9 More HORRIFYING Incidents That Happened Live

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  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
  • Music used:
    "Black Moon"
    "Satanic"
    by CO.AG Music
    / @co.agmusic
    "ambient piece"
    by falling forever
    ffm.bio/fallingforever
    --------
    Chapters:
    0:00 - Intro
    0:51 - Munich Massacre
    07:36 - WDBJ Murder
    12:54 - A Father's Revenge
    19:23 - Cromañón Fire
    23:19 - Hartford Fire
    28:17 - Cocoanut Fire
    33:43 - The Death of Ayrton Senna
    39:09 - The Altamont Free Concert
    45:49 - The Challenger Disaster
    --------
    FOLLOW ME ON TWITTER: / savox_yt
    --------
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3,9 тис.

  • @MichaelMiller-tm2os
    @MichaelMiller-tm2os Рік тому +3654

    The fact that Gary Plauche got a suspended sentence shows that even the judge wasn't that upset about Jeff. Sometimes vigilantism is worth it.

    • @haggardnobody2183
      @haggardnobody2183 Рік тому +31

      How can he be upset for literally giving him suspended sentence?

    • @JeriScarborough
      @JeriScarborough Рік тому

      And the fact Gary really isn't a murderer, he is not a threat to anyone unless you harm his children, the way all parents feel about their children. Not too mention, the countless number of children he saved from this POS thay would've eventuslly gotten released and just proceeded to harm more children. Gary may have even saved lives of chidlren...who knows what capabilities this guy would have graduated to, could've up'd the ante to murder as well had he not been taking out.

    • @benno291980
      @benno291980 Рік тому +27

      Yes but they obviously can't tell people that, it would open the floodgates. But I think you're right that prosecutors weren't terribly interested to begin with

    • @tetoterritory
      @tetoterritory Рік тому

      “He killed a fucking pedophile, give him suspended.”

    • @dsan17
      @dsan17 Рік тому +1

      @@benno291980 I wouldn't mind the floodgates opening for vigilantism, persecution, and murder of pedophiles.

  • @themultiplechannel5588
    @themultiplechannel5588 Рік тому +3812

    The fact that Gary’s wife said “The least you could’ve done was let me drive you” shows that she wasn’t even against him killing him. That’s a wife.

    • @orgafelaforeginatum
      @orgafelaforeginatum Рік тому +325

      That’s a mother.

    • @GunToting
      @GunToting Рік тому +146

      THATS A WIFE I WANT💝

    • @juancarloscortesperez8458
      @juancarloscortesperez8458 Рік тому +4

      That’s a ride or die wife right there

    • @loner1878
      @loner1878 Рік тому +61

      They were getting divorced at that point.

    • @chevalierdesangreal
      @chevalierdesangreal Рік тому +111

      she wasn't against him killing him, she even wanted to have a small role in it but he probably protected her from legal consequences

  • @vcupiano
    @vcupiano Рік тому +2005

    The fact that Gary didn’t go to prison for killing that monster who molested his child warms my heart. No mercy for pederasses.

    • @kenrose2523
      @kenrose2523 Рік тому +83

      Imagine inviting someone into your house, introducing them to your family, sharing your food with them, and helping them up when they're in povervished....
      And then they do this..
      They way I see it, he would have gotten killed sooner or later in prison.

    • @kenrickeason
      @kenrickeason Рік тому +34

      ​@@kenrose2523 If the Parents didn't get him, the Prisoners sure would have got him.. He was screwed once he touched that child if he knew it or not.. One thing I love about this transaction and this chain reaction is *"When you harm a child you are never off the hook"* ever.. and that's a great thing..

    • @user-jb9nz2fs2u
      @user-jb9nz2fs2u Рік тому +3

      isnt 'pederasts' more correct or am i wrong?

    • @kenrose2523
      @kenrose2523 Рік тому +21

      @@kenrickeason Exactly, no such thing as an ex-murder or an ex-child molester.

    • @ihavefallenandicantreachmy2113
      @ihavefallenandicantreachmy2113 Рік тому

      @@kenrickeason You must not be familiar with Christianity, Lately. Lucky you.

