Plane's Emergency Landing in Hudson River | Sully

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  • čas přidán 9. 01. 2019
  • The Sully video is based on an actual airline pilot crash into the Hudson in 2009 commonly referred to as "Miracle on the Hudson," starring Tom Hanks as Sully. I review Sully movie clips and from the sully movie explaining aspects that may not be obvious to someone who isn’t an airline pilot. Enjoy!
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    Attribution:
    Sully. Distributed by: Warner Bros. Pictures Sept 6, 2016
    All clips used for fair use commentary, criticism, and educational purposes. See Hosseinzadeh v. Klein, 276 F.Supp.3d 34 (S.D.N.Y. 2017); Equals Three, LLC v. Jukin Media, Inc., 139 F. Supp. 3d 1094 (C.D. Cal. 2015).
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    Moldy Lotion by Light-foot / light-foot

Komentáře • 10K

  • @jeffskiles7406
    @jeffskiles7406 Před 5 lety +26120

    Too many misconceptions and misrepresentations in the Comments section to reply to individually but I would like to say that both Sully and I had the opportunity to edit the script at the beginning of the production. It originally had a lot of the common movie script aircraft inaccuracies but Clint Eastwood wanted a film that was as close to reality as possible so he adopted our recommendations. The cockpit scenes in the movie weren't as dramatic as they could have been but neither Sully nor I acted as a consultant on the set. The various background warning commands are about 4 times the volume represented in the movie and we had no time to look pensive, there was simply too much going on. I particularly appreciate the reviewer 74 Gear giving the flight attendants credit for their role. Our flight attendants didn't get anywhere near the credit the deserve for their incredible contributions that day. Jeff Skiles

    • @Eternal_Tech
      @Eternal_Tech Před 5 lety +1172

      From what I can gather from various sources online, the NTSB was portrayed more aggressively in the movie than they actually behaved. Would you concur with this assessment?
      I agree that the flight attendants did not receive the full credit that they deserve, but neither did you. The entire flight crew were heroes that day.

    • @scottl5000
      @scottl5000 Před 5 lety +1577

      Jeff, It's an honor to read your comment -- I just want to say that you, Sully, the flight attendants, ATC and I'm sure helpful passengers, all under the most adverse circumstances, showed the world what the term "our finest hour" really means. Incredible. I met an Apollo 13 Astronaut once (Jack Swigert), from where I sit, you guys are right up there standing proud with them.

    • @jeffskiles7406
      @jeffskiles7406 Před 5 lety +1983

      @@scottl5000 Hi Scott, thank you for the kind words. you are very thoughtful. I have had the privilege of meeting virtually all of the surviving Apollo astronauts and spent a bit of time with several of them. We're hardly in that class, after all they went to the moon, we only went to New York!

    • @jeffskiles7406
      @jeffskiles7406 Před 5 lety +2463

      @@Eternal_Tech That is very true. The NTSB got a bad rap in the movie. They were very respectful of us in the investigation and didn't deserve the treatment they received. Movies are very formulaic. You must have a black hat and a white hat. Nuance is too difficult to portray. Having said that, everything I saw in the movie happened, everything that was asked or said was true to the facts. If you take the rudeness and insulting tone out of the NTSB actors delivery, it was pretty true to the actual events.
      There are many people involved in an NTSB investigation other than the NTSB itself. The NTSB sets up the structure of an investigation and then invites interested parties such as Airbus, GE, USAirways, etc., to participate. Those interested parties help to find the truth but also have their own corporate interests to defend. There's a lot of grey area and casting blame elsewhere can be part of the investigation. Pilots are an obvious target. I liken the whole thing to a situation where you are on trial for a crime. But, you aren't allowed in the courtroom to attend your own trial. It is conducted in secret, the verdict is rendered, and you are sentenced, all without you ever getting your day in court to explain yourself. There is no question it is a stressful situation for those of us involved. That's not a criticism of the NTSB, they do valuable work and have a noble purpose. Its just the way it is.

    • @scottl5000
      @scottl5000 Před 5 lety +367

      ​@@jeffskiles7406 , Thanks for your reply, it's an honor. Naturally, you couldn't have been a pilot on Apollo 13, but if you could, I'm sure you'd make us proud too. It's the person inside that counts. So you, and your team can stand up there with the best of the best for that reason. Oh one interesting thing, in 2013, while recovering from a brain tumor (I'm fine now) I had lot's of time on my hands... I wrote an iPad application demo for a friend, it was intended for pilots to use in the cockpit during an emergency. It's an expert system to guide pilots through highly complex EAP (Emergency Action Procedures) on the Dassault Falcon series of private jets. Complete with layouts of the dashboards, procedures, instruments, warnings etc etc... I digitized the super thick book, and turned it into an interactive system. Of course you can also just view the original manual, quick references, with fast lookup index and natual language queries. It even would send procedure adherence and status information automatically, and it could interact with ground support live. I do not know if it was demo'ed or not. But personally I think it was pretty cool. When I saw your movie, I thought of you specifically, wondering if my electronic system would be as useful as the quick references you had available. Anyway, thanks again for your response. (btw: one of my closest friends is now a retired airline pilot, living in Hawaii. I'm just sleepless in seattle, litterally, it's 3:20am). Scott

  • @lukethellama5591
    @lukethellama5591 Před 3 lety +4391

    Sully: nice view of the hudson
    Birds: do you want a closer look?

  • @MandoMonge
    @MandoMonge Před 2 lety +797

    As a flight attendant, hearing them yelling their commands in the back at 12:10 gives me chills. That incident is reviewed like gospel during flight training, SO MANY things learned and improved afterwards

    • @anesidora0seneca
      @anesidora0seneca Před 2 lety +74

      Yeah, hearing the FAs in the back through the flight deck door makes all FAs take a sharp breath during this movie... Just like how all pilots have a visceral reaction to watching the belly of the plane touch down on the water surface.
      The communication during the movie was SO INFORMATIVE of how good CRM is supposed to look like, I'm so glad Kelsey touched on that.

    • @philkarn5661
      @philkarn5661 Před 2 lety +8

      It gave me chills too, and I'm neither a pilot or a passenger.

    • @musictraining5071
      @musictraining5071 Před rokem +35

      i think flight attendants are kinda underrated, they have a lot of shit to do and a lot of responsibility and a broad set of responsibilities too. when i was a kid i once flew without my parents and the airline took care of us. my experience was very good with the flight attendants and other personnel. really made sure us kids weren't bored and scared. also a few years ago i flew with an ex girlfriend who was TERRIFIED of flying, like really pathologically terrified. flight attendants noticed it and took great care of her by calming her and coming by every few minutes to ask how things are. after a few flights she was no longer scared of flying.

    • @musictraining5071
      @musictraining5071 Před rokem +7

      i think flight attendants are kinda underrated, they have a lot of shit to do and a lot of responsibility and a broad set of responsibilities too. when i was a kid i once flew without my parents and the airline took care of us. my experience was very good with the flight attendants and other personnel. really made sure us kids weren't bored and scared. also a few years ago i flew with an ex girlfriend who was TERRIFIED of flying, like really pathologically terrified. flight attendants noticed it and took great care of her by calming her and coming by every few minutes to ask how things are. after a few flights she was no longer scared of flying.
      good flight attendants are socially very skilled,they are also responsible for safety etc, they have to be on a tight schedule and probably they need to know quite a few things too. they also have to deal with annoying people too a lot i assume, and then they are always in the shadow of the pilots lol. i think they're very underrated as a professional group..

    • @samuvisser
      @samuvisser Před rokem +12

      Genuinely interested, do u have an example of something that was changed after this accident? How and why? Would love to know

  • @canzoneri8
    @canzoneri8 Před rokem +131

    I saw this landing from the 31st floor of a high rise on 60th street and Tenth avenue.
    It.. was.. breathtaking... So welll executed that for a few minutes I didnt realize it was out of place. The wings were level, the plane was lined up just as if it was aiming for a normal runway landing. Sully made it look easy. Thank you for making this video Kelsey and the ATC vs Pilot of the landing. The potential of how cataclysmic this event could have been to New Yorkers is mind blowing. So many were saved that we can't even estimate. God Bless Sully, Skiles and their amazing crew.

    • @frankiesayspanic
      @frankiesayspanic Před 4 měsíci +3

      very interesting to hear this! i’ve always wondered if it was scary for any NYC residents to see a plane that low after the events on 9/11. i know this occurred nearly ten years later, but it’s just something i’ve always been curious about. maybe that’s stupid and doesn’t actually make sense, i was only 9 years old on 9/11 and live in a small town on the other side of the country. so i don’t know what it was like, or even what it’s like on any normal day in new york. it’s a cool to hear how it felt for you from your perspective! thanks for sharing

  • @dennisvandijk9759
    @dennisvandijk9759 Před 3 lety +4099

    The people on that plane where just really lucky that the pilot had that Apollo 13 experience.

    • @vladimirkroutov3310
      @vladimirkroutov3310 Před 3 lety +353

      @@geobloxmodels1186 He was not worried about water landing because while being a ship captain attaked by somalian pirates, he knew that the airplane was a ship too, and it would take like a duck to the water and there were no somalian pirates on the Hudson river.

    • @joshuanicely8722
      @joshuanicely8722 Před 3 lety +31

      Your comment was the first one I saw when I clicked on the thumbnail...made me chuckle...good one... Happy New Year

    • @MHLegacy
      @MHLegacy Před 3 lety +129

      Yes, and he was also prepared for anything...because his mother always told him that life was like a box of chocolates and that you never know what you're going to get.

