons. Now in 1996 the average person would believe that. But the average person today only has to Google which of the seven summits require crampons. Since Denali is one,We can deduce she was familiar with crampons.
      Beck said there were people up there who did things they weren't proud of. I wonder if he was speaking of Krakauer . Seems like the guy spent a lot of time sniping about amateur climbers, yet when the shit hit the fan, he became one of them.

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +5

      @@Tenebarum The upper reaches on Denali's W Rib Route require solid cramponing skills. Vinson, too. Yasuko was very competent but maybe a tad slow. That's a good deduction about Beck, he didn't want to point a finger specifically. And ditto for Yasuko's husband not publicly calling anyone out that I'm aware of. It's said that Carlos Castaneda's books gradually came to be viewed as fictional, but still meritorious. The same cannot be said for ITA, where many lies sting,

  • @vanzell1912
    @vanzell1912 Před 2 měsíci +3

    As always, your new issue is interesting and well done.

  • @TJTurnage
    @TJTurnage Před 2 měsíci +3

    Yes! So glad to see this video drop.

  • @user-mi3rw9lo7s
    @user-mi3rw9lo7s Před 2 měsíci +15

    Krakuer spends the first 2/3rds of his book saying how he’s the best climber out there, then the last 1/3 about how he somehow became the most debilitated.
    None of his book stands serious analysis like this. Good work!

  • @johngraves2185
    @johngraves2185 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Super sleuth at it again, amazing work! His actions seem more like that of a novice at best, but knowing he was an experienced climber and fully capable to help, but chose not to, makes it even worse in my book.

  • @hllok
    @hllok Před měsícem +1

    This is really great investigative work. I caution listeners to consider the likelihood that the ‘truth’ of precise events is full of nuance and subtly in survival situations, especially at altitude.

  • @jonnyjoe119
    @jonnyjoe119 Před 2 měsíci +8

    It never ceases to amaze me how captivated people (including myself) are by the 96 storm. It always stuck out to me that JK made it down before everyone else he summitted with. Not because I found it suspicious, just that he made it out fine. I did think he went way overboard in his criticism of Anatoli. He does the same thing to the kid in into the wild. Its such a gross and needless habit of his, criticizing deceased people. Someone else in a comment somewhere said it well about thin air and how his writing style is the main character. Its actually not hard to picture him, skilled as he is, abandoning Namba to save himself. This is a heavy accusation though. I wonder if JK will respond.

  • @jackharle1251
    @jackharle1251 Před 2 měsíci +7

    Love the analysis. Keep up the great work.

  • @VashStarwind
    @VashStarwind Před 2 měsíci +5

    I just picked up The Climb, think im gonna give it a read. This stuff's pretty cool to learn about

  • @digitaurus
    @digitaurus Před 29 dny +3

    My understanding is that empathy is one of the first cognitive functions that is affected in the Death Zone, presumably due to the debilitating effects of altitude. In addition, people typically become focused on their own needs primarily when facing a life-or-death situation. Finally, the guides clearly had a higher duty of care than the clients; Krakauer was a client, not a guide, even if he wasn't paying out of his own pocket.
    The difference between Groom's understanding, that he was sending Namba down with Krakauer, and Krakauer's explanation, that he was descending on his own with Namba (and Groom?) following behind, can simply be a combination of mutual misunderstanding and Krakauer's fight-or--flight tunnel vision by this point.
    All of this helps understand why Krakauer (perhaps) behaved in a manner that seems callous in the cold light of day. I suspect that I would have behaved no better and it's impossible for me to condemn a person given that likelihood. Krakauer never helped his case, however, by his criticisms of Anatoli Boukreev and Sandy Hill Pittman which were startlingly ill-judged given his own profoundly unheroic actions on the day.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 29 dny +3

      All good, but simply "talking past" what I put in the video. I explained all of that. What you should address is why Krakauer didn't say, "I remember descending alone with out Namba., However, Groom has a different recollection of us descending together." The only way a reader of Krakauer would be able to learn the important lessons you offer about "empathy" and "memory" is if they also purchased and read Groom's account and had the wherewithal to spot that the point of departure of of Krakauer and Namba differed significantly in the two books.
      But Krakauer not only did not do that, he strongly implied to his readers that his account and Groom's account agreed when he criticized Boukreev for not including it. So, you need to state why Krakauer criticized Boukreev for not including it when Krakauer didn't include it himself. Perhaps talk about "empathy." And note that Krakauer did not write his book at altitude.
      You should also address Krakauer's statements that his book reflects what really happened. “Anyone who goes to that movie and wants a fact-based account should read ‘Into Thin Air.’” Krakauer did not talk about empathy and poor memories . Even almost 20 years later, Krakauer was still saying his book has the "facts." It does not.

    • @digitaurus
      @digitaurus Před 28 dny

      @@michaeltracy2356 Thank you so much for replying - I really appreciate it. The only written source on this incident that I have consulted is Graham Ratcliffe's "A Day to Die For", which I read because I know his climbing companion from that expedition. They were stuck in camp 4 on the night of the storm. That account is very strongly "pro Boukreev", criticises Krakauer for just collapsing in his tent instead of (at the least) telling others what was happening, and is most focused on the possibility that the IMAX team and at least one of the commercial teams had access to a storm weather forecast and didn't pass it on. Otherwise, I am afraid I am reliant on you for untangling the facts, which you seem to have done admirably.
      You ask me to speculate on why Krakauer didn't point out that he and Groom differed in their recollections. Your analysis seems pretty good and I don't want to be criticised further just for repeating what you have already said. Regarding Boukreev, I have no time for any of Krakauer's criticisms of Boukreev, this one included. In my eyes and, more importantly, the eyes of his fellow professional mountaineers, Boukreev was a hero who died tragically early, and is unable to be here to defend his own reputation.
      I have never read Krakauer's "Into Thin Air" and have no interest in doing so. I watched "Everest" when it came out but focused on it as a fictionalised representation of a tragedy, not as a documentary.

