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Crash Pilot Gets Elite Hero Status

By Vera H-C Chan
Fri, January 16, 2009, 12:18 pm PST

Less than halfway through the first month of 2009, and America already has a new hero.

Jittery fears over a New York City airplane crash turned to widespread relief when the pilot managed to land a U.S. Airways airbus into the Hudson River on January 15. Yes, the water was cold (40 degrees on a 20-degree day), but the plane didn't immediately sink, no nearby boats were crushed, every single passenger emerged safely, and Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger III instantly got elevated to elite status on the Web.

The people monitoring the "plane crash," "airplane crash new york," "airplane crash in hudson river," and "us airways crash" online quickly turned to pore over the hero pilot's credentials. As searchers for "chesley sullenberger" found out, this was a guy made for worst-case scenarios: According to the Associated Press, Sullenberger flew F-4 fighter jets in '70s, investigated aircraft accidents, is president of a safety consulting firm, and studied the "psychology of keeping airline crews functioning even in the face of crisis."

Time magazine's two-minute bio also cited his position as a visiting scholar to the very severe-sounding University of California at Berkeley's Center for Catastrophic Risk Management. U.S. News & World Report highlighted the 57-year-old pilot's long career as "evidence that companies should hold on to their older and experienced workers."

Searches also rose for "fans of sully sullenberger," which are manifold on Facebook: So far, the captain can count about nine variations of "fans of" groups. That doesn't include the "Captain C.B. Sully Sullenberger" Facebook page, which reaped nearly 20,000 fans in less than 48 hours. (A nation's gratitude does have its drawbacks: His family have had to duck the media hordes and sustain themselves on a diet of In-N-Out burgers.)

Investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board are talking to Sullenberger and copilot Jeff Skiles on Friday, but a curious public has already started its own online inquiry into "snarge," which Fox News calls the remains of birds hit by planes (one widely reported theory behind the crash) and "ditch switch," which CBS News explains "seals the underbelly of the plane to make it more buoyant." (Interestingly, a "ditch switch" search on Yahoo! yields a link to a pilot forum topic, "The Time a Widebody Takes to Sink," with one poster pointing out, "The question, I would think, isn't how long it will float, it's how will the pilots manage to get the thing down intact ... not something I'd want to experience first hand.")

While normally such incidents prompt a look back at lessons from past accidents, the so-called 'Miracle on the Hudson' has shown how well the airline industry has learned from them this time. Given the recent Federal Aviation Administration whistleblower scandals about cozy relationships between inspectors and airlines, the timing for a hero is about right. And while media are always eager to bestow that title, aviation experts believe Sully deserves it (even if Mrs. Sullenberger thinks the designation is "a little weird"). Said one pilot and aviation consultant to AFP, "I would definitely call the guy a hero. To have no fatalities--that is remarkable."

Incidentally, just two days before the accident, NPR reported that fixing the FAA's problems figured high on the president-elect's priority list. If Barack Obama needs some recommendations for an airline safety czar, some people might just have a name to offer up.

Filed under: Heroes, Accidents, Airlines

An Internet Horror Story

By Molly McCall
Fri, December 14, 2007, 2:58 pm PST

Last Halloween, Nikki Catsouras snuck her father's Porsche out of the garage for a joyride. Within the hour, the 18 year old was found dead on the side of the road in a vicious car wreck. California Highway Patrol arrived on the scene and documented it, as they usually do.

Later, though, somebody at the CHP broke protocol and emailed images of the accident—graphic, gruesome images—outside the agency. What happened since has spiraled into an Internet horror story.

The pictures spread like wildfire, soon showing up on more than 1,000 different sites. A fake MySpace page was set up for Nikki. Her father was "spammed" with emails of his dead daughter's body. The Catsourases yanked their other daughters out of school for fear of them seeing the brutal images of their sister. They sued the CHP. In November, a judge allowed the suit to go forward.

On Friday, 20/20 ran a segment on the story. The next day, searches for "nikki catsouras" and "porsche girl" flooded the Buzz. We see a lot of queries, but we were astounded by the number and variation of lookups seeking images of the teen and her death. Consider yourselves warned. These pictures are brutal, as is this tragic tale.

Filed under: Legal Cases, Law, Accidents

Bizarre Tragedy in NYC

By Molly McCall
Thu, October 12, 2006, 3:30 pm PDT

Minutes after news went out that a plane had slammed into a New York City high-rise yesterday, searchers hit the Web. Hard. A groundswell of queries reflected how little information there was yet—and how much the crash triggered terrorist fears. The first line of searches to launch off the chart looked like this...

  1. Federal Aviation Administration (breakout)
  2. Plane Crash (+1,994%)
  3. NTSB (+1,423%)
  4. The Pentagon (+334%)
  5. Homeland Security (+332%)
  1. Manhattan and Map (+267%)
  2. Manhattan (+185%)
  3. 9/11 Conspiracy (+132%)
  4. New York City Map (+121%)
  5. LaGuardia Airport (+114%)

Then, the event became all the more surreal. New York Yankees pitcher Cory Lidle and his flight instructor were both in the single-engine plane. They were out on what was supposed to be a "leisurely flight." They were both dead.

At this point, Buzz entered the second wave of shock. Searches on the right-handed pitcher and his Cirrus SR-20 plane outstripped all other buzz for the day. Demand for Lidle's biography, family, wife, team, and Wikipedia page all surged. Interest in two other baseball players who suffered similar fates in aviation crashes—Thurman Munson and Roberto Clemente—also leapt.

Throughout the day, searchers turned to breaking news sites with a clear sense of urgency. Here, as the final swell of searches in a day that stunned the country and the Buzz, are the news sources that spiked the most...

  1. New York 1 (+1,423%)
  2. Breaking News (+738%)
  3. CNN Headline News (+559%)
  4. WNBC (+556%)
  5. WABC (+404%)
  1. Fox 5 News (+306%)
  2. 7online.com (+303%)
  3. Eyewitness News (+297%)
  4. NBC News (+288%)
  5. Fox News Channel (+253%)

 

Filed under: New York, Cory Lidle, Accidents

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