    • @ssagar8808
      @ssagar8808 Před 3 lety +35

      Well when u got Gump as ur pilot, he will save each one of u.

    • @rvanzo925
      @rvanzo925 Před 3 lety +18

      And was seasoned by having Somali pirates boarding his ship. Not to mention being stranded on an island with a volleyball for a friend.

  • @cdtaylor7732
    @cdtaylor7732 Před 4 lety +2317

    Had an instructor once tell me when it comes to declaring emergencies, even if it turns out to not be one, “Better to have twelve men judge you for your actions than six men carrying you.”

    • @EtzEchad
      @EtzEchad Před 4 lety +162

      If you feel that the flight is in danger, it IS an emergency. I've seen videos where it clearly was an emergency and the pilot refused to declare it. That is just stupid.
      More pilots die of stupidity than any other cause.

    • @henoch44
      @henoch44 Před 4 lety +27

      Was your instructor a gun guy by any chance?

    • @paulmarchi1393
      @paulmarchi1393 Před 4 lety +41

      My instructor told me : "If you lose your engine, the mayday is super unimportant. You should use this time to concentrate on flying the plane and choosing the right field to put it down. Of course, if you are near an airport and you might make the runway, things are very different.

    • @aproudasia9529
      @aproudasia9529 Před 4 lety +53

      “Better have twelve me judge you for your actions than six men carrying” I’ll remember that

    • @sparky6086
      @sparky6086 Před 4 lety +60

      The saying goes, "Better to be tried by 12 than carried by 6".

  • @maraki1212
    @maraki1212 Před 9 měsíci +83

    As an ATC it always gives me chills to revisit anything to do with this 'accident'.
    I've heard the real communications and I'm amazed by the reaction of my colleagues.
    Thank you for the credit that you give us! It is true that we all work together in aviation like a chain and also that we'll try our best to help you in any kind of problem that you might encounter!

    • @cherylkirkpatrick7094
      @cherylkirkpatrick7094 Před 8 dny

      fellow atc here from SCT, totally agree with you. Controller did a great job, and did not have a handoff.

  • @bisbonian4085
    @bisbonian4085 Před 2 lety +21

    Hello Jeff, my name is Lawrence. I spent 27 years flying 737s for another airline. Retired now, and missing a lot of it. One of the highlights happened several months after your landing on the Hudson. My First Officer was on your plane, along with his wife, one of our flight attendants. As soon as the order to evacuate was given, the two of them began to help your crew to get the passengers out onto the wings. He was the last one off the plane, except for Sully. He's visible on many of the photos, right next to the overwing hatch. All three of us have the maximum respect for you and Sully and the rest of your crew. I salute you.

  • @nonotachance7935
    @nonotachance7935 Před 4 lety +1423

    "Is he a hero or just doing his job?" Both, sometimes the most heroic thing you can do is doing your job well.

    • @helloimcrazy7588
      @helloimcrazy7588 Před 4 lety +5

      He'll yeah he both

    • @-C.S.R
      @-C.S.R Před 4 lety +1

      Can’t be a hero if you’re trying to save your own life too!

    • @dw7401
      @dw7401 Před 4 lety +9

      He did his job very well, above and beyond, which qualifies as Hero💯✔
      I've heard Flight Data Recording where pilots lost their minds(paniced), the aircraft, passengers, and crew.

    • @wyomingptt
      @wyomingptt Před 4 lety +14

      I think it should be based on what a reasonable outcome would have been, and history tells us that most cases result in disaster particularly when combined with a water landing. When the bird strike occurred at least some of those people were already dead, Sully and the F/O wrestled them back, I think he deserves the hero status.

    • @itzdilpickle3679
      @itzdilpickle3679 Před 4 lety +3

      Being a pilot requires you to be a hero at times

  • @amicloud_yt
    @amicloud_yt Před 3 lety +1517

    "hero or just doing his job?"
    well, sometimes being a hero is the job.

    • @thepsychicspoon5984
      @thepsychicspoon5984 Před 3 lety +55

      Agreed, just because you got paid for it doesn't dismiss the fact that you saved lives.
      That being said, I do have more respect for people that try to distance themselves from the title of 'hero', deserving or not.

    • @Raul1971xxx
      @Raul1971xxx Před 3 lety +10

      That's correct.. 👍👍🇪🇸🇪🇸

    • @Ramza941
      @Ramza941 Před 3 lety +25

      He didn't just do his job. He knocked it out of the park. That's what made him a hero.

    • @MultiChrisjb
      @MultiChrisjb Před 3 lety +2

      Especially if your job is being a hero.

    • @Putinhuylo3
      @Putinhuylo3 Před 3 lety +13

      I think every time a pilot lands a plane without killing everybody onboard, makes them as much of a hero.

  • @lsquared6975
    @lsquared6975 Před rokem +88

    My dad (now deceased) who was a pilot said Sully was a hero who did everything by the book to bring about the positive outcome. The entire crew did a wonderful job to save everyone.

  • @YeOldeTowneCryer
    @YeOldeTowneCryer Před 2 lety +468

    I am not a pilot, but I have had enough science and physics to understand Sully had to ease that plane down smooth and level. If one wing had hit the water before the other, that plane probably would have done somersaults while ripping apart and tossing bodies all over the place at about 200 miles per hour.
    That is something only a highly skilled and cool headed pilot could do. There is no substitute for experience and skill.

    • @jakekitzmiller7065
      @jakekitzmiller7065 Před 2 lety +38

      I mean the same goes for a landing on a runway. Flight basics 101 is to keep the wings level during landing. The hard part about this landing would be the disorienting effect the water has on the height of the plane and when to flare properly. Too early and you'll stall and porpoise down on the belly. Too late and youll drive the nose into the water. Combined with the fact you're missing about 10 ft of landing gear in an abnormal landing configuration. That was the impressive part. Cheers.

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat Před 2 lety +25

      It's not the wings hitting the water being the problem but the huge ENGINES hanging below them. It's the engines hitting the water which is the problem. If it were a regional jet with tail-mounted engines, there would have been less risk.
      The fact the plane didn't cartwheel once the nacelles hit the water is a testament to their flying skills as physics was poised to ruin their day.

    • @BigTulsa
      @BigTulsa Před 2 lety +22

      This is why it's so difficult to have a water landing with a good outcome like this one had. It didn't hurt that the Hudson was smooth as glass that day.

    • @nytom4info
      @nytom4info Před 2 lety +1

      Yep!

    • @markmissildine4451
      @markmissildine4451 Před rokem +16

      Yeah, I like how he said in the movie “I eyeballed it”. My opinion as a passenger car driver for decades, you operate a motor vehicle (car, bus, motorcycle, any type of plane) long enough, you can hear & feel when something goes out or isn’t working right without necessarily having to look at the instrument panel. I believe it when he said both engines went out & that he could feel it.

  • @brianromine5817
    @brianromine5817 Před 3 lety +2022

    I was one of three men that provided the emergency communication radios for this event. God bless the team of Chris Bogg, Tom Volante, Rick Watson, and Richard Warren.

    • @sandygrogg1203
      @sandygrogg1203 Před 3 lety +78

      Oh man... The teamwork was fantastic.. Those controllers earned their money thst day. God bless them ALL.

    • @kylesanders8276
      @kylesanders8276 Před 3 lety +51

      Great job in emergency management. It was likely one of the greatest teamwork efforts ever executed dealing with an ongoing emergency.

    • @xJ0LLYR0GERx
      @xJ0LLYR0GERx Před 3 lety +33

      I can't even imagine how stressful that would have been.

    • @oc4964
      @oc4964 Před 2 lety +9

      God bless you too sir. Thank you for your service and keep fighting

    • @Someone34599
      @Someone34599 Před 2 lety +7

      @@oc4964 you got no brain?

  • @techmantra4521
    @techmantra4521 Před 3 lety +550

    I'm not a pilot but even to me the "Pull up" and "Too low, terrain" warnings are just scary.

    • @springofficialsyt4008
      @springofficialsyt4008 Před 3 lety +14

      Pull up usually goes on landings if you hear to low gear that’s when you will be scared

    • @shinkreytpuylap
      @shinkreytpuylap Před 3 lety +2

      Thats my plane everytime in TFS

    • @WolfePaws
      @WolfePaws Před 3 lety +24

      Random bit of trivia for you: Those alarms were sounding far more than in the movie, but that was reduced for creative reasons.
      FO Skiles was (correctly) following a checklist for engine restart until they agreed it wasn't working. A checklist for ditching/forced landing would have included disabling those alarms to prevent overload for the pilot, but there simply wasn't time. Clearly they managed superbly despite the distraction - I just find that fascinating.

    • @ChloeLouiseeB
      @ChloeLouiseeB Před 3 lety +7

      Try fly a GA plane and watch the stall alarm scream like a rubber chicken everytime you’re on short final 🙂🙃

    • @sialmeckerjr
      @sialmeckerjr Před 3 lety +1

      my plane in a flight simulator while landing :

  • @stephenbland7461
    @stephenbland7461 Před 2 lety +175

    I am a retired cabin crew and would like to thank you for highlighting what our primary role is, and that’s not serving food and beverages. The airline I worked for, SEP was quite rightly very tough and a we all had to go through rigorous recurrent tests every year which even the most experienced cabin crew found challenging but vital.