  • @N.I.R.A.T.I.A.S.
    @N.I.R.A.T.I.A.S. 7 місяців тому +449

    "Why Gary, why?"
    Come on, man. I don't even have kids and I know _exactly_ why. Gary's a hero.

    • @ricardonb6375
      @ricardonb6375 7 місяців тому +5

      Vengeance is never the answer. Revenge will only lead to more pain

    • @chandlerh2408
      @chandlerh2408 5 місяців тому +51

      @@ricardonb6375Not in this case, Jeff had already harmed many kids before. Gary saved who knows how many.

    • @gregorturner4753
      @gregorturner4753 4 місяці тому +16

      put it this way, how many future victims did gary save that day.

    • @magikarp9718
      @magikarp9718 3 місяці тому +4

      @@ricardonb6375 The guy is pretty vocal, and he doesn't regret it not one moment.

    • @lilbroskee6697
      @lilbroskee6697 3 місяці тому +3

      ​@@ricardonb6375Horroble thought process

  • @moodymermaid3690
    @moodymermaid3690 Рік тому +2826

    With the way the legal system handles child predators, Gary saved a lot more children. The legal system would have let the sicko out within a few years, Gary made sure that wasn't going to happen. Gary was and is a hero.

    • @iced.autumn
      @iced.autumn Рік тому +124

      I whole heartedly agree with you! Way to go, Gary!

    • @penskepc2374
      @penskepc2374 Рік тому +87

      It seems like some predators get life and others get a few years for the same crimes depending on the state, very strange.

    • @LARDYCHRIST
      @LARDYCHRIST Рік тому +54

      That man is a legend and deserves admiration and praise for what he did, who knows what that scumbag monster would've gone on to do if he was set free

    • @haggardnobody2183
      @haggardnobody2183 Рік тому +7

      Show that video to feminists showing how great of a man he is to make them angry

    • @haggardnobody2183
      @haggardnobody2183 Рік тому +6

      @@Katclem77 Good Woman 🐶 But who asked you?

  • @SquidProQuo80
    @SquidProQuo80 Рік тому +5621

    *Gary Plauche is and always will be nothing short of a hero as he prevented a monster from harming any more innocent children. Thank you Gary for your bravery and for doing the right thing even though it might have cost you everything!*

    • @cruisecontroltvdlcgraphixs4545
      @cruisecontroltvdlcgraphixs4545 Рік тому +140

      Absolutely a hero, Love ya Gary💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾

    • @Zamurai_Panda
      @Zamurai_Panda Рік тому +193

      Absolutely! Too bad the reporter sought to villanize him for the sake of a story🤦🏾‍♂️

    • @davidca96
      @davidca96 Рік тому +212

      He had the guts to do what any Father would want to do in that same situation. Yes its wrong to murder someone, but I cant think of a better reason to snap and actually do it. Temporary insanity in this case in my opinion is very real, he boiled with rage for days and couldnt hold it back and I dont blame him.

    • @carllipsey1497
      @carllipsey1497 Рік тому +45

      Yes, exactly.

    • @betide8501
      @betide8501 Рік тому

      Gary the goat

  • @emilyofjane
    @emilyofjane Рік тому +900

    The Challenger explosion (as someone born long after it happened) is still wild to me. Somewhere, there was an entire classroom of kids that were watching their teacher make history by going up into space…and then all of those kids were forced to watch their teacher *die* on live television. I can’t even imagine the kind of trauma that gave them

    • @beautyinthorns
      @beautyinthorns 11 місяців тому +149

      My mom told me that one of her teachers was a runner up for the event, and when it exploded, the teacher had a panic attack and ran out of the room and they had a sub for the rest of the year...

    • @chiefkeef74
      @chiefkeef74 11 місяців тому +42

      For millennials our Challenger was Columbia. I remember that day too, i was at my grandparents house that summer

    • @williamfrazier3822
      @williamfrazier3822 11 місяців тому +16

      I watched it live at home - I was sick that day so I had the TV all day. Was horrible!

    • @michellejnickel
      @michellejnickel 10 місяців тому +15

      My mother went to that school and was watching it live. She never had her but knew her.

