Skip navigation
advertisement

Emergency landing televised on JetBlue flight

Passengers watched their terrifying drama live via satellite

Image: JetBlue
Reed Saxon / AP
Flames stream from the broken nose gear of a JetBlue Airbus 320 as it makes an emergency landing at Los Angeles International Airport Wednesday.
FREE VIDEO
JetBlue drama
Sept. 22: Millions of Americans watched the drama live of a potential disaster involving a JetBlue aircraft packed with frightened passengers — and so did the passengers. NBC's George Lewis reports.

Nightly News

FREE VIDEO
Recalling ordeal
Sept. 22: NBC executives Michael Miceli and Andy Warren were two of the JetBlue passengers. They discuss the ordeal with 'Today' host Matt Lauer.

Today show

Video: Life  
Nightly News
Rudolph the dog leads way to learning
Dec. 16: Making a Difference: A little dog who didn't seem to have much of a future is helping kids learn a very important lesson about compassion. NBC's Kevin Tibbles reports.

  Photo features  
  More
Image:
AP
  The Week in Pictures
A fiery protest in Greece, Baghdad bombing, winter winds, a cold dip in China, a relaxing bath in Hungary, police officers remembered and more news and feature images from around the world.
Image: health care bill
AP file
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
updated 7:59 p.m. ET Sept. 22, 2005

LOS ANGELES - The airliner circled Southern California for hours, crippled by a faulty landing gear, while inside its cabin 140 passengers watched their own life-and-death drama unfolding on live television.

While satellite TV sets aboard JetBlue Flight 292 were tuned to news broadcasts, some passengers cried. Others tried to telephone relatives and one woman sent a text message to her mother in Florida attempting to comfort her in the event she died.

“It was very weird. It would’ve been so much calmer without” the televisions, Pia Varma of Los Angeles said after the plane skidded to a safe landing Wednesday evening in a stream of sparks and burning tires. No one was hurt.

Federal authorities, the airline and the plane manufacturer launched investigations.

Live broadcasts until just before landing
Varma, 23, and other passengers said the plane’s monitors carried live DirectTV broadcasts on the plane’s problems until just a few minutes before landing at Los Angeles International Airport.

The landing gear trouble — the front wheels were stuck in a sideways position — was discovered almost immediately after the plane departed Bob Hope Airport in Burbank at 3:17 p.m., en route to New York City.

The Airbus A320 circled the Long Beach Airport, about 30 miles south of Burbank, before being cleared to land at Los Angeles. It stayed in flight for three hours to burn off fuel, said Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Donn Walker.

Zachary Mastoon of New York said it was “surreal” to watch his plane’s fate being discussed on live TV while it was in the air. At one point, he said, he tried to call his family, but his cell phone call wouldn’t go through.

“I wanted to call my dad to tell him I’m alive so far,” the 27-year-old musician said.

The pilot finally brought the plane down, back wheels first. As he slowly lowered the nose gear, the stuck wheels erupted in smoke and flames, which quickly burned out.

“At the end it was the worst because you didn’t know if it was going to work, if we would catch fire. It was very scary. Grown men were crying,” said Diane Hamilton, 32, a television graphics specialist.

Passengers told to assume a crash position
As the plane was about to touch the ground, Hamilton said crew members ordered people to assume a crash position, putting their heads between their knees.

“They would yell, “Brace! Brace! Brace!”’ she said. “I thought this would be it.”

Lisa Schiff, 34, of Los Angeles sent a text message to her mother in Miami that said: “I love you. Don’t worry about me. If something happens, know that I am watching you and Daddy and (her brother) David.”

Emergency crews from across the area met the plane on the runway. Spectators gathered on buildings and stood on parked cars to see firsthand as passengers walked down a stairway onto the tarmac with their carryon luggage.

Some passengers shook hands with emergency workers and waved to cameras. One firefighter carrying a boy across the tarmac put his helmet on the child’s head.

“We all cheered. I was bawling. I cried so much,” said Christine Lund, 25, who was traveling with her cat.


Sponsored links

Resource guide