    • @Galworld761
      @Galworld761 Před rokem +8

      Louder for the menaces in the back. When I see trousers and practical shoes on FAs- I think “ready for action”. Skirts and heels don’t project “here for your safety”. Thank you for your thankless work.

    • @nhokonhokopuala
      @nhokonhokopuala Před rokem +5

      Ty, i find that people tend to forget about that.

    • @nodical802
      @nodical802 Před rokem +2

      Yea, in rare instances. But 99.9% of the time you’re just serving food and drinks.

    • @stephenbland7461
      @stephenbland7461 Před rokem +2

      @@nodical802 you’re cabin crew? Are you speaking for personal experience as cabin crew or personal observation as a pax?

    • @rickbaca9248
      @rickbaca9248 Před 9 měsíci +1

      A coleague's wife is a senior attendant for Delta. While in Santorini for a wedding we had long talks about her role as a flight attendant. I observed her roll was safety not serving drinks to snotty, drunk, pissed off passengers. The cabin crew has the more difficult job of dealing day in and day out with people who don't understand what the job of a flight attendant really is. Hats off to you and flight crews everywhere.

  • @christiangibbs8534
    @christiangibbs8534 Před rokem +64

    I think that Sully went above and beyond "doing his job." But I also think that there were dozens of heroes that day: All of the ATCs who dropped everything and disrupted all of that traffic to provide safe runways. The first officer who kept his cool. The cabin crew who got those people ready for something they never could have anticipated, and got every single one of them off of a sinking plane. The fire crews and emergency responders. The ferry crews and other boats that were so quick to the rescue. The ferry passengers who gave blankets and jackets to keep the victims warm.
    A hero, in my opinion, is someone who makes a sacrifice to do something for someone else, that they couldn't do on their own. Everyone involved that day was definitely a hero.

  • @joemusic2882
    @joemusic2882 Před 3 lety +616

    I would like to thank the Hudson River for just being there when needed most.

  • @AndrewFremantle
    @AndrewFremantle Před 4 lety +1532

    Was he a hero or was he doing his job?
    Yes.

  • @rhennaostrander5910
    @rhennaostrander5910 Před rokem +31

    Sully did a magnificent job. What is not mentioned is that he was a master glider plane pilot. This came into play as to how he glided the plane into the Hudson.

  • @justanotherupscaspirant8837

    "One way of looking at this might be that for 42 years, I've been making small, regular deposits in this bank of experience, education and training. And on January 15, the balance was sufficient so that I could make a very large withdrawal." - Sully
    Absolutely a hero.

  • @carljacolette6964
    @carljacolette6964 Před 3 lety +269

    My son met Sully at an event at Buckingham Palace, My son was there collecting a flying award as a junior pilot. Sully is a hero but is very humble, A great man

    • @tiffprendergast
      @tiffprendergast Před 3 lety +1

      My uncle met him

    • @jimmycorper
      @jimmycorper Před 3 lety +10

      A friend of my cousins uncle worked with a guy that cleaned Sullys grandma's gutters one summer. He said granny wasnt much of a pilot but made damn good blueberry pie.

    • @siesaw1
      @siesaw1 Před 3 lety +7

      @@jimmycorper I honestly can't tell if this is a joke or not 🤣

    • @guy2006
      @guy2006 Před 2 lety

      Not a hero

    • @iggy978
      @iggy978 Před 2 lety

      @@guy2006 how so

  • @auswar3ft
    @auswar3ft Před 3 lety +113

    I’m paraphrasing here but: Courage is not the absence of fear. It’s the ability to act correctly without panicking even when you’re afraid. I think Sully was courageous.

  • @1kopljar
    @1kopljar Před 10 měsíci +6

    Heroes ! All of them ! And thank you Kelsey for reminding us again ! One thing that really gives me chills is, if you listen to the audio of the incident (US Airways Flight 1549 Full Cockpit Recording), is how ATC is trying to do everything they can to help ... offering them to return to land on runway 31 ... and when Sully said "unable", ATC responded "OK, what do you need to land ?" ... I just can't shake off the feeling that at that moment, this controller would have probably built them a whole new airport if he could ... So, once again, thank you Kelsey for reminding us all how important it is that everybody work together !

  • @Koorime18
    @Koorime18 Před 2 lety +21

    I just want to point out Clint Eastwood's style of trying to be as realistic as possible was not only really good in their dialog (which is damn near exactly what was said on the audio logs) but that during these scenes... there's no score, no dramatic music. Just the sounds of the plane, the warning alarms, the whoosh as the plane descends, the straight audio of everyone talking as the full gravity of the situation unfolds. Great move on Clint's part.
    Also, EVERYONE involved is a hero. The ATC, Capt. Sully and his Co Pilot Jeffrey Skiles, the flight attendants, the ferrymen who responded. Great example of Americans coming together doing great things.

    • @MicrowavedAlastair5390
      @MicrowavedAlastair5390 Před 2 lety +2

      Its soundtrack is like Breath of the Wild- Sparse, but emotionally powerful when it kicks in. Especially with all the bombastic soundtracks nowadays (no offense to the composers, because it is good music) we don't really get moments where the movie is allowed to breathe. We've come to expect dramatic music for such scenes, that it's now actually more powerful when such scenes are silent.
      The only criticism I have is that the NTSB is far nerdier in real life. I understand why Clint wrote it the way he did, (he's a libertarian) but organizations like the NTSB and, say, the USGS for example, are more nerdy science people than political lawmakers. They don't actually get to make rules, but if they tell you something, it's generally a good idea to listen.

  • @glenchapman3899
    @glenchapman3899 Před 4 lety +883

    I remember an interview with Sully. He was asked did he say a pray or anything like asking God for help. He said no, he focused on flying and assumed the passengers had that part covered :)

    • @ramonsanabria1472
      @ramonsanabria1472 Před 3 lety +20

      Freakin awesome ! Talk about level headed ! 😜

    • @franciscoshi1968
      @franciscoshi1968 Před 3 lety +32

      It was all about team work. The pilots flying passengers praying. Got everything covered.

    • @Jesusprayerwarriorbw
      @Jesusprayerwarriorbw Před 3 lety +3

      Its awesome how nice these guys are.

    • @AtarahDerek
      @AtarahDerek Před 3 lety +14

      Not every prayer is made in words and a moment of silent focus. Sometimes doing what you were trained to do to save lives is the best, most sincere prayer you can offer.

    • @jossuekasindula5790
      @jossuekasindula5790 Před 3 lety +1

      @@franciscoshi1968 kkkkkkkkk lol. Wise one. It's true, the passengers are innocent.

  • @rstra730041
    @rstra730041 Před 4 lety +475

    I believe the way Sully, his first officer and the cabin crew handled this emergency constituted the highest standards of the aviation profession. The way Sully defended the crews actions and refused to take credit for saving the crew and passengers, in my book, makes him a hero.

  • @steveharriman7128
    @steveharriman7128 Před 2 lety +222

    Sully, Jeff, the crew, the ATC’s and all of the first responders absolutely were heroes that day. Heroes are ordinary people who do their jobs in extraordinary circumstances and save the lives of other people.
    Great story, great movie and a great video. It was compelling just to watch you watching that scene and see your authentic reactions and body language.

    • @nytom4info
      @nytom4info Před 2 lety +2

      Just doing their jobs!!

    • @Lord-Wolfie
      @Lord-Wolfie Před rokem +3

      Excellently mentioned. Although it is their job to safely get flights from A to B (or C, in this case), they did their job marvellous, so, they are ALL heroes!

    • @annika_panicka
      @annika_panicka Před rokem +2

      Brilliant comment! 👍👍

  • @DRMTTJ
    @DRMTTJ Před 10 měsíci +7

    I am amazed that this plane made it down without losing one, single person. Sully, in my opinion, did his job but was certainly a HERO!!! How he managed to keep that plane from cartwheeling and missing a bridge is amazing. Yep, a hero in my book!

  • @AMomandDaughter_370
    @AMomandDaughter_370 Před 2 lety +394

    Captain Sully is a hero. He was aviating, navigating and communicating. I watched him speaking about this experience in a video and, expressing that he’s very well read, knew that multi-tasking is a myth and that you’re basically just pivoting from one task to the next without doing either very well. He’s intuitive and accountable.

    • @nytom4info
      @nytom4info Před 2 lety +14

      And if you asked Sully if he was a hero... He'd say.. I was just PIC. pilot in command..

    • @M11TS
      @M11TS Před rokem +12

      Yes, I (as a mental health professional) confirm that multitasking is a myth.

    • @ranonampangom2185
      @ranonampangom2185 Před 11 měsíci

      He's a hero for doing his job well? What if he did his job well but everyone died? Would he still have been a "hero"?

  • @codyking4848
    @codyking4848 Před 3 lety +87

    Know how you know this guy is the real deal? He's making this clip in a hotel room. Thanks for what you do, man.

    • @factbeaglesarebest
      @factbeaglesarebest Před 3 lety

      Liked your comment so it wasn’t stuck at 69... just cuz I like what you said.

  • @darcydoll437
    @darcydoll437 Před rokem +19

    That one ATC agent when he learned Sully was going to need to land on the river...so devastated. He knew what the outcome of a water landing usually is. 😢 Sully is 100% a hero. All his vast experience got everyone home safe. Great crew too!!

    • @erika_itsumi5141
      @erika_itsumi5141 Před měsícem +1

      Yeah Tell that to the NTSB, those people hunted day and night to find something, anything they could to blame him for.