    • @willc5512
      @willc5512 10 місяців тому

      @@chiefkeef74 The world was more primitive when Challenger blew up. 9/11 hadn't happened & the space shuttles weren't as understood by the general public then. It was just a take it as it comes along mentality vs a "liability conscious" society we live in today.

  • @hollieBlu303
    @hollieBlu303 Рік тому +930

    Gary Plauche is an embodiment of a dedicated parent. I don't condone murder (obvs) and often don't condone the death sentence...but if that was my kid, I'd do the same and be proud of my actions. This man is a hero in my book.

    • @amodernalchemist432
      @amodernalchemist432 Рік тому +13

      *Absolutely!* Most parents would do the same and not lose a wink of sleep at night.

    • @leglessinoz
      @leglessinoz Рік тому +25

      Ok that's a bit hypocritical. You don't often "condone the death penalty" but you'll make an exception clearly when it affects you personally. Taking the law into your own hands and murdering in revenge is exactly the same as the death-penalty.

    • @johndwashburn9582
      @johndwashburn9582 Рік тому +24

      @@leglessinoz meh🤷🏽‍♂️

    • @peachystonerlol
      @peachystonerlol Рік тому +8

      ​@@leglessinoz You'd have to be a parent to understand

    • @rockmycd1319
      @rockmycd1319 11 місяців тому +16

      @@peachystonerlolI don’t think you need to be a parent to understand cowardly doublethink

  • @fight8the8feeling8
    @fight8the8feeling8 Рік тому +1010

    That’s a judge who understands true crime, he did his studying.
    Gary wasn’t a killer, he wasn’t vicious, he was a loving father blinded by the horrors of what another man could produce, glad the judge was able to see that.

  • @marvinalexander6796
    @marvinalexander6796 Рік тому +1595

    What Gary is something all fathers would do in a heartbeat. Big praise to the judge for giving Gary a suspended sentence plus 300 hours of community service.

    • @stephanniemorin
      @stephanniemorin Рік тому +13

      Isn't that twelve and a half days? That's a lot, isnt it?

    • @TERRELL_GASKINS
      @TERRELL_GASKINS Рік тому +41

      His story is the only one I like in this video the other ones are just depressing

    • @skyatollah2skyharder276
      @skyatollah2skyharder276 Рік тому +25

      The man is an absolute king.

    • @NiceGuyErick
      @NiceGuyErick Рік тому +34

      If I become a father, and my child were in the same situation, I would do what Gary said. These kind of people don't deserve sympathy, in fact, recently a person who's basically like the freak Gary killed is in the internet and trying to get in contact with me and some friends who exposed him of being a MAP 3 years ago. We've been dealing with this freak for 3 goddamn years, and he still refuses to leave the internet despite all the evidence we got on him.

    • @marvinalexander6796
      @marvinalexander6796 Рік тому +13

      @@stephanniemorin I think some community service are like an 8 hour shift that's done on weekends. My ex father in law use to be marshall for Franklin county GA, and on weekends he would supervise the people doing community service.

  • @yeeyeehaircut
    @yeeyeehaircut Рік тому +678

    My mom heard the story of Gary Plauche when it happened, and she was glad to see that he didn't get prison time. She has also said to me and my siblings that she would do the same thing that Gary did if anyone tried to hurt us. I fully understand it because you gotta do what you gotta do to protect your sons and daughters.

    • @paulorocky
      @paulorocky Рік тому +5

      I’m curious as to whether it was the inspiration for John Grisham’s “A Time to Kill”

    • @BAKURA666
      @BAKURA666 Рік тому +5

      He didn't protect his children. He killed him after it happened. It doesn't reverse anything that happended and was a pure act of revenge.

    • @yeeyeehaircut
      @yeeyeehaircut Рік тому +4

      ​@@BAKURA666 Honestly, it's hard for me to blame Gary because he just didn't know that Jeff Doucet was not trustworthy. A lot of predators will try to make themselves look trustworthy.

    • @BAKURA666
      @BAKURA666 Рік тому +2

      @@yeeyeehaircutThat's correct, but killing him afterwards still didn't make sense, because he already did what he did to the children.