  • @darrell3752
    @darrell3752 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Groom and Krakauer ... it really gets to the heart of the Namba descent matter. My view is that, in general, Krakauer did not have a responsibility to Namba or any other client because he was neither a Guide or Team Leader. Did Krakauer have Groom's blessing to head out ahead and by himself leaving Groom ( a guide ) and the Team Leader ( Hall ) and Harris ( guide ) to caretake any stragglers? Only those two know whether Krakauer had Groom's approval. One factor that is potentially not in Krakauer's favour is Groom giving his Oxygen bottle to Krakauer. Was getting additional oxygen an implied change in role for Krakauer ( Groom may be implying to Krakauer ... here's my oxygen buddy, "now I have none" so you better use the Oxygen wisely and also help the other climbers because, with no Oxygen, my ability to help/guide goes down considerably ). We are guessing how Namba was left alone. Groom knows. It is up to Groom to either say exactly how Namba ( his charge ) was left alone or say that it is in the best interest of all to leave 1996 matters alone. The finger would point to either Krakauer ( not a guide ) or to Groom ( a guide ). Left unsaid is that all of Fischer's team and client's survived except for Fischer ( Fischer went into the climb overly tired and perhaps somewhat sickly is my understanding ) while Hall died, his guide Harris died and two of Hall's clients died. On top of the deaths on Hall's team, Hall's client Beck Weathers was left for hours and hours and hours standing around in the death zone awaiting Hall to return to him to guide him down. One has to come to an understanding that Hall struggled to lead that day thus his team and guides did not get the leadership the situation required.

    • @lightnesstraveling
      @lightnesstraveling Před 23 dny +1

      I think the question is whether Krakauer was using a spare oxygen bottle that otherwise could have been given to Namba, putting him into a position to assume some responsibility for her safety. Krakauer has never elaborated on how he ended up with oxygen after running out earlier, and no one else was willing to more than suggest where he acquired it.

  • @WWIIPacificHistory
    @WWIIPacificHistory Před 2 měsíci +9

    So why did Sandy Pittman abandon Yasuko like that! 🤬

  • @JohnDavidHays
    @JohnDavidHays Před 2 měsíci +21

    I believe in veritas as a supreme virtue, and as a practical necessity. This analysis sounds devastating and it sounds dishonorable. I would like to hear or read a response from Mr. Krakauer.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +26

      When Satan calls up and wants to borrow my down suit, I'll know Krakauer responded.

    • @msbeecee1
      @msbeecee1 Před 2 měsíci +11

      Wouldn't everyone like a response from Krakauer, but we'll likely wait until hell freezes over...

    • @jjzap2935
      @jjzap2935 Před 2 měsíci

      Krakauer is a putz & a coward. Yasuko's husband & family deserve to know the truth.

    • @allenleclerc7878
      @allenleclerc7878 Před 2 měsíci +5

      Absolutely. There’s no way you can recount that experience with pinpoint accuracy. Really enjoyed the video but I’m having a hard time understanding what the beef is. I read both books and it’s easy to notice that both authors were doing what they had to do. Incredibly life-threatening situation. You weren’t there. Let it rest bud.

    • @Jessiedoesyoutubee3838
      @Jessiedoesyoutubee3838 Před 2 měsíci +1

      What are his socials? I'd love to get a lot of people to ask him his response.

  • @FreshSalad645
    @FreshSalad645 Před měsícem +5

    Hearing these discrepancies is so interesting because I'm pretty sure the only version I ever heard was Krakauer's. I was always a bit skeptical of his views on Sandy Pittman, maybe it's because I'm a woman, but I always felt like she was getting flack for no reason. I also never understood Rob Hall and Doug Hansen's death. I've never been up there, but as far as I remember, the reason I heard was that Mr. Hansen had tried the climb numerous times and had put all of his money towards his dream of climbing Everest. He was somewhat super determined to keep going and Rob Hall was doing him a favor or took pity on this man who had a hard time climbing, and decided to keep going up with him to support him, even though it was too late in the day. A decision that can seem kindhearted, but I thought that it was a fool's decision, especially for someone as experienced as Mr. Hall.
    I do have a question because I'm not sure if it wasn't explained or if I didn't hear, but what was the stunt/prank thing they wanted to do on the summit? Was it just never explained clearly what really went down?
    Thank you for the videos, it's very interesting to listen to. As always, it seems like the words of those who have the least to gain or lose seem the most trustworthy.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +2

      What the stunt was remains a mystery. However, the importance of it is that people clearly knew about it and yet chose not to write about it. From this, Krakauer was not this great investigative journalist out to write the cold hand truth. The cold hard truth was full of simple explanations and was not that interesting. Instead, he ignored the "stunt" and numerous other major factors to present a "nuanced" view that only he could help the reader understand. A pure work of fiction that followed his earlier writings about other climbs -- in that earlier work, a former Soviet Union climber is also the butt of the joke -- Adrian the Romanian in his earlier work. He just used that same character developed to write a complete work of fiction that ignored the rather simple analysis of what happened.

    • @eljimberinoq5518
      @eljimberinoq5518 Před měsícem +2

      @@michaeltracy2356 can one assume the stunt involved some unnecessary object that Fischer carried to the summit?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +6

      ​@@eljimberinoq5518 Very likely. Fischer was very slow on the ascent for unknown reasons. Various "explanations" have been offered for this such as his being tired, having a stomach virus, etc. However, these are noting but speculation and "heard from a guy who heard from a guy."
      Curiously, the photos taken by Fischer show he was descending fairly quickly up until around the South Summit where he collapsed. If he were "tired" or had a "stomach virus," it is unlikely such a condition would simply disappear once he reached the summit so that he could descent so quickly. Instead, if he was carrying something for the stunt and he discarded it on the summit, it would explain the following : (1) why everyone stayed on the summit waiting for him for so long (2) why he climbed so slow and (3) why he was able to descend so quickly.

    • @eljimberinoq5518
      @eljimberinoq5518 Před měsícem

      @@michaeltracy2356 Makalu Gau the climber probably knows...

  • @michaelmyers7416
    @michaelmyers7416 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Hindsight. Groom should have short roped Namba to Krakauer. I was on a winter climb once and had the leader short rope, one of the climber to me on the descent because the team had just helped him come back from hypothermia

  • @davidgeisler9885
    @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +4

    I am struggling here with the blaming of Jon for the plight of Yasuko when we know that above them Rob, Andy and Groom were getting caught up in a tragedy of most likely Rob's causation due to decisions he was making regarding Doug Hansen. I think it is reasonable that Rob's clients would have assumed that if they were struggling they could sit put and get helped down by Groom, Andy and Rob. Rob in fact told Beck to wait for him. This may in fact have been what they were told before they started. To say in hindsight that Jon could have known that Rob and Andy would never return to help anyone is a little unfair. So many elements went wrong that day but to me I always turn the spotlight on the guys running these shows.
    Then remember the storm hit in all its fury after Jon has completed his climb and it was the storm that was the cause of Yasuko then dying due to her, like others, getting trapped on the south col not knowing where camp was.
    To say that all comes back to actions of Jon hours earlier feels like unnecessary.
    Also, it sounds like many climbers past Yasuko and "left her". All would have assumed Rob and Andy would have taken care of her when they were arrived.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +12