    • @ihicccup9446
      @ihicccup9446 Před 9 dny

      @@erika_itsumi5141no they did not. They did their investigation as they have to do when a plane crashes. Both crew have come out and said the NTSB weren’t nearly as bad as the movie made them out to be.

  • @LeadTrumpet1
    @LeadTrumpet1 Před 2 lety +11

    Sully and the entire crew are heroes. A fair number of long time New Yorkers have anxiety and/or PTSD after 9/11 and I remember social media that day went from panic to celebration really quick.
    The city also did some wildlife management on the Canada geese population so they weren’t living in large flocks near major airports.

  • @DuckOfRubber
    @DuckOfRubber Před 2 lety +142

    To me the toughest part would be getting to the “wait 30 seconds” part of the restart procedure, knowing you have to wait because the engine will never restart if you don’t give it time to build up a charge, but also knowing if it doesn’t work you don’t have another 30 seconds.

  • @huntsbychainsaw5986
    @huntsbychainsaw5986 Před 5 lety +962

    With great moustache comes great responsibility! 2 mighty moustaches in the cockpit that day lol.

    • @dennismayfield8846
      @dennismayfield8846 Před 5 lety +20

      Ha-Ha-Ha-Ha!! Quite-Right!!

    • @dennismayfield8846
      @dennismayfield8846 Před 5 lety +13

      Many Thanks For Your Response!

    • @huntsbychainsaw5986
      @huntsbychainsaw5986 Před 5 lety +15

      @Luxi Turna AWESOME! I accept this prestigious award not only for my self but for random comments every where! Thank you! Thank you! 😁

    • @elcidS15
      @elcidS15 Před 5 lety +17

      One might say you need 1 mustache per inoperative engine.

    • @huntsbychainsaw5986
      @huntsbychainsaw5986 Před 5 lety +5

      @@elcidS15 I completely agree!

  • @guilhermejurdi4701
    @guilhermejurdi4701 Před 2 lety +76

    Wow, Jeff himself answered. Man, all you pilots and all crew members are heroes everyday taking thousands of people safelly through the air. But this case was really unique. Sully, Jeff, and all people in this crew brought all passengers alive in a very critical situation. Heroes you are. Nice video! Hugs from Belo Horizonte, Brazil!

  • @v-doc5230
    @v-doc5230 Před 2 lety +108

    I remember the news coverage of that event and I was sooo impressed. Being an aerospace engineer, I know a thing about flying, even though I do not have a license. As far as I know, a forces water landing basically newer works for this kind of aircraft, because of the engines, which cause drag in the water, rip of the wings and thus the aircraft often sinks. It also often tumbles, because you often don't manage to hit is horizontally balanced so one side touches water first.
    This was outstanding flying by the flight crew. Also keeping the passangers from panicing, evacuating them safely was an outstanding job of the flight attendents. I think all excelled that day and did an incredible job, which lead to 0 casulties. What an impressive feat after such a catastrophic bird strike.
    When I watched the movie I was surprised to seeing all these theoretical simulations and all of the test pilots clearly had warning of what would happen. None of the real crew had that.
    Thanks for making this more accessible for normal people, Kelsey. :)

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Před rokem +5

      From an engineering perspective it is notable that aircraft had specific equipment for water ditching, and Sully used it. Specifically a button to close up the fuselage bottom to reduce sinking (and of cause the mechanical features to do so). Also notable is that terrain warnings are so loud even during emergency descent where it's mostly noise except in zero visibility, but at least it acts as instrument confirmation of situational awareness. It's also worth noting that APU power isn't automatic upon loss of main engine electricity, but that may be a feature to allow captain the choice between APU and ram turbine (the latter conflicting with water ditching).

    • @gordonepema722
      @gordonepema722 Před rokem +3

      I wondered about the engines too. They'd be the first parts of the a/c to hit the water, immediately causing a negative pitch moment on the plane and causing a nose down into the water, game over. That didn't happen so there couldn't have been enough drag on the engines after contact with the water, maybe because the water could flow through easily enough to allow the rest of the airframe to plane then settle. Maybe the bird damage cleared enough of the fan blades out to allow that. Bloody miracle in any event.

    • @franziskani
      @franziskani Před 4 měsíci

      @@johndododoe1411 They were lucky, this was a domestic flight, but the machine was equipped for water landings (in an emergency), so they could fly international.

  • @jeepien
    @jeepien Před 4 lety +294

    Good video. Glad you credited the FA's. I saw a stunning interview with one of the FA's afterward. She said she was fighting to keep from panicking at the end, and experienced what she described as almost a blackout--couldn't really see or hear for some long seconds. As she came out of it, she started to hear the chant: "BRACE BRACE BRACE; HEAD DOWN; STAY DOWN", over and over, but couldn't make out where it was coming from--till she realized it was her own voice!
    Man, if that doesn't prove the value of training, I don't know what does! Half blinded with fear, and still doing exactly the right thing at exactly the right time.

    • @MattH-wg7ou
      @MattH-wg7ou Před 3 lety +21

      Wow, thats powerful to read! Especially if you've been unlucky enough to have experienced an adrenaline type event with auditory and/or visual exclusion and temporal dilation.

    • @steiny3353
      @steiny3353 Před 3 lety +13

      @@MattH-wg7ou ..I agree Matt. That was very powerful. A bit moving, actually. They all did a fantastic job. As for 74 gear's question, "hero or just doing his job?" I say both. Having the experience and the strength of character/courage to do what you are trained for, and that goes for the FA too.

    • @tarundevnandan2327
      @tarundevnandan2327 Před 3 lety +2

      @jeepien where did u find that interview dude. can u share the link for that interview if possible✔💙

    • @jeepien
      @jeepien Před 3 lety +6

      @@tarundevnandan2327 Sorry, I just caught it in passing a long while back. Don't even remember if it was TV or youtube or what. Back when, I was teaching at Fort Lee High School, close enough to hit the GW Bridge with a potato. I certainly could have heard the plane fly over, if it had any engines running. But I didn't know what was going on till I got in the car to drive home. I took the river road south along the western bank of the Hudson but couldn't see much by then.

  • @heidifedor
    @heidifedor Před 3 lety +205

    Even though you know that they survive, it’s still nail biting.

  • @aliceblue7305
    @aliceblue7305 Před 2 lety +24

    He was doing a part of the job that neither he nor anyone else had practiced. So he was also a hero. This situation always moves me to tears.

  • @BJenno
    @BJenno Před 2 lety +30

    I felt like I was in that cockpit with them. The feeling of relief after they landed smoothly onto the Hudson was too real for me. Captain Sully was, and still is, a true American hero on that day, and will remain for years to come.

  • @melloyellogsxr
    @melloyellogsxr Před 3 lety +220

    For some reason when the flight attendants start chanting instructions to the passengers i find myself fighting back tears.. Don't know why but it happens everytime.

    • @BenjHolt
      @BenjHolt Před 3 lety +32

      At least I'm not alone with that... When Sully comes to the radio and says "brace or impact" I get goosebumps all over my body every single time

    • @jpp9876
      @jpp9876 Před 3 lety +13

      Me too, I think we understand the stakes, and hats off to the whole flight crew, for their professionalism.

    • @BenjHolt
      @BenjHolt Před 3 lety +6

      @@jpp9876 exactly... It always comes to my head what the hell would I do in this situation (as a passenger)... Probably I'd panick and black out

    • @L.Spencer
      @L.Spencer Před 3 lety +3

      I was surprised to see them walking through the rows, were they doing that to check the plane for damage? Don't the flight attendants usually have to wait until the seatbelt sign is off?

    • @megsterbbb
      @megsterbbb Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah, it happened for me but that was more seeing the passengers' fear and that one guy that got on his phone

  • @Intel_Corei9
    @Intel_Corei9 Před 3 lety +121

    ATC right after the water landing: "Cactus 1549 I have a number for you to call..."

  • @rcmanski2
    @rcmanski2 Před 2 lety +46

    We had the privilege of hearing Mr Skiles talk at a fund raiser for the West Michigan Aviation Academy in Michigan. It was a a riveting talk. It was like being right there in the cockpit. Heroes, in my book yes. The whole flight crew were heroes! The ATC were also heroes that day. Thank you Captain Sullivan and First Officer Skiles! You will always be heroes to me!

    • @detroitblue9407
      @detroitblue9407 Před rokem

      How many aliens did he shoot in Muskegon, Michigan?

  • @saltields7649
    @saltields7649 Před 2 lety +30

    I think both. He was doing his job as I pilot and used all of his experience to handle the situation as well as he did. He is also a hero because he was able to land the plane on the Hudson so perfectly. I also think that his military career helped him stay calm and able to keep control of the situation.

  • @Zhonguoria
    @Zhonguoria Před 5 lety +427

    Damn.... Sully, his copilot Jeff Skiles, and the entire flight crew were all heroes! 👍

    • @aplicqu8761
      @aplicqu8761 Před 4 lety +10

      Whenever you do your job well and professionally, you're a hero. Sometimes it's just small victories. A well served customer getting what they needed. In this case it was enormous.

    • @save708
      @save708 Před 4 lety

      Sully in not copilot

    • @PackardBelltoll
      @PackardBelltoll Před 4 lety +4

      That man deserves alot respect . he made the right call to save his crew . That is commendable .

    • @mrnemo204
      @mrnemo204 Před 4 lety +3

      And it's amazing he actually commented here

    • @romeoroberts8647
      @romeoroberts8647 Před 4 lety

      @@save708 he never said that

  • @ratkeller9608
    @ratkeller9608 Před 4 lety +269

    while Tom hanks as Captain Sully asks for the checklist he is actually thinking damn we should have done this in castaway.