    • @Him_He_Me
      @Him_He_Me Рік тому +5

      l am the parent of children this happened to. l am all they have and if l go to jail they enter the foster system. l cant have that happen either. We went to court years later, (my kids weren't abducted) after the disclosure, but, nothing happened. He got off and is free to commit this henous crime against others. When it does happen to you.... you have to weigh up alot of things. Good luck

  • @jlfrench3667
    @jlfrench3667 Рік тому +142

    The Night Club fire where the staff was asking people to “pay” before leaving as they were trying to escape the blaze was absolutely ludacris. Just goes to show the negligence and incompetence of the staff and owner involved. Greed was definitely the ultimate cause of that tragedy. 💔

    • @bostonrailfan2427
      @bostonrailfan2427 Рік тому +14

      it was even worse, it was a death trap that caused the closure or dozens of similar clubs and destroyed the most historic theatre in US theatre history

    • @jlfrench3667
      @jlfrench3667 11 місяців тому +7

      @@bostonrailfan2427 Wow… Just awful, and so very sad. 💔 Had the owners just did what was right, all of this tragedy and destruction could have and would have been avoided.

    • @Iphroget
      @Iphroget 10 місяців тому +5

      Now that's what I call a captive market.

    • @hexoslaya3696
      @hexoslaya3696 7 місяців тому +5

      @@Iphroget*SpongeBob Foghorn Sound Effect*

    • @vulpes7079
      @vulpes7079 3 місяці тому +3

      ludicrous*
      Ludacris is not a word

  • @grosskidsidd
    @grosskidsidd Рік тому +1831

    As a victim of SA, Gary will always be a hero to me. He did what nearly nobody has the courage or ability to, and the fact he kept his word that he doesn’t regret a single thing he did that day is always amazing to hear.

  • @motionlessinbrides
    @motionlessinbrides Рік тому +1906

    Can you blame that poor father? He only did what any other parent would want to do. Also, I love the response from that mother. 👍🏼

    • @IsaacClarkeDS
      @IsaacClarkeDS Рік тому

      He did everything right, no other were hurt. That pedophile got what he deserve

    • @JeriScarborough
      @JeriScarborough Рік тому +36

      @Motionlessbrides, right? What she said was perfect.

    • @waynegoddard4065
      @waynegoddard4065 Рік тому +7

      👍💯

    • @tonyjones1560
      @tonyjones1560 Рік тому +39

      The only thing I can “blame” in this is, this Dad didn’t get a large cash payment for peeling that guy’s cap back.
      If anybody ever deserved a hot one to the head, Jeff Doucette was that guy. RIP Gary Plauche💪🏾💪🏾

    • @Emsev100
      @Emsev100 Рік тому +7

      Should he have done it? No. But I don't blame him. No parent should have to go through that. 😢

  • @tobycampbell7783
    @tobycampbell7783 7 місяців тому +73

    Could you Imagine being those Canadian athletes and thinking you were doing a kind and buddy buddy thing for a fellow athlete just to find out you doomed an entire team of people

    • @alexpaulyoungthemuso3937
      @alexpaulyoungthemuso3937 Місяць тому

      Fuuuuuck that man that shit would weigh on me

    • @Doggo4520
      @Doggo4520 7 днів тому

      Damn Canadians there kindness always getting people hurt or worse

  • @shannonbragg6685
    @shannonbragg6685 Рік тому +90

    My Great Aunt was actually at the Hartford Circus Fire.... Her & her friend had gotten tickets from thier boss (who couldn't attend) at the Hartford Insurance company. She has told me about the horror several times.
    She actually turned 100 this previous January. So thankful she survived & I know her.
    As for the Challenger disaster I was home sick from school that day & actually watched it live on T.V. watching the crowd (more specifically Christie McAuliffe parents) going from clapping and cheering to absolute shock has always stayed with me.

    • @tilabryant5591
      @tilabryant5591 Рік тому +2

      Lies🙄

    • @wutertots1487
      @wutertots1487 8 місяців тому

      ​@@tilabryant5591come on, dude. Play along. Have a bit of faith

    • @slimeyiscringe237
      @slimeyiscringe237 4 місяці тому +6

      This manchild called @tilabryant5591 thinks that it's lies because he thinks people can't live to a 100 years old. Do some research sir before you say LiEs with that cringey emoji at the end.