      There is no "blaming of Jon for the plight of Yasuko." There is blaming Jon Krakauer for claiming to be an investigative journalist and then providing either a false account which contradicts Groom's account or blaming Boukreev for not using Groom's account when Krakauer claims it is not accurate. You probably need to watch the video again, as you seem to have missed the point.
      Jon Krakauer criticized Boukreev for not using Groom's account --- that is what kicked off the video. That is why I made the video. Not because of something Krakauer did in 1996 while cimbing, but because of something Krakauer wrote in 1999. What he wrote is that Groom's account was accurate and be blamed Boukreev for not including it because, according to Krakauer, it would make Boukreev look bad.
      Ok. Great. I accept that as true. Groom's account is accurate -- just like Krakauer says. And it makes Boukreev look bad -- just like Krakauer says.
      However, Groom's account makes Krakauer look far worse. In Groom's account, Krakauer abandoned Yasuko. Ok. No problem, that was all Rob Halls fault, or no one's fault. No one said Krakauer was supposed to save Yasuko. What Jon Krakauer did say is that he reported honestly. And that is simply not possible if Groom's account is correct.
      The criticism of Krakauer is not that he abandoned Yasuko. It is that he wrote a book purporting to be the truth when it was not. He then criticized someone else for not accepting Groom's account when Krakauer himself has a completely different account from Groom. I then explain why I believe Groom's account and state that Krakauer fabricated his account in order to avoid telling the hard truths about why he abandoned Yasuko.
      This was not something he did on the mountain. He had years to think about it, had an editor, and he had a copy of Groom's book. At the very least, he should have said, "I don't blame Boukreev for not including Groom's account because Groom's account is completely false as it has me descending with Yasuko when I left her over a hour prior to that." He didn't write that. Instead, he wrote that it was accurate and he remembered seeing something that he could not have seen if his own original version was accurate.
      Many other people passed Yasuko and left her. The difference is that they were honest about it. That is why I read the last line from Beidleman. He left Yasuko. No questions asked. He left her. Tough call. But, unlike Krakauer, he told the truth about it. That is what this video is about. It is that Krakauer's version is not accurate and he told everyone it was.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +4

      @@michaeltracy2356 At some point in the video you say things like Jon "abandoned" her and imply she would have lived had Jon stayed with he, ie he was responsible for her death. I am not sure that's a fair assessment of his role on the day and what he knew at the time.
      Your premise is that Jon's actions are explained by him wanting to hide that he left Yasuko. When I would question whether that is anything he needs to "hide" because that implies he did something wrong by continuing onto camp.
      I think Jon as a climber and client was perfectly in his reasonable rights to push on down if he felt able to rather than hand hold a fellow client, risking his own life, knowing the actual guides whose job that actually was were meant to be following down soon. Instead stupid decisions were being made by those guides higher up the mountain. Rob;'s clients were stranded ultimately by Rob who got himself stuck too high with a sick client he could not get down.
      If not for the storm I think Yasuko survives because then Rob and Andy would have descended to help. If for the storm but not for Rob getting Doug to the top I think Yasuko also survives again because Rob and Andy are present to do their actual jobs!
      I am happy to rewatch the ending as I admit I did miss your point about Beidleman.
      I take your point that Jon may have felt that his actions regarding Yasuko, whilst reasonable, could have been construed differently and may wish spin a version that suits.
      My view on books about that day is that ultimately everyone may have a motive to spin things in a certain direction because everyone involved would feel guilty regarding what they could have done differently. But also that memories and are shaky and events were traumatic and chaotic. Everyone is telling their version of events without there being one agreed source of truth we can judge any one story against.
      But I appreciate you probably agree with all that and instead are commenting on Jon's subsequent actions as a writer.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +9

      There is a difference between "spin" and "fabrication." Spin is to put a certain emphasis and analysis on facts. That is not what Krakauer did. Instead, he fabricated a version so that he did not have to spin anything. In his version, he left them at the steps below South Summit and just went down to his tent. Nothing to explain. Nothing to spin.
      In contrast, Krakauer did "spin" Rob Hall's mistakes. This is not surprising because Rob Hall was paying Outside Magazine who was paying Krakauer. So, when you follow the money, you will find some spin. In Krakauer's book, he glosses over the fact that Doug Hansen turned around below the Balcony. Before the sun came up, Doug Hansen was headed back to his tent. Rob Hall talked to him and convinced him to re-turn back around and go for the summit. Exactly what was said in that conversation remains a mystery, but whatever was said, it killed Rob Hall, Andy Harris, and Doug Hansen. That Krakauer just glosses over this single biggest mistake is an example of "spin." He does not fabricate a version where the conversation doesn't take place.
      It is the extensive amount of "spin" that Krakauer puts on Rob Hall's decisions that I will cover in a future video. But it all relates back to the fact that Rob Hall was paying for Jon Krakauer to climb. The reason people are unhappy is that Krakauer presented his book as a type of "unbiased" account of the "truth." And upon some detailed analysis, it is an extremely biased fictional account that was "paid journalism." As people realize that, their views on Krakauer's writing change. If you read through some of the comments, people are not too happy with the "spin" Krakauer placed on things.
      In terms of different people remembering things differently and it not being possible to figure out what happened, you can simply look at Rob Hall. We know exactly when he summited. We know exactly when he left the summit, with whom. We know exactly where he died. He know exactly when he called for oxygen. We know exactly who moved what and when and where. Absolutely nothing about Rob Hall's climb above South Summit is in conflict with anyone. There is one version and only one version. And yet, he, Andy Harris, and Doug Hansen all died. So, it is not that difficult to figure out what happened as long as Krakauer is not inventing things. We have photos of the entire day. We know where Sandy Pittman was the entire time. Nothing Krakauer says is accurate. As soon as you throw out Krakauer's fabrications, there is only one version and everyone agrees on it. Seriously -- give it a try.

  • @ailroe9357
    @ailroe9357 Před 2 měsíci +7

    U the 🐐 on this topic

  • @darsynia
    @darsynia Před 9 dny +1

    FWIW, during the interview when Jon says 'we' got the first radio call, I always took that as a kind of collective of the people who were farther down the mountain. I recall Ed Viesturs commenting on getting radio calls from the group trapped farther up from their lower camp, and he said something like 'we got a call' but he wasn't in the tent at the time. I'm with you on a lot of these arguments, but that one just sounds like a quirk of language. 'We' for Jon could have been anything from 'the group of us that weren't stuck up top,' 'the survivors,' or any number of things, IMO.