  • @DF-DefendFREEDOM
    @DF-DefendFREEDOM Před 9 měsíci +3

    Sully did his job, the safe transition of passengers from one location to another, however his skill as a pilot is exceptional. It was a blessing that day for Sully to be the pilot in that uncharacteristic incident. His prompt realization of facts most likely saved lives as he acted with deliberation and skill. Yes Sully is a hero… The greatest marvel is hero’s seldom think they are a hero, they believe they are just a person, at that moment in time, was there to do a job laid before them.

  • @ingridsweeney1787
    @ingridsweeney1787 Před 8 měsíci +6

    Solly was just doing his job as an airline pilot, but also a hero. The decisions he made while remaining calm were phenomenal

  • @canuckrcp
    @canuckrcp Před 3 lety +451

    Firstly, thanks for the great, concise and professional content you provide.
    Secondly, as An FA I want to greatly thank you for the recognition for the work we do "down the back end".
    When I was hired as an FA and I told my friends 9 weeks training is what I would undergo they all said "does it take THAT long to learn how to pour a Diet Coke and hand out a bag of chips?"
    My reply was "No". That takes 4 days. The rest of the time we learn and train and practice over and over again how to keep our passengers safe - including evacuating 350 passengers from a crashed aircraft with only half of the exits available in under 90 seconds. Fight fires in the cabin at 35000 feet until the captain can land, and oh yes - combat terrorists.

    • @twstdreality
      @twstdreality Před 2 lety +24

      Sounds pretty badass to me

    • @msr1116
      @msr1116 Před 2 lety +21

      I just don't understand why there is still the pervasive belief that FAs are waitresses in the sky. Smh.

    • @phydeux
      @phydeux Před 2 lety +18

      Combating terrorists by throwing bags of chips and cans of Diet Coke at them? 😜
      Just kidding, your friends need to see your skills at strapping them to a seat using seat belt extensions.

    • @tanya5322
      @tanya5322 Před 2 lety +15

      @@msr1116 probably a holdover from the “golden age of air travel” and the joke I heard as a kid with the FA asking the passengers (largely male businessmen) “coffee, tea, or me?”
      These days, even if it was true that FAs were little more than glorified wait-staff (they are so much more than that)… they would probably still need extensive training on how to with an ever increasing self-important passenger base. Because unlike a waitress at a bar or restaurant, FAs can’t simply kick people out the door.
      Fortunately, most of us will never see an FA put most their trading to use. Thus the misconception persists.
      On a similar note, my daughter has been a certified lifeguard for 15 years now, and is now also a certified lifeguard instructor. So far in 15 years of she has only had to use her CPR training once. And that was for a member who had collapsed in the locker room. And yet like FAs I’m sure, she gets her CPR skills re-certified on a yearly(?) basis. (Some certs a good for a year, others are good for two years)

    • @JoshuaTootell
      @JoshuaTootell Před 2 lety +18

      Very under rated position.
      I do love the one quote I read/heard (probably from this channel):
      Flight Attendants are there for safety, not convenience. If you weren't needed you would have been replaced by a soda machine.

  • @itsabustout
    @itsabustout Před 4 lety +343

    Great video! I just happened to be on the 1st hudson ferry to arrive on scene to pull people off the wing. The smell of fuel burned our eyes but still did everything we could. What a day to remember. The only major injury was one flight attendant with a wounded/broken leg that we took on board. Keep up the good work!

    • @PFab
      @PFab Před 3 lety +18

      That must of been crazy. I can't imagine what was going through everyone's heads. Right after 9/11 and being in New York on a plane crash. All that going on and trying to focus on saving people. Just crazy. Good work to everyone involved.

    • @MrGeek70
      @MrGeek70 Před 3 lety +19

      Thank you for helping people in dire need!

    • @aerospacesystems8658
      @aerospacesystems8658 Před 3 lety +7

      I envy you... What an amazing experience! So cool that everybody survived.

    • @Flash1857
      @Flash1857 Před 3 lety +5

      Thank you

    • @mbowen300
      @mbowen300 Před 3 lety +9

      If it wasn't for people like you, even though the plane landed in one piece, there would've been many tragedies. There were many heroes that day......you were one of them!

  • @stephanieritter4771
    @stephanieritter4771 Před 2 lety +7

    What an honor to have Jeff Skiles comment on your video..... I already had mad respect for you but it's so great that he would take the time to know who you were and to watch your content.... We all think you're pretty fantastic..... To Say that we're proud of what Sully and Jeff did he is an understatement and always will be and will go down in the history books as to one of the best recoveries in avionic history....A shout out to those airline stewardess who absolutely saved lives and they all do... they will always put themselves first before the passengers and the ATC and the whole crew involved was just magnificent.... And to Clint Eastwood that he tries to stay true to every story that he makes he did a great job in that movie..... So thank you Kelsey for your content I always look forward to it and although I wasn't a aviation follower.... I did have the chance to fly a two-seater.... If only for a few minutes..... It was incredible and because of your channel and others that happened to come up into my feed a couple months ago I have become absolutely a huge fan and I can't stop watching

  • @steveburton2997
    @steveburton2997 Před 2 lety +18

    Sully was a hero with the experience to land the plane to rescue of all the survivors. Also, the rescue efforts of the Waterway Ferry and other first responders were heroes in this effort.

    • @davelee9087
      @davelee9087 Před 2 lety +4

      The response by the watercraft on the Hudson was so fast it could have been assumed they were there just for that reason. They were the unsung 'heroes' for their response.

  • @flyerbob124
    @flyerbob124 Před 5 lety +215

    Jeff Skiles told me that Sully never gave up command of that flight even after it was in the water. That flight was text book cockpit team work.

  • @briancaldwell7305
    @briancaldwell7305 Před 5 lety +760

    Sully and Sykes followed the first rule of flight: fly the aircraft.

    • @seanmccrary8300
      @seanmccrary8300 Před 5 lety +34

      Absolutely, fly it the best you can for as long as she will fly. It's okay if she turns into a glider just quickly realize your constraints on effective distance you can still fly based on glide slope and you will quickly know what you can and cannot make. He clearly knew he couldn't make the airport.

    • @williamjones4483
      @williamjones4483 Před 4 lety +33

      I believe Captain Joe says Aviate, Navigate then Communicate.

    • @michaelcowell4654
      @michaelcowell4654 Před 4 lety +23

      CORRECT!!! they totally skipped the steps on freaking out and running up and down the aisle screaming "We're all goona die!"

    • @michaelcowell4654
      @michaelcowell4654 Před 4 lety +1

      @Robbie Moser you forget the end result :) I know that I could not have done better, I would have tried Tetterboro (that would have made my record look just great!) lol Love to hear how Gear74 would have handled this.I've had bird strike as most of us probably have, but the intensity (number of birds) is NOT something I've experienced.

    • @mattpalmer8918
      @mattpalmer8918 Před 4 lety +23

      @X-Plane Captain 4609 well, he did navigate. instead of going over a crowded urban area he navigated the aircraft to minimize collateral damage.

  • @CyarSkirata
    @CyarSkirata Před 2 lety +24

    The one thing I'd say the crew can unquestionably be credited with is being quite simply amazing at their jobs.
    Lives were in their hands and they kept their heads, as far as I'm concerned that makes them heroes.

  • @josephherron7671
    @josephherron7671 Před rokem +7

    Sully was just doing his job. But the fact that he, Jeff and the flight attendants did their jobs so well under that kind of pressure with that much at stake. That makes them all heroes.

  • @milky94
    @milky94 Před 4 lety +753

    *74 Gear:* "ATC is your best friend!"
    *also 74 Gear:* "I reported that we flew through a bunch of birds, ATC didn't really seem to care."

    • @nitehawk86
      @nitehawk86 Před 4 lety +113

      Funny, my best friends are assholes too.

    • @FatheredPuma81
      @FatheredPuma81 Před 4 lety +33

      I mean it's kind of reasonable tbh. They probably hear it every single day and know planes are built to eat quite a few birds without being effected.

    • @hellyfahreza
      @hellyfahreza Před 4 lety +5

      Because my best friend is not ATC

    • @orlandodavidson2321
      @orlandodavidson2321 Před 4 lety +1

      Lmao

    • @k1productions87
      @k1productions87 Před 4 lety +43

      ATC likely won't make a deal out of it unless you are reporting engine failure or declaring an emergency

  • @incorefoysal
    @incorefoysal Před 2 lety +116

    You can see him swallowing in his Adams apple the moment the birds strike the plane.
    He was really in the moment visualizing himself in that situation

    • @vsabio
      @vsabio Před 2 lety +8

      Yeah I saw that, too. And also as the plane was coming in on the Hudson....

    • @squirrellyb9753
      @squirrellyb9753 Před 2 lety

      I caught that too.

  • @88silvergt
    @88silvergt Před 2 lety +15

    Been flying 15 years and I still get a little emotional watching movies like this. Amazing job!!!

  • @maureengreen3625
    @maureengreen3625 Před 2 lety +11

    Only 2,800 feet. What a hero. This video was so helpful. Thanks. My dad was an Air Force pilot but he didn’t talk about his work. I love getting a smidgeon of a feel for what he did watching this channel.