  • @chrissizemore8705
    @chrissizemore8705 Рік тому +878

    As a dad, I can easily say that Gary Plauche is a hero. The guy he killed won't be missed by anyone. He took a dangerous predator off the street and made sure no more children would ever get hurt by him. I would've done the exact same thing he did without a second of hesitation. Thank you, Gary.

    • @j.khuster2024
      @j.khuster2024 Рік тому +8

      👏👏👏

    • @flipflopping
      @flipflopping Рік тому +11

      Straight-up truth...right there. I would have done the same. Personally, I think Gary used GREAT restraint....I personally would have drawn out retribution that whould have extended for a much longer time frame.

    • @brony6hiphopsicebergsandga169
      @brony6hiphopsicebergsandga169 Рік тому +3

      Seems to be a lot of these.. so I’m commenting them.. and yes, thank you Gary for what you did you destroyed a monster who harmed many children to bad that’s the law, but you did the right thing. Thank you Gary for what you did. Rest.. in.. peace..

    • @samiamtheman7379
      @samiamtheman7379 Рік тому

      All things considered, Gary just did what would've happened to that fucker in prison anyway. Pedos generally don't last long in there.

    • @ningbronsin9826
      @ningbronsin9826 Рік тому

      Dudes not god and because of what he did when he dies he will be in hell regardless of how much social warrior y’all want him to be that man will burn in hell for killing someone

  • @diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754
    @diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754 Рік тому +834

    "A father's revenge": totally understandable.
    Man should have be given a medal.

    • @iamwrong2239
      @iamwrong2239 Рік тому +18

      Count Dankula did a video about it. He's a good man

    • @diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754
      @diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754 Рік тому +12

      @@iamwrong2239 I don't remember. He probably did got his "Absolute Madlads Series".

    • @iamwrong2239
      @iamwrong2239 Рік тому +4

      @@diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754 That's what he is doing to this day

    • @nickyblue4866
      @nickyblue4866 Рік тому +1

      @@diegoviniciomejiaquesada4754 yep he did. Good video.

    • @crayCray420
      @crayCray420 Рік тому +3

      Free Cain Velasquez

  • @dekudude8888
    @dekudude8888 Рік тому +267

    Godspeed, Gary Plauche. Wherever he is, I hope he knows that he's a damn good shot and that the monster he put down won't hurt anyone ever again

    • @miapdx503
      @miapdx503 8 місяців тому +9

      Amen. Rest easy soldier 🌹

    • @thedesensitizedsympathizer5307
      @thedesensitizedsympathizer5307 5 місяців тому +1

      hes not a soldier. He still killed someone who didn't commit murder.

    • @thisaintitchief
      @thisaintitchief 5 місяців тому +16

      @@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307Womp womp

    • @Meretrix2
      @Meretrix2 5 місяців тому +17

      @@thedesensitizedsympathizer5307raping and abusing (and god knows what else) children is 10x worse than murder.

    • @thedesensitizedsympathizer5307
      @thedesensitizedsympathizer5307 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Meretrix2 What about Terrorism and war crimes?

  • @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control
    @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control 10 місяців тому +29

    "The tent was covered in gasoline as a water-proofing method"
    LOL geniuses. GENIUSES.

  • @NaturalHigh21
    @NaturalHigh21 Рік тому +808

    Jody wrote a book called “Why Gary, Why?” He didn’t want Doucet dead and thought jail time was enough, and it took him awhile before he forgave his father. Really great guy. Gary did the right thing. Any father in his situation would do the same, and he potentially saved even more children because Doucet would have been released in 7 years

    • @ryantannar5301
      @ryantannar5301 Рік тому +117

      that has all the creepy undertones of Stockholm Syndrome. Gonna need to read that now

    • @richardtherichard26
      @richardtherichard26 Рік тому +115

      @@ryantannar5301 I was about to say the same thing. That poor kid was brainwashed by his abuser. Happens a lot in cases like this, especially with kids.