  • @JoeRadFlyBoy
    @JoeRadFlyBoy Před 2 měsíci +4

    @Michaeltracy2356 I've always watched, read, and visualized through other people on mountaineering. And those having the balls to do it. I admire those that can, those that do, and those that have tried and lost. But someone that claims and steals the work of others is damn wrong. Plagiarism goes both ways, through work or writing. You bring light and transparency to your sport. Thank you Sir

  • @zztops489Y
    @zztops489Y Před 3 dny +1

    Well, it's really easy to condescendingly, in the LIGHT of day, to have opinions (when the wind is not gusting in the 70s, you are cold etc). And, just btw, it is rare, almost unheard of to find statues raised in honor of a critic.

  • @baze3SC
    @baze3SC Před 2 měsíci +2

    Excellent analysis. I wouldn't necessarily blame Krakauer for wanting to save his life. These decisions come at a cost and survivor guilt is part of that. It's more about the fact that he "upgraded" the story to make himself look better.

  • @juanignacioordoqui7539
    @juanignacioordoqui7539 Před 2 měsíci +5

    For future videos I recommend the 2008 K2 disaster. Still not clear what happened .

    • @domesticterrorist483
      @domesticterrorist483 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Indeed, lots of conflicting statements there, some make no sense at all.

    • @Garde538
      @Garde538 Před 2 měsíci +3

      I second this, K2 content is so interesting

  • @lukebrown3390
    @lukebrown3390 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Why do you think Krakauer made so much of it up? Guilty conscience maybe?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +33

      For the Yasuko stuff, yes. But ultimately, Rob Hall had a deal with Outside Magazine for advertising space. Into Thin Air is just a very successful "product placement" book that is loosely based on actual events. As Rob Hall was paying for Krakauer to be there, it is not surprising that Rob Hall's team comes out looking better than Scott Fischer's. Fischer having refused the exact same deal Rob Hall signed up for.

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@michaeltracy2356 From a "product placement" perspective, ITA successfully glossed over [more like ignored] the 3 vs. 4 summit day oxygen bottle dichotomy. My homework assignment = pick up Sheer Will and see if it mentions the 3 vs. 4 bottle dichotomy? Groom, JK, and Andy Harris all ran out of O's for periods of time on the descent before nightfall.

    • @simbalantana4572
      @simbalantana4572 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@michaeltracy2356 Well the product placement worked, because Rob Hall has somehow been put on a pedestal, despite the facts.

    • @janepipkin8139
      @janepipkin8139 Před měsícem +2

      @@michaeltracy2356 Krakauer originally had a deal with Fischer then abandoned it when Outside tried to negotiate a cheaper price with Rob Hall. Not good of Rob Hall there either.

  • @winkieblink7625
    @winkieblink7625 Před 2 měsíci +7

    I loved the book when reading it at publication almost 30 yrs ago. I’ve read ALL of his books and find him an exceptional story teller. Over the years discovering how Krakauer changed much of the narrative on Into Thin Air during the horrific days in 1996….he NEVER openly talked about why. He wrote a story to SELL A BOOK omitting the MOST PROFOUND PART that HE WAS LIKELY PARALYZED with fear unable to go the extra step(s) for whatever reasons to help others and hide in his tent, (explaining years later he went thru years of PTSD due to the climbing experience) to a shameful existence he’s had to live with ever since. Telling the truth about “himself” during the climb just might have earned him the Pulitzer Prize. He short changed the story AND his personal integrity. Sad.

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 23 dny +1

      Now imagine him descending with Yazuko, running out of oxygen while the japanese lady still had a full bottle. If he took it from her, he would have had a much easier descend ahead of everyone else, which he did. And he would never be able to tell the truth, which to this day he didn't.
      But looking at his character, it would actually be possible.

  • @mykofreder1682
    @mykofreder1682 Před 2 měsíci +7

    He is trying not to look bad, but Krakauer is not a guide, and they were together yet still independent in getting back to camp. He could have got desperate or lost his sense of the situation in the mind fog and lost her. There were a lot of stragglers like Weathers and Pittman, if I were in his boots I would have thought it unnecessary to assist her. There was Groom, Fisher, Hall sweeping up the stragglers, all plans of sweeping inexperienced stragglers back to camp went up in smoke when the 2 leaders of the expedition dropped dead on the mountain like 2 armatures. He didn't want to put blame on the dead leaders/hero's for dying and I suspect it was survival and assumptions the experienced guys will clean things up that caused him to not play hero with a disabled straggler without oxygen. He had a hero and villain narrative, with the dead people are the hero's and the guide that descended the villain. The truth is the one thing worse than descending without helping is being a burden and resource sucker by not descending at all and making calls for help. He looks bad 20/20 hindsight but with all the guides above him he should not have been needed. He should have told his story and state of mind, but it would have made the guys who died look bad for abandoning their responsibility, their responsibility is more important than summiting or dragging a dead man to the summit 3 hours late. Bring back yourself and clint, give him his money back if you feel bad, neither has any feeling about summiting or money dead. The feeling of summitting or money come later and not at the desperate survival moment, if there is no later what is the point.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +1

      well said. I think some are taking the Jon criticism way too far. He was not responsible for Yasuko and he had no way of knowing Rob, Scott and Andy were going to die up there later on and not be able to help clients down.

    • @tonydrennan4948
      @tonydrennan4948 Před měsícem +2

      ​@davidgeisler9885 if you choose to create a narrative of criticizing others("inexperienced climbers"), then you certainly aren't above criticism yourself and the major distortions don't help him in the least. You can think it too far, maybe others don't....so be it.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +1

      @@tonydrennan4948 I’d have to reread the book but I recall Jon being very critical of himself over various acts including failing to realise Andy Harris was in trouble. He feels his inaction directly contributed to Andy’s death, as one such example.

    • @tonydrennan4948
      @tonydrennan4948 Před měsícem +3

      @davidgeisler9885 the fact is Jon was extremely harsh criticizing Anatoli and Sandy. Sandy certainly wasn't the strongest climber but was far from inexperienced, and he acting like she was short roped the whole way up and down which is proven not true, at times yes. And the criticism of Anatoli, was based completely on the fact he knew nothing about Scott s conversation with him on the mountain, when all seemed quite well. Many feel both these critiques are overly harsh, especially Anatoli, and in my mind rightly so. Did you read the climb, because if you did you would way more understand the dynamics of mountain madness.