  • @joelzimmerman2462
    @joelzimmerman2462 Před 4 lety +60

    As an airline pilot (32 years/46 flying, and with multiple bird strikes on both, engine or airframe), I appreciate non-biased reviews. Yes, Sully, and Jeff Skiles ARE Heros. Classic CRM.

  • @holdemNE1
    @holdemNE1 Před 3 lety +248

    Quick Reference Handbook:
    What to do when you have double engine failure:
    1) Turn on APU
    2) Panic........you're hosed.

    • @danuttall
      @danuttall Před 3 lety +29

      For psychological reasons the word "panic" is never in a QRH, not even in the context of "Don't Panic!" (I know, wrong book) "Stay calm and carry on" should be well understood by the time you get your pilot's licence. So this should be:
      1. Activate APU
      2. Declare emergency.
      2.1. Tell ATC your souls on board and that fuel load does not really matter as far as flight time goes.
      3. See if you can find a soft place to put the airplane.
      The next step may depend on your religious beliefs.

    • @NerdyCatCoffeeee
      @NerdyCatCoffeeee Před 2 lety

      @@danuttall i dont think praying will turn the engines back on. At the same time, god is all powerful, so he just might

    • @jcwrld1369
      @jcwrld1369 Před 2 lety +1

      nsjsj lol nice one 😆

  • @charlesgreco6964
    @charlesgreco6964 Před 2 lety +9

    I was a flight attendant (now retired) with US Airways when Captain Sullenberger ditched the aircraft onto the Hudson. I know Sheila, who was the ‘A’ flight attendant, (forward cabin), on that flight. What we see in the movie “Sully” are true to form to Sheila’s discriptions of the events in the main cabin. Clint Eastwood wouldn’t have had it any other way.

  • @sarah259
    @sarah259 Před rokem +7

    I loved this film. I think it did a fantastic job of showing us the true heroic feat accomplished by the pilots, crew, and first responders that day. We all heard of it when it happened, but no one really understands how incredible this is until we see what it looks like to end up in a river on a commercial jet, with the flooding fuselage, the dangerously cold air and water, and the sheer number of people stranded. The end where we got to meet the real survivors and see them reunite with Sulley and the plane truly made this movie great, reminding us again of the sheer level of heroism and the incredible nature of the human spirit.

  • @jcarlovitch
    @jcarlovitch Před 3 lety +759

    I cant believe Hollywood turned down my screenplay for a sequel titled "Sully is a murderer" which would have depicted this event from the birds point of view.

    • @74gear
      @74gear  Před 3 lety +189

      Well technically Jeff was flying when they hit the birds. You see how fast I can do these videos 😂

    • @gunpowdertimothy5644
      @gunpowdertimothy5644 Před 2 lety +16

      @@74gear But can you do the videos as fast as it takes a 747 at typical cruising speed to travel 46.7 miles at an altitude of 25,000 feet?

    • @kauztuv
      @kauztuv Před 2 lety +31

      Pitch the idea to the angry birds guys. They might do something with it 😀

    • @PandemoniumMeltDown
      @PandemoniumMeltDown Před 2 lety

      I'd say the airplane industry but ok.

    • @ZackBurnsOG
      @ZackBurnsOG Před 2 lety +10

      Take it up in Court....Get yourself a good bird lawyer...

  • @parazet4799
    @parazet4799 Před 4 lety +426

    *nice view of the hudson*
    Birds: we will help you get down there...

  • @brickisland6353
    @brickisland6353 Před 2 lety +4

    The best with this clip is that we have Jeff Skiles in the comments explaining things.

  • @Seabasstien
    @Seabasstien Před 10 měsíci +3

    Great Post. I think Sully and Skiles, air traffic control, the USAir 1549 flight crew, passengers and first responders are all heroes. I am overwhelmed with joy every time I hear this story. Humanity stepped up to the plate that day❤

  • @marc21256
    @marc21256 Před 5 lety +620

    "a hero" or "doing his job" Can't it be both? Courage isn't fearlessness. Lack of fear is carelessness. Courage is feeling the fear, and doing the job right anyway.

    • @1stinsonguy
      @1stinsonguy Před 5 lety +5

      Spoken like a true outhouse philosopher. LOL

    • @kevinquinn1993
      @kevinquinn1993 Před 5 lety +9

      You are right. And the same holds true in many walks of life. God bless you sir.

    • @randialtman8612
      @randialtman8612 Před 5 lety +4

      @@kevinquinn1993 ALL walks of life

    • @kevinquinn1993
      @kevinquinn1993 Před 5 lety +6

      @@randialtman8612 I gave your comment a thumbs up because you raised a nice point. Still, perhaps for some who have already chosen the wrong walk in life, the same does not apply in a similar fashion. For example I watched a video in which a man whose livelihood was stealing other people's cell phones by force so that he could sell them on the black market was interviewed. He was admonishing people to just give up the phone so that he wouldn't have to use violence upon them. True, his lack of fear is carelessness, because he cares not for the Salvation of his own soul. But his courage is taken in a very dark direction and makes him far less than a hero. God bless you! Thank you for commenting.

    • @MR-ub6sq
      @MR-ub6sq Před 5 lety +2

      Marc Whinery : I agree. Just did his job, not anymore. But anyway some people have worshiped Zeus and partners, even though these gods are mythology. Is it therefore no wonder that some people life-saving pilot is a hero to these people. And the different story is the media's interest in finding something amazing to sell only their job!

  • @ccpperrett7522
    @ccpperrett7522 Před 3 lety +135

    Sully was a well trained professional that flew that plane along with the FO and made a forced water landing. 155 souls saved. God bless Capt Sully, FO Skiles, and flight crew. Also thanks to ATC and the passengers who helped one another. Thanks to the Harbor rescue.

  • @manzell
    @manzell Před 2 lety +11

    This happened on my first day of an internship in NYC. I was taking a bus from NJ to Port Authority and must have been in the Lincoln Tunnel when the plane landed. When I got out of the terminal and into Times Square, there were sirens and flashing lights everywhere if you looked west down 42nd. I was glad everyone made it out OK!

  • @Goose9313
    @Goose9313 Před 2 lety +5

    Can think of nothing worse than being in a plane, in the air and everything just goes super quiet.
    This movie still gives me goosebumps, an amazing pilot who landed so perfectly in the water

  • @danielbenson5858
    @danielbenson5858 Před 4 lety +275

    Small decisions make a huge difference. Sully says, "Brace for impact." In his book, he remembers wondering if he said the right thing. But he gave himself credit - if he'd said "Brace for water landing" the passengers could've been fumbling for flotation devices instead of assuming brace positions. Ergo, more injuries and possibly fatalities.
    Skiles had just finished extensive training to pilot Airbus frames after a long time on Boeing, including emergency procedures. Therefore Sully taking the aircraft and Skiles running the QRH checklist while it was more or less fresh in memory was another small yet potentially life-saving decision.
    Ms Welsh helping get people off the aircraft despite being severely injured. All five crew with amazing devotion to and expertise at their work - all of them with many years, decades of service. They were all doing their job. There are reasons that the procedures are there: the safety of all souls on board. They did the right thing. Does that make them heroes? Put another way: in today's context, with the coronavirus around us, you've got doctors, nurses, porters, cleaners all doing their jobs with expertise and according to procedure despite a dearth of protective gear. Are they heroes?
    Absolutely.

    • @gundvr1846
      @gundvr1846 Před 3 lety

      sup

    • @ramonsanabria1472
      @ramonsanabria1472 Před 3 lety

      Just semantics ! Let's not get caught up with our choice of words !

    • @elbendecido.5160
      @elbendecido.5160 Před 3 lety +6

      Yes, they are heroes. Authentic, flesh and blood, who cry, suffer, bleed. Many ask cynically: Are they heroes for doing your job? Of course not. They were not doing their job, when landing a plane in a river, because the planes normally land on runways, safely, with firefighters, with flight controllers etc. They were doing something that they never thought to do. They went beyond their duties, their obligations, they went beyond their training; beyond their experience, that's why they are HEROES. The other pilots, who land a plane under normal conditions, ARE NOT CALLED HEROES. It's just like an animal keeper in a zoo: He does his job every day, normally. He feeds lions, tigers, panthers etc. Nobody calls him hero, it is his job, but if a child accidentally falls into a lion's den, and the caretaker jumps to save that child. HE IS A HERO, not by doing his job, but by DOING SOMETHING OUTSIDE OF HIS JOB. Risking his life, the tranquility of his family etc. Another example. The military go to war and are not heroes for going to the front lines. They will defend their flag or their homeland, just as all the military in the world do. They are heroes, when they do something extraordinary, something that nobody does normally, putting their lives at risk, to save their comrades in combat, to save innocents, etc. etc. etc. That's what happened at HUDSON RIVER.

    • @paulsheridan424
      @paulsheridan424 Před 3 lety +1

      Or, to put it ANOTHER way, what if you have a "mission critical" job and you not only fail to do it the best way possible, but you repeatedly get in the way of others who ARE doing their job, in the best way possible? Does that make the president an anti-hero? What other name would you give that person? I can think of a few...

    • @jshepard152
      @jshepard152 Před 3 lety +2

      @@paulsheridan424
      Just what I came to see on this channel....someone grinding their political axe.

  • @TheJer1963
    @TheJer1963 Před 4 lety +55

    He did something no other pilot had ever even trained for so this guy is a hero in my book.

  • @VladimirGorev
    @VladimirGorev Před 2 lety +21

    Everyone, who can overcome fear and panic, and act normally under the pressure of circumstances saving a lot of lives in the process - is a hero by definition.