    • @davidgeisler9885
      @davidgeisler9885 Před měsícem +1

      @@tonydrennan4948 i even question why a guide was resting in camp whilst the clients were still descending, but I’m not a climber,
      Jon had many times described Anatoly’s actions that day as heroic. So there’s pluses and minuses.
      You can’t have that many die in one day and there not be some criticisms. As I said, Jon is particularly critical of himself for his actions and inactions that day!

  • @VashStarwind
    @VashStarwind Před 2 měsíci +1

    The photo at 10:40, what causes those trail looking lines on the mountain? They look to be game trails, but there is no animals up there right? Or are those just trails from peoples routes? Very interesting.

  • @parallaxview6770
    @parallaxview6770 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Magnificent !

  • @davidws6260
    @davidws6260 Před měsícem +3

    Hi Michael Tracy ... i just watched an interview with Sandy Hill and i was wondering if you had seen it ? That poor woman has suffered so much as a result of these best selling books painting her in a very unfair way to put it mildly... Harvest Series Podcast Surving Everest and Social Death with Sandy Hill ... let me know if you have seen it ... thanks for all the great work you do separating the facts from the fiction .!!

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +6

      I have seen it. There is a simple fact that misogyny exists in mountaineering literature, and Krakauer is one of the worst. It is not just Pittman that he belittles in his book. If it is a woman on that mountain, Krakauer doesn't like her. I think he singled out Pittman because she is 2 inches taller than him and that insulted his frail little ego too much. When you really look at Krakauer's writing about climbing, it seems like it was written by a 5 year old boy. Unfortunately, there are plenty of people in his target audience that share those same values and are all too eager to engage in confirmation bias without actually looking into things.

    • @janepipkin8139
      @janepipkin8139 Před měsícem +3

      @@michaeltracy2356 So if that's his attitude towards women mountaineers, perhaps that contributed to him abandoning Namba?...

  • @Garde538
    @Garde538 Před 2 měsíci +3

    People will do anything to survive, I would climb anyone like a ladder if I was drowning. Suppose if I wrote a book about it, I would be tempted to edit that detail out 💀

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +9

      Yes, there is a CZcamsr who stepped over two living humans so he could reach the summit of Everest and now make videos criticizing people for doing the exact same thing.

    • @angelaabbott4542
      @angelaabbott4542 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@michaeltracy2356 he has the perfect initials, he seems to be full of shit 😂

  • @eric-wb7gj
    @eric-wb7gj Před 2 měsíci +1

    TY 🙏🙏

  • @getoffenit7827
    @getoffenit7827 Před 2 měsíci +4

    Mr. Tracey, Do you catch alot of flak from the authors of the books that have been written about the tragedy that happened?
    Im sure they dont like you poking holes and dissecting their stories
    Me? I like you poking holes in the veils that have been lowered over the 96 climb as well as the expedition that found Mallory.

  • @Sleepyjudei
    @Sleepyjudei Před 2 měsíci +1

    This was epic for the book of Esther reference alone. Every single time.

  • @wolfgang6028
    @wolfgang6028 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I often watched Storm over Everest from David Breashears. After watching your video, Michael, I also searched through it. But it seems to not offer a lot of information about times, so not too useful to compare and might just be interesting to check on general statements of persons.

    • @Tenebarum
      @Tenebarum Před 2 měsíci +4

      I look at Storm over Everest more as a tribute to the climbers. It goes over what happened and let's the climbers tell their stories, but doesn't get into too much details or any finger pointing. It's a beautiful work, IMO

  • @wpbarchitect1800
    @wpbarchitect1800 Před měsícem +2

    What astounds me is that more people don't understand this is what much of periodical journalism and non-fiction writing is: find a sellable hook, which means drama and very clearly drawn, pantomime-level heroes and villains, create a roughly accurate superstructure of a story, and then add details to fit, the truth or lack of which have literally zero importance. People, I guess, assume if something makes it into xyz magazine or is published by xyz publishers, surely it must all be true. Sorry, nope. Not hardly. Few are as ruthlessly dishonest as an ambitious feature journalist/non-fiction writer. Except maybe their editors and publishers.

  • @Denali1600
    @Denali1600 Před 2 měsíci +3

    I think there's lots going on here. Physical exertion, oxygen depravation are significant barriers to good recall, but the biggest factor on memory in these circumstances is going to be trauma (of being in a life and death situation). Research trauma and memory. I think all of these accounts should be treated as at best indicative rather than accurate. Eyewitnesses of traumatic events typically make very unreliable court witnesses.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +6

      Certainly, but as I indicate, the problems cannot be attributed to memory because Krakauer is not remembering things. He is conveying what happened when he was not there and the person who was there says a different thing. If you watch the other videos, there are photographs which contradict what Krakauer is saying and in his own book, he places himself hundreds of feet apart at the same time. That is, he is at two places at the same time. While he may have been completely out of it on the mountain, it does not explain why he would write in a book that he was in two places at the same time. More interesting is why so many people who read his book simply accepted his statements without even thinking about them.

    • @Denali1600
      @Denali1600 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@michaeltracy2356 Yes, I do like your videos and your approach of deep analysis of photographs, as they are a strong source of truth. ITA was the book that got me into mountain literature 25 years ago, and i've read hundreds since. But like you I started to notice discrepancies between and even within accounts. Then seperately learning about trauma & memory, i've come to realise that they shouldn't be relied on.

    • @Gollumfili
      @Gollumfili Před 2 měsíci +1

      If you re-watch the videos he notes that when JK story changes he seems to recall the new memory very vividly. Over time you never recall events better, but he seemed to have the ability to do just that.

    • @Denali1600
      @Denali1600 Před měsícem

      ​@@Gollumfili Yes, that's a good example of how people construct memories after traumatic events to help make sense of them. Hence whether it's JK or other mountaineers, i'd take their recall of events written days / weeks / months after events with a very large pinch of salt. They're not neccessarily doing it for nefarious or ego reasons, simply succumbing to very well known failings in human memory. The only after event memory recall i'd begin to trust are contemporaneous notes written within minutes of the event.

  • @OverTheLineSmokey
    @OverTheLineSmokey Před 2 měsíci +1

    In ITA, JK states that, upon reaching the summit, his dominant emotion was not elation, but fear of the descent.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +8

      Perhaps that can be inferred, but his account on the summit is more factual. He was worried about his oxygen. He took 4 photos. Grabbed some summit rocks and stuffed them in his pocket the same way Malloy and Irvine would have done and then headed down. Of interest to Mallory and Irvine fans is that he notes putting them in a zippered pocket -- and Irvine had zippered pockets, a novelty at the time.

    • @JohnDavidHays
      @JohnDavidHays Před 2 měsíci

      @@michaeltracy2356 Makes you wonder what would happen to those Irvine rocks if his body got thrown off or dragged off downslope by person or persons unknown?

  • @davem8836
    @davem8836 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Michael, how do I get back into the Yeti Academy? It's not recognising my login info. I tried emailing you but got no reply.

  • @christianjones4497
    @christianjones4497 Před 2 měsíci

    This is off topic but, in the photo showing where Rob Hall and Scott Fischer was found, the location of where the group huddle happened, is that correct?

    • @D0GSHOW
      @D0GSHOW Před měsícem

      Rob Hall died just below the south summit, Scott Fischer was a little below the balcony and the huddle was in the south Col, near to the Kangshung Face, so all different height and locations on the mountain.

  • @lisavalentine8877
    @lisavalentine8877 Před 2 měsíci

    I don't know why I'm so drawn to tales of mountain climbing, as I'm terrified of heights & can't even look at photos of people on cliffs or rock climbing without feeling sick.
    I read Into Thin Air as soon as it came out, and I can't overstate how disappointed I am to be finding out how much of his story was total fiction.

  • @1unsung971
    @1unsung971 Před 2 měsíci +6

    Terrific, deep research and reasoning. Thank you for investing so much time and thought into this subject to present a penetrating challenge to Krakauer's sensationalist and embellished musings of May 10th 1996 on Everest. He must be feeling very embarrassed. Strange that he has not yet seized the opportunity to fess up and to apologise. Perhaps he feels no remorse? Whatever his motives, he has brought disgrace to himself, his publishers and several, innocent "teammates" from The Climb. Bukreev had to write his book in order to refute Krakauer's wild allegations. That made me really angry with Krakauer. His silence in the face of this overwhelming evidence, carefully compiled, is beyond puzzling. It seems to reinforce the evidence arraigned against him here. As a journalist he has clearly honed the skill of "misrepresenting" events to shine the light of glory on himself. That is tragically cynical and unethical. What will he do now? Thanks again for such excellent investigative reporting. Go well. Greetings from New Zealand.

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +2

      The blank 46-page gap between references to "teammates" subtly highlights missing factoids that inquiring minds would definitely want to know about.

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 23 dny

      Narcisists feel no remorse. Krakauer is a good example of such psycholohical disorder.

  • @dawry9408
    @dawry9408 Před měsícem +2

    I am curious if you have (or will) deduced Andy Harris' fate? From what can be gathered from all online sources, in all but Krakauer's accounts he disappears on the descent and then either is confirming going up to Hall and Hansen or Rob mentions he is gone at 4:43 am, May 11. Krakauer meanwhile makes him acting crazy and then puts some stupid pointa about acting or failure to act. Also, in summit journals from that time, it was said that Japanese Association reported finding Harris' body near Camp IV.
    Where Ang Dorje was on the descent is also unable to be deduced via online sources.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +8

      Krakauer's account is very bizarre. I'll cover some of the issue in the video about what happened at South Summit -- because as you noticed, none of what Krakauer says makes any sense.

    • @dawry9408
      @dawry9408 Před měsícem +2

      @@michaeltracy2356 Thanks, that's great to hear. You are doing fantastic job at setting the record straight and I guess by your MO, an actual, reliable timeline of the events for everyone involved in that mess could be created.

  • @dmurphy1578
    @dmurphy1578 Před 20 dny

    I burst out when you said JK memorized everyone’s outfit. Omg.

  • @opheliaelesse
    @opheliaelesse Před 2 měsíci +3

    It sure sounds not so good for Krakauer.
    And to push the hero of this story, Bukreev, in front of the wolves ..
    Looks indeed bad.
    Poor little one. Wrong companion.

  • @tracycameron5099
    @tracycameron5099 Před měsícem

    Whoa, the last line is really unfortunate.

  • @bananek87
    @bananek87 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Michael, which books about 1924 would you say are worth every penny? Currently I am reading Ghosts of Everest ( I've started it before I've found your channel and I don't like unfinished books ;)).

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +4

      This is a little depressing. Of couple of new books that have come out, they offer nothing of real value and one is so full of basic errors that are just embarrassing.
      Ghosts of Everest is a good start. It has a lot of the basic stuff, and gives you a good idea of the geography of the mountain. But it was written when the "ridge route" was the only option.
      Tatort Mount Everest is also pretty good. Written in German and Hemmleb is a terrible writer (Ghosts of Everest was ghost written).
      Julie Summer's Fearless on Everest about Irvine and is good for a no nonsense book -- doesn't have some crazy theory that is the "key" to the whole thing like the recent books have.
      Into the Silence is not really about Mallory. It is a three part book, first part is about how the British Empire works, the second is about how British upper society works, and the third is basically Conrad Anker's theory of that happened on the climb. Great book in hidden power structures (much like Serpent & the Rainbow), but if you just are interest in Mallory and Irvine, then you can just read Conrad Anker's book -- but see the video for how it gets most things wrong.

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +1

      I'd also recommend The Six Mountain Travel Books by Eric Shipton, published 1985 by The Mountaineers {Seattle.) Shipton (1907-1977) explored the Himalaya and Karakoram in the 1930s thru 1952, had explored N and S approaches to Everest with Ed Hillary in 1951, and was initially pegged to lead the 1953 British Everest Expedition. My late dad gave it to me on my b-day in 1995.

  • @Bamboule05
    @Bamboule05 Před 24 dny

    Thank you for this. It's one thing to not recalling correctly because of all the stress one had descending in s storm, but fabricating stories to hide one 's cowardice and blame others for one's mistakes? Not cool

  • @Suejd1001
    @Suejd1001 Před 7 dny

    Poor Yasuko! 😭😭😭😭😭

  • @davidschneide5422
    @davidschneide5422 Před 2 měsíci +6

    "Yasuko was found with a black eye, and her empty oxygen tank bore the initials JK"
    - also omitted by Jon Krakauer

    • @jjzap2935
      @jjzap2935 Před 2 měsíci +5

      would love to know your source for that info..

    • @davidschneide5422
      @davidschneide5422 Před 2 měsíci +6

      @@jjzap2935 pulled it straight outta my arse for comedic purposes

    • @jjzap2935
      @jjzap2935 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@davidschneide5422 hahaha .. thanks for being honest.
      I despise JK & anyone who backs his BS

    • @davidschneide5422
      @davidschneide5422 Před měsícem

      @@birgitmelchior8248 love the wit, appreciate the smile

  • @mmeiselph7234
    @mmeiselph7234 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Wow.