  • @laurashapter6287
    @laurashapter6287 Před 10 měsíci +3

    I’ve mad respect for Sully! He did amazing. Both the pilots did, the fact that they didn’t panic, sought options and at the end of it everyone lived. Neither pilots deserved to to have been looked at like they didn’t make the best decision

  • @damongreville2197
    @damongreville2197 Před 5 lety +148

    When a guy does a great job, in the most difficult of circumstances, without giving way to panic and fear, and his actions save many lives, then he is a hero. All the crew were heroes. Brilliant team effort.

    • @flagmichael
      @flagmichael Před 4 lety +2

      I was in general aviation in a past life and was often in awe that pilots who had little hope of living through impact would give up their last chance of survival to try to avoid casualties on the ground.

  • @doxinator3560
    @doxinator3560 Před 4 lety +160

    I was an aircrewman in the Navy, some years ago. We used to share the often heard joke about the hours of boring routine occasionally interrupted by moments of sheer terror. Funny, but true. Part of the military experience was learning to maintain composure and a rational state of mind independent of your emotional state. But you never know you can do it, until it really matters. It's not heroic to do what you're supposed to do. But it is heroic to remain competent under the pressure of the very real specter of life threatening harm.

    • @standartenfuhrerhanslanda4867
      @standartenfuhrerhanslanda4867 Před 4 lety +5

      Dylan Doxey this comment is underrated

    • @opl500
      @opl500 Před 4 lety

      It's either one or the other. I would add that training consists of a good chunk of queasiness. So, boredom, terror and queasiness.

    • @ebmvideoproductions
      @ebmvideoproductions Před 4 lety +1

      hours of boredom followed by seconds of sheer terror? sounds like another visit from my mother in law.

    • @thundercactus
      @thundercactus Před 4 lety +2

      My dad was an RCAF pilot for over 20 years, I remember one time he came home and just non-nonchalantly exclaimed "I set the plane on fire today"
      Fly the same plane for 10 years without issue and one day the radar just sets a battery on fire lol

    • @winecrafter1
      @winecrafter1 Před 4 lety +2

      I spent 23 years in the Canadian Military as a photographer. I photographed a few plane crashes & many vehicle accidents & fires. I agree with your comments about so much boredom and routine followed by seconds of sheer terror! That is so true. I thank you very much for saying what you did about doing what you are trained to do, it is second nature. It is just in you to react, and just jump in and help people. Thank you again on behalf of my many Military friends and coworkers for your kind words.

  • @LulzRoyce
    @LulzRoyce Před 2 lety +2

    The fact that they chose to not play some tense music over this scene made it more tense for me

  • @trumpet5565
    @trumpet5565 Před 2 lety +8

    Absolutely a hero. He and everyone working that flight. God bless them.

  • @sigmadeltahomevideo
    @sigmadeltahomevideo Před 4 lety +123

    the part where Sully says: "this is the captain, brace for impact" always gives me a shiver up my spine... I believe this movie is the most accurate in showing pilot procedures and Clint did a great job on this movie (amazing visuals!) thanks again

    • @tiffprendergast
      @tiffprendergast Před 4 lety

      Sigma Delta yess

    • @sibbywoo
      @sibbywoo Před 4 lety +5

      What Kelsey did not show was right after the forced landing, Sully ran out of the flight deck and said “evacuate”

    • @Swift-Kiwi
      @Swift-Kiwi Před 4 lety

      Mama just killed a man...

    • @serpentisma
      @serpentisma Před 4 lety +4

      @@sibbywoo Also he didn't show that Sully refused to leave the plane until he knew that EVERYONE had gotten out of the aircraft safely. He did his job and performed beyond admirably. H E R O!

    • @sigmadeltahomevideo
      @sigmadeltahomevideo Před 4 lety

      @@markusnashorn1145
      Who mentioned Star Trek on this thread? Seriously?

  • @magnusb.20
    @magnusb.20 Před 4 lety +2827

    I’m not afraid of flying...
    I’m afraid of the plane suddenly not flying

    • @KnowZz
      @KnowZz Před 4 lety +21

      MEME LORD lol

    • @bnkrazie
      @bnkrazie Před 4 lety +81

      Falling with style?

    • @LaciDoszka
      @LaciDoszka Před 4 lety +38

      Flying is better than travel by ship/cruiser.
      There are such of ships already stay in the ocean.
      But there are NO planes stay in the air.

    • @magnusb.20
      @magnusb.20 Před 4 lety +8

      Laci Doszka m8 in air refueling ring a bell of course it doesn’t because u can’t english

    • @harveyezihe
      @harveyezihe Před 4 lety +1

      🤣 🤣

  • @m.b.calderhead268
    @m.b.calderhead268 Před rokem +2

    Both. What a cool customer he was. That was definitely a Profile in Courage. All those years of experience. All that talent that came together in a few minutes that saved the day for everyone on
    board, including Sully going through an empty, evacuated plane to make sure no one was left, frozen in
    their seat. Admiration galore!!

  • @MS-19
    @MS-19 Před 2 lety +12

    What do I think of Sully? He was (is) a true professional, who dealt with an unexpected and challenging situation to the best of his ability with the understanding of years of experience to guide him. He was also able to face the necessary inquiry into the accident with grace and dignity. The same goes for his copilot Jeff Skiles, the cabin crew, the ATC personnel, those on the ground at the airports to which it was suggested that he might divert, and to the ferry crews and emergency services that responded. Between them, every life jeopardised in that situation was saved. Every passenger and crewmember got to return home to their families and friends. Any landing you can walk away from is a good one; they didn't exactly walk away, being on the Hudson River for a while pending their rescue by boat, but to all intents and purposes everyone walked away.
    In crediting Sully and his people, we must also credit Clint Eastwood, one of America's greatest film makers, for telling the story so sympathetically. He didn't set "Hollywood versus reality," but brought reality straight into Hollywood. The result is remarkably moving and a testament to the heroic people it depicts.

  • @FRITZI999
    @FRITZI999 Před 5 lety +247

    what did he do wrong? .... NOTHING ... he saved his Passengers in a Situation no other one could handle. A true Hero and I would be happy if I could fly with him. thanks Sully !!!

    • @mattpalmer8918
      @mattpalmer8918 Před 4 lety +14

      now if every pilot was as calm and skilled as sully....

    • @Verbally.autistic
      @Verbally.autistic Před 4 lety +1

      @Dominus Ghaul wrong place for you ghaul, shouldnt you be fighting the red war right now?

    • @vilmaburakiene8726
      @vilmaburakiene8726 Před 4 lety +3

      you fly 1 million passengers and you can get judged by 200 seconds

    • @jusezaba8557
      @jusezaba8557 Před 4 lety +2

      Every airline pilot is trained to handle that situation but at higher altitude

    • @braindeadlogan230
      @braindeadlogan230 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jusezaba8557 they arent. No One had ever lost both engines at an altitude of 2800 ft before. It was impossible to return to the airport and the only option he had was to ditch the aircraft in the Hudson. And it turns out he did it perfectly.

  • @MandoMonge
    @MandoMonge Před 4 lety +60

    It always gives me chills when the cabin crew are chanting their brace commands

  • @blake7587
    @blake7587 Před 26 dny +1

    You gotta admit Sully did a good job.
    Even in the news many non-American pilots said he showed remarkable skill.

  • @TCSC47
    @TCSC47 Před 2 lety +1

    As you asked at the end of the video -- Hero or just doing his job? ------ HERO most definitely! The right people in the right place, at the time nobody wants! Great film to see the good guys win!
    I come from a family seeped in aeronautics and I was being brought up to enter the RAF here in the UK and I expected to be a pilot. However, -- and I kept on thinking this throughout the crash scenes and the enquiry scenes, --- I simply could not have managed the situation like Sully, Jeff and crew with the coolness they must have displayed. I had passed the entrance exams for the RAF but for many reasons ended up at University instead and became an engineer and physics teacher which I don't regret one bit. So good job!
    One event in my life probably had more affect on my future than any other. As a 16 year old Air Training Cadet back in the early 60's I was on my gliding course at Tangmere airfield here in the UK. On my second time up, the instructor handed me the controls. He told me to "push the stick forward gently". Now to me, as a physics nerd, "gently" indicated a force so I felt the force on the stick as I pushed it forward with the stick pushing back with a gentle force ---- as I continued to push the stick ALL the way forward! The ground which had previously been underneath us moved around to be directly in front of us, and the wind noise increased dramatically! (open cockpit glider). This is very exciting I was thinking when the stick violently snapped out of my hand and the instructor levelled us off and took the shortest route back to landing. I remember wondering why he said nothing about "I have control" so I could reply "You have control" or anything like. When we came to a stop I looked across at the instructor (side by side seats) and he simply looked straight ahead and would not make eye contact. Strange, I thought, but I thanked him and climbed out. I continued with wing duty pushing gliders around for the rest of the day and the following day, wondering when I would get another go. It was only at the end of the second day when I overheard two other cadets talking about the idiot who had "put the glider on its nose yesterday" that I began to understand what had happened. Of course when the instructor said "gently" he was referring to the decent of the glider, and nothing to do with the stick! My card had clearly been marked even though I did eventually get back up in the air towards the end of the course. However I ran out of time and never completed it.
    Over the (many) years since I have wondered who was at fault here. Me for just being thick? The instructor for inexact terminology? Both of us? I still can't make up my mind, but anyway, I think it demonstrated that I was much more suitable to live and work in the laboratory trying to understand relativity and quantum mechanics and what other physicists are saying about why there is something instead of nothing. Better for the world than me being faced with a Sully situation, anyway. And as a teacher, it did inculcate in me the need for precise and clear terminology at all times when issuing instructions and explanations to students, so the episode was not a complete failure!
    Thankyou for giving me an excuse to tell my tale here. My own kids and grandchildren are fed up of hearing about it!