  • @RussellStrosnider
    @RussellStrosnider Před 2 měsíci +3

    Dang, only 21 minutes ago and I'm already 126th. LOL

  • @Garde538
    @Garde538 Před 2 měsíci

    JK needs to come online and do a interview/confession here. I wont judge him if he is honest

    • @Gollumfili
      @Gollumfili Před 2 měsíci +2

      The time for him to come clean for these lies had come and gone a long time ago. If he hasn't done it now, it isn't going to happen.
      Anyway, the evidence provided here is compelling. I don't think we need to hear the words from his mouth

  • @thelogicaldanger
    @thelogicaldanger Před 2 měsíci +1

    Wow, I had only read Krakauer's book. Makes me sick I gave him my money. Krakauer is pure evil.....he is responsible for Namba's death, and that could have been written off as just bad judgement,. Except Krakauer wrote a book completely lying about it to enrich himself. He has profited off of leaving someone to die. Disgusting.

    • @baze3SC
      @baze3SC Před 2 měsíci +1

      If we isolate just the fact that he continued on his own then yes, there are questions. There are moral dilemmas in many life-or-death situations. On the other hand, everybody has a family and the responsibility extends also towards people at home. It was not Krakauer's job to ensure that self-sufficiency and fitness of other clients is at the expected level. But of course, he could have been simply honest about it. Instead he came up with a cover-up story in which he doesn't have to make decisions.

    • @thelogicaldanger
      @thelogicaldanger Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@baze3SC See, that is the big difference. If he had just honestly said, "I was concerned about my oxygen level, and the approaching storm, so I left everyone to get to base camp as fast as possible.".....almost everyone would have respected that. But when we now know he lied about several people, criticized other's actions in "not doing enough" to save other's, etc......well, with that, he has opened himself up to being called out for his lies and criticized himself for not doing the bare minimum to save others.

  • @plakor6133
    @plakor6133 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Does Michael Groom have anything to say?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +8

      He has some interviews out there on CZcams, but he has not spoken on this. Given what he wrote in his book, I do not blame him.

  • @whatisbestinlife8112
    @whatisbestinlife8112 Před 2 měsíci +2

    You make a compelling case Krakauer's version is not lining up in regards to his perhaps leaving Yashuko.
    But I never got the sense that Krakauer said or implied "it was all Pittman's fault". He certainly said argued her inexperience and media prominence, and the pressure that may have exerted on the guides to push ahead when not advisable, was a factor. But unless I'm not remembering something from his book he never lays it all at her feet in any such manner as snarkily implied.

  • @Mia1R
    @Mia1R Před 2 měsíci +1

    Lovely. Some Science of Deduction! 😏

  • @livealoha50f
    @livealoha50f Před 27 dny

    Is this a video? All I see is text

  • @swerne01
    @swerne01 Před měsícem

    Don't expect anyone's memory to be perfect at 26,000 feet. It's been demonstrated repeatedly that high altitude reduces cognitive ability and memory.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem

      Where did anyone expect someone's memory to be perfect at 26,000 feet? No need to share your "wisdom" with us in this channel. If something has been "demonstrated repeatedly," then myself and everyone else here is aware of it. If you have an actual point to make, please do. But your condescending platitude is not appreciated.

    • @swerne01
      @swerne01 Před měsícem +1

      @@michaeltracy2356 Good luck with your hater videos. I'm sure they're quite popular.

    • @Bamboule05
      @Bamboule05 Před 22 dny +1

      @swerne why would you call them hate videos? He's comparing different accounts and photos against each other. The conclusions don't look good for jk, but critique is not hate.

  • @theworldisavampire3346
    @theworldisavampire3346 Před měsícem +1

    Great stuff. But one thing:
    YA-SU-KO. not Yasko.
    I always knew that Krakauer fudged many points to alleviate his own survivors guilt, but never realized to what extent.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před měsícem +4

      In videos of Adventure Consultant expedition participants, the "u" is silent and it is pronounced the way I do in this video. Krakauer leaves the "u" silent in his own presentations.

  • @lesliegriffiths8567
    @lesliegriffiths8567 Před 2 měsíci

    Wasn't Krakauer a client, not a guide? What obligation did he have?

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +4

      Why don't you watch the video? It tells you.

    • @Tommykey07
      @Tommykey07 Před 2 měsíci

      Krakauer was paid by Adventure Consultants to be there. He was not a client

    • @lesliegriffiths8567
      @lesliegriffiths8567 Před měsícem +1

      @@Tommykey07 He wasn't a paid guide though...unless I've got that wrong.

    • @Tommykey07
      @Tommykey07 Před měsícem +2

      @@lesliegriffiths8567 I never said he was a paid guide, just that he wasn't a client. Rob Hall paid for Krakauer to be there. In terms of any duty of care he owed to the clients, I couldn't say. However, if Groom conveyed to Krakauer that he would accompany Namba and Krakauer consented to this, then one could argue he assumed the responsibility and then shirked it.
      As skilled a climber that Rob Hall was, his leadership failure at this critical moment endangered his clients. By getting stuck up near the top getting a weakened Doug Hansen to the summit, and then Andy Harris going up to try to help Rob, two out of the three Adventure Consultants guides were not there to help the others on the descent. Groom had to shoulder the burden.

  • @carolbradley4845
    @carolbradley4845 Před měsícem +1

    I read “Into Thin Air” years ago. I thought it was a true account of what happened. After seeing this video, I’m going to take it down from my library shelf and throw it into the trash. I’ll replace it with ”The Climb”. Thank you for revealing this coward.

  • @gregorylumpkin2128
    @gregorylumpkin2128 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I don't put much faith into any accounts from this expedition. If everyone is just about gone in the head due to altitude, how can you really know exactly what happened. But some people just cannot let go of it. Gotta write the story, make a few bucks. It was an unfortunate series of events, so just let go of it.

  • @bolshoefeodor6536
    @bolshoefeodor6536 Před měsícem +1

    Article in the Guardian today about BOTH Mallory and Irvine's bodies now "missing". Chinese authorities fingered as possible culprits. Beijing Olympics mentioned.

  • @ratzi2204
    @ratzi2204 Před měsícem

    Read both books and "A day to Die For", doco's up the wazoo, and watched both movies, "Everest" and "Into Thin Air". The later movie puts Jon everywhere, at the forefront of every drama, find that hard to believe. The fact is if he did leave Yasuko on her own, then stretched the truth or lied, that is between him and his concience now. We can't judge the actions of others in a disaster, we were not there!
    Hubrius, disrespect for the environment, and lack of common sense, fear of failure are the factors that lead to this disaster, not one or some individuals.
    These two teams were not the only teams on the summit that day, there were others that got caught out and died, ITPB expedition, on the north route. Others like the Imax team and a few others in different teams had the common sense to go back down as they sensed something was not right.
    The weather forecast was known, just misunderstood, ignored or played down.

  • @jaybee7890
    @jaybee7890 Před 2 měsíci +10

    I don't find this topic relevant at all. I enjoy your work on M & I a great deal, and the only reason I come to your channel. It's interesting because there is a genuine mystery involved, and your research is incredible. Little mystery exists around '96, at least any that truly matters. It was a tragedy, we can account for it, and the fact that people recall and see things differently (and change their views over time) whether due to trauma, a desire to make money, a poor memory, deceit, or any of a whole host of reasons is not surprising. In fact, it is normal and pretty much how society and humankind operate on a daily basis. You have pointed that out quite capably. I am guessing that part of this is a general interest in alpinism and running out of material on M & I. If that is the reason I understand it, but it seems a bit pointed toward some type of problem with Krakauer. The world is full of people like him, most of them successful. Sad but true, pointing it out doesn't do anything. As someone who has followed you from the very first video, you can do better with your talents.

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +25

      You are one person. My Mallory and Irvine content views have more than doubled -- almost tripled since I started the 1996 series. You may also notice that the logo for the channel is "Sic Semper Charlatanis" -- for which the 1996, 1960 and and 1924 expedition all offer plenty of material. But ultimately, there are far more people drawn into the channel by 1996 content who then find the 1924 content interesting. While there are extremely few people in your camp. And if you really did find my content useful, likely you would be a channel member, as producing these videos takes a considerable amount of time, effort, and money.

    • @msbeecee1
      @msbeecee1 Před 2 měsíci +25

      The truth ALWAYS matters, whether you are interested in it or not is irrelevant. I'm sure the truth matters to Nambo family & other survivors, especially sandy hill pittman, who was unfairly crucified. Kind of funny that u write so much just to indicate lack of interest 😂

    • @arneboveng3756
      @arneboveng3756 Před 2 měsíci +4

      @@michaeltracy2356 Count me as another in his camp. You're reaching in your efforts to criminalize Jon Krauk.

    • @supper.at.6
      @supper.at.6 Před 2 měsíci +21

      The actual truth of what happened in 1996, to the extent that it is possible after all these years and given what you speak to re: individual perspectives, is more important now than ever. The 100 year anniversary of M&I’s climb has led to an increase in interest and along with it, attacks and lies about climber’s actions that day, including Sandy Hill Pitman, have also increased. Michael is one of the few people who has called the specific attacks of SHP what they are, misogynistic. Videos such as these highlight the importance of considering WHY people are saying (or not saying) what they are and whether the source is considered credible before accepting it as truth. He is carefully and systematically sharing inconsistencies in Krakauer’s reporting and writing. Krakauer isn’t just a climber that happened to write some stories and a book, he is an outdoor adventure journalist and must hold himself to a higher standard when it comes to the truth. It seems this may not have been the case and he should be called out and held accountable for it.
      Edit: spelling of a word

    • @user-yi3yx2fn7g
      @user-yi3yx2fn7g Před 2 měsíci +10

      Truth matters. Only selfish people hate truth. Don't be the emperor from the tale.

  • @jasonschommer2511
    @jasonschommer2511 Před 2 měsíci +2

    This man really hates Krakauer did krakauer sleep with guys wife

  • @Jose_Hunters_EWF_Remixes
    @Jose_Hunters_EWF_Remixes Před 2 měsíci +2

    Mike, it's entirely possible, even likely, that JK lied because he felt guilty for leaving YN behind
    Regardless, his lying due to his feeling guilt *still* does not make it JK's responsibility to care for YN.
    JK was not a guide and/or sherpa and/or professional salaried person

    • @michaeltracy2356
      @michaeltracy2356  Před 2 měsíci +6

      So, if you saw someone drowning in a pool, you'd just leave them because you are not a paid lifeguard?

    • @brucerorty4014
      @brucerorty4014 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@michaeltracy2356 Not sure how lifeguarding is taught today, but in the late 1970s the instructors emphasized approaching distressed swimmers in the ocean with great caution, lest they drown the rescuer. The instructors recommended being wary from more than arms' length, and all the while letting the rescuee tire themselves out before moving close in.

  • @tonymoto1188
    @tonymoto1188 Před 2 měsíci

    Can you recommend a book on Mallory and Irvine for a newcomer? Either account of their climb or the search for their remains.

    • @zztop4996
      @zztop4996 Před 2 měsíci +2

      He discusses this in a reply to another comment.

    • @rhobot75
      @rhobot75 Před 2 měsíci

      @@zztop4996 Thanks for saying so bc yesterday I meant to.

    • @tonymoto1188
      @tonymoto1188 Před 2 měsíci

      @@zztop4996 Thanks

    • @aeromodeller1
      @aeromodeller1 Před 2 měsíci +1

      The single most comprehensive book on the subject of the 1924 expedition is Wade Davis "Into the Silence". It is thoroughly researched and annotated. The extensive references will lead you to other works.

  • @Jose_Hunters_EWF_Remixes
    @Jose_Hunters_EWF_Remixes Před 2 měsíci

    With all due respect, Mike, which I state with sincerity
    And not because I have anointed Krakauer as my favorite writer (but that's mostly because I have mediocre preferences for writers, and I don't read fiction)
    And whether or not JK fabricated his narrative, or was merely suffering from hypoxia
    As a client, JK is clearly not responsible for YN legally, and possibly morally
    And it was irresponsible of Groom to remove the responsibility for YN from himself and place it on JK
    Just to set the record straight, the other day I was painfully - even mortally - bored with CZcams
    Then I suddenly remembered that dude with the Climbing Everest channel
    And suddenly I was revived!
    And this fact was not changed despite what I wrote above
    Because I have recognized you as an extremely careful thinker who doesn't engage in hyperbole dedicated to increasing views of your channel
    And if you claim that JK was extricating some of his narrative from those places where the sun doesn't shine
    Then I concede you're almost certainly correct
    That's the credibility you have earned from my POV based upon the content of your channel
    I also delight in your dry, sarcastic, understated wit
    But JK is still my favorite writer
    Final fact about your careful reasoning/thinking
    You should feel honored that I paid you such a complement
    But only because I am a professional mathematician

  • @michaelmyers7416
    @michaelmyers7416 Před 2 měsíci

    Hindsight. Groom should have short roped Namba to Krakauer. I was on a winter climb once and had the leader short rope, one of the climber to me on the descent because the team had just helped him come back from hypothermia