  • @tqsuited
    @tqsuited Před 3 lety +277

    Whenever you hear the PULL, UP... PULL, UP... PULL, UP.... shit gets real.

    • @danepetersen5792
      @danepetersen5792 Před 3 lety +9

      I'd just go ahead and pull up

    • @shinkreytpuylap
      @shinkreytpuylap Před 3 lety +19

      @@danepetersen5792
      Oh and then your plane stalls :D

    • @thcthehonestclone6329
      @thcthehonestclone6329 Před 3 lety +3

      Yup....just ask Kobe Bryant.

    • @tqsuited
      @tqsuited Před 3 lety +19

      @@thcthehonestclone6329 Kobe enjoyed a covid-free life, at least. Things were still normal in January 2020. I could never have envisioned a virus from some shithole Chinese city shutting down everything.

    • @thcthehonestclone6329
      @thcthehonestclone6329 Před 3 lety +6

      @@tqsuited Good point of view. Quick death VS. Drowning in your own blood/fluid in a coma...racking up costs for your family to pay... becoming a statistics number. However, to see your death coming via hellacious- 🚁Heli spiral.... the fog blinding your future and past... no time to pray to God... a final slam that perhaps could be infinite..ALL THE WAY DOWN.
      Something to ponder indeed

  • @eme.261
    @eme.261 Před 3 lety +244

    OK... the most interesting thing about this? While focusing on the scenes, 74 Gear (Kelsey) rarely blinks. His attention is laser focused until he begins to speak directly to the camera. It's both freakish and impressive.

    • @chrysopraselepidoptera3490
      @chrysopraselepidoptera3490 Před 3 lety +15

      It's been shown that when we are focused on a screen, for example watching a movie, we do indeed blink less.

    • @JohnRodriguesPhotographer
      @JohnRodriguesPhotographer Před 3 lety +10

      He was above average intense watching this one . I'm surprised he didn't throw a little body English in there. You could tell a part of him was in that cockpit.

    • @IChoseOther
      @IChoseOther Před 3 lety +6

      He is a pilot so it could be that he’s just that focused when it comes to flight which is super interesting like how often do you think they blink when in an emergency situation. They could literally miss something in the blink of an eye.

    • @eme.261
      @eme.261 Před 3 lety +1

      @@chrysopraselepidoptera3490 -- I work in operations and marketing and I am pretty much focused on a screen 60% of the time I'm working, as are my colleagues.
      Kelsey's attention is remarkable.

    • @olabergvall3154
      @olabergvall3154 Před 3 lety +1

      Kelsey is just not a man who blinks much. Watch some more 74gear videos and you'll see what I mean.

  • @ballaking1000
    @ballaking1000 Před 2 lety +9

    2:21 such a powerful line and so true. I couldn't imagine the pressure of being responsible for 155 lives and having to make borderline instantaneous decisions... Everyone survives and STILL having to be thoroughly scrutinized by the media and more importantly, the law after everything that happened is over.

  • @ValidityJ
    @ValidityJ Před rokem

    Genuinely, I am SO GRATEFUL for EVERYBODY who makes my flights successful. Being able to fly people across the world & safely is SUCH a modern miracle and it takes true dedication of ALL who are involved....from the ticketing agents, ground staff, flight attendants, ATC, pilots and even the passengers. Im an Orthodox Christian and corporately, Orthodox Christians pray every liturgy for "those who travel". We also have special prayers for those who pilot & travel by air or by sea. Sully & Skiles are clearly walking in their calling, as are the rest of the airline staff and ATCs. They ALL did an amazing job.

  • @floyd8740
    @floyd8740 Před 5 lety +390

    One thing that is often overlooked, but the movie highlights very well, is the incredible actions of the ferry operators.
    I'm not exaggerating when I say that even having survived the landing, being sopping wet and standing on the wings in those conditions, hypothermia could have killed some people within minutes. Not only did they not hesitate, or sit back waiting for 1st responders, but they showed considerable skill in maneuvering their ferries and rescuing the passengers

    • @godbluffvdgg
      @godbluffvdgg Před 5 lety +2

      26 minutes...

    • @JRobbySh
      @JRobbySh Před 5 lety +22

      Shows the astounding capabilities involved in the organization of a great city and the underrated skills of its people.

    • @exit13d
      @exit13d Před 5 lety +32

      I agree wholeheartedly. I watched the evacuation of the passengers from the windows at work and those ferry drivers were the shit! A whole lot of damned fine people did a damned fine job that day.

    • @motorcop505
      @motorcop505 Před 5 lety +12

      Floyd Thanks for sharing this! They do deserve great recognition. They were also outstanding in 9/11 helping out!

    • @picometer472
      @picometer472 Před 5 lety +16

      The most incredible picture I have ever seen is the Circle Line coming to the rescue with the ramp opening pulling up precisely to the edge of thr wing. That was the Cavalry coming over the hill!

  • @adrunkgorillawithalobotomy353

    Sully was obviously doing his job, but he did it so well when the outcome could've been so horrific, that he deserves the praise he's gotten, as well as the First Officer and the rest of the crew. They all were heroic in their team work to bring everyone to safety, so they're all heroes in my book.

  • @jo_rellvs..
    @jo_rellvs.. Před měsícem +1

    HUGE HERO!! and a Dedicated Crew!! saved all those souls!!!

  • @roycspary8923
    @roycspary8923 Před 4 měsíci

    not just doing his job but remaining calm and positive in an impossible situation.undoubtedly he was terrified. bravery is overcoming fear and at all times he calmly made good decisions this is the textbook definition of bravery. such calm bravery makes him a hero he did everything right and later research showed all his judgement calls were correct it doesn't get any better. great pilots flying for a great airline,this also screams great training to me

  • @HastyJane88
    @HastyJane88 Před 4 lety +262

    Does anyone else see the micro expression of love on his face when the plane takes off at about (5:29)
    He loves to fly :)

    • @jorge1869
      @jorge1869 Před 4 lety +8

      I note it too 😂😂😂.

    • @WayneSA85
      @WayneSA85 Před 4 lety +3

      So did I! Awesome to feel like that about your profession.

    • @cbcdesign001
      @cbcdesign001 Před 4 lety +12

      Yeah I did notice that. That feeling when an aircraft leaves the ground is pretty magical and I guess that never goes away.

    • @pissandcornflakes9119
      @pissandcornflakes9119 Před 4 lety +11

      @Warrior Son no

    • @gastondotta7294
      @gastondotta7294 Před 4 lety +8

      Did u notice how he suffered through the entire emergency as if he was there too? Because every pilot did

  • @chrisp4170
    @chrisp4170 Před 5 lety +93

    I am an engineer. This is a great video which covers some amazing events. I've read most of the comments and quite rightly, they emphasise the thanks that are due to numerous people. they were heroes in that under incredibly stressful conditions, they kept it together and responded in the right way. No doubt about that. However, one credit that i don't see is for Airbus. At a time when it seems popular to criticise certain aircraft manufacturers, lets just recognise that the plane was strong enough to avoid breaking up on impact. Airbus, I reckon there are a bunch of engineers and technicians in your employment and probably some who are now retired, who deserve just a little bit of credit too.....

    • @jameskeyes1131
      @jameskeyes1131 Před 4 lety +17

      You know, I have often thought the same thing. The plane remained in one piece with very little visible outer damage. Well built, for sure. And it's unbelievable that it floated for hours after the impact. The fact that the wings stayed on made it possible for the passengers to exit without having to go into the freezing water. An excellent plane flown by an excellent crew saved so many lives. The Airbus engineers, the crew and passengers are all heroes.

    • @quadsman11
      @quadsman11 Před 4 lety +2

      Every rivit put in place had a reason to be there !
      ( thanks to an engineer )
      Every blueprint !
      Every pattern made !
      Had a reason !
      Every single installer, and electrician !
      Those unsung heroes that just show up and do their job everyday !
      That airframe, and hundreds like it, are light and strong, because of an engineer !
      Well,
      a team of engineers !
      They are ALL heroes in a number of very real ways !
      Thank you, to all of you !

    • @edouardesk4535
      @edouardesk4535 Před 3 lety +2

      @
      Dazedand Confused :
      in addition to the rivets, we must not forget the fly-by-wire system whose computer kept the aircraft in its flight envelope.

    • @jkarov
      @jkarov Před 3 lety +1

      Well said. I remember watching videos on how much testing and R&D used to go into Boeing's planes, quite a contrast to what they did with the 737Max.
      ===================
      My preferred planes are all retired now in the USA but flying on a 747 was my choice for long haul , especially over water. A 4 engine passenger jet is now a thing of the past, except for the A380.
      Having 4 engines like the 747, or A 380 probably would have meant all the difference for Sully & Jeff Skiles that day

  • @kikimontagesandvids8460
    @kikimontagesandvids8460 Před rokem +3

    Such an amazing story with so much heroism shown by not just the crew but also the ATC & Emergency services.

  • @54duffield54
    @54duffield54 Před 2 lety +6

    Doing his job. AND A HERO. All of the crew were.