    • @PhirePhlame
      @PhirePhlame Рік тому +67

      @@ryantannar5301 Probably also at least partially just that kids tend to have simple morality, a common staple of which is "killing is wrong".

    • @strayiggytv
      @strayiggytv Рік тому +31

      @@PhirePhlame or it could be that he really thought it was the wrong action to take. I haven't read the book so I don't know (and neither do you) but infantilizing the victims decision on what they believe was just punishment for their abuser is pretty sh1tty.

    • @marthakrumboltz2710
      @marthakrumboltz2710 Рік тому +4

      @@PhirePhlame exactly. They need to mature before being allowed to make important decisions.

  • @chemergency
    @chemergency Рік тому +598

    Gary Plauche: Best Dad Ever
    Sometimes the only cure for evil is violence, and I'd consider that event more "thrilling" than "horrifying," given the circumstances.

    • @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368
      @oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Рік тому +11

      I get the sense that no one on UA-cam is against capital punishment or mob justice.
      Never do I see comments talking about reforming criminals or acting like Norway and treating the incarcerated as humans needing rehabilitation.

    • @221Prohunter
      @221Prohunter Рік тому +1

      @@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Child r@pists do not deserve a second chance. They can not be reformed.

    • @skyatollah2skyharder276
      @skyatollah2skyharder276 Рік тому

      @@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 Stick your arrogant higher ground bullshit up your ringpiece. Sometimes trash needs to be taken out.

    • @vismattress5760
      @vismattress5760 Рік тому

      @@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 they don’t need rehab, because it won’t work. Start caring about the real victims for once and not r*pists

    • @Beefkilz
      @Beefkilz Рік тому

      @@oldmandoinghighkicksonlyin1368 once a pedo always a pedo.

  • @D-AMJ-C
    @D-AMJ-C Рік тому +41

    I remember sitting on the floor with about a hundred other fellow gradeschoolers, & being so confused when the space shuttle exploded. Our 2 teachers whispered to each other before 1 went & turned the TV off. Everyone went right into lessons with no further discussion about what had just happened. Obviously we all learned more from our guardians that evening. Days later, my school planted 7 saplings in honor of the crew. My own children climbed those large trees decades later.

    • @Salicat99
      @Salicat99 Місяць тому

      That is actually quite a lovely tribute!

  • @saintsheepy6682
    @saintsheepy6682 11 місяців тому +27

    Crazy thing; my grandmother on my mom's side, who would have been six at the time, almost went to the Hartford circus fire, but was kept from going there because her mother/my great grandmother had a horrifying vision/dream when she was asleep one night and kept them at home.
    We also need more fathers like Gary, who was a true hero, and Doucet fully deserved what he got, not horrifying at all to see what happened to him.

  • @chiefkeef74
    @chiefkeef74 Рік тому +502

    What makes Senna well loved by everyone is that he genuinely cared about his fellow racers and even had planned to raise an Austrian flag in honor of Ratzenberger had he made it to the podium. Even Dale Sr gave his condolences after winning at Talladega that day.

    • @hellspawn32x66
      @hellspawn32x66 Рік тому +32

      He's a personal hero of mine. Such a fucking legend

    • @waynegoddard4065
      @waynegoddard4065 Рік тому +6

      @@hellspawn32x66 👍💯

    • @weedwhacker287
      @weedwhacker287 Рік тому +10

      My dad remembered watching the nascar race and he was an F1 fan as well but he couldn’t see the race and when he heard about what happened to senna he didn’t believe it until the next day when the front page was about senna dying in a horrific car crash

    • @taratee
      @taratee Рік тому +5

      He was one of my heroes. Absolutely great man. Cared about everyone on the team. Even pit crew

    • @xIKeepaIx
      @xIKeepaIx Рік тому +10

      The great Ayrton Senna who dated a 15 year old when he was 25, but it's fine, he was driving fast.

  • @Xxlibra1018xX
    @Xxlibra1018xX Рік тому +597

    Still gotta give Gary props for such a great shot placement. Shooting that fast, one-handed, with cops that were friends of his, escorting Doucet on either side, and he pops that headshot off perfectly without harming anyone else. That's one motivated dad right there. 👍

    • @dogtags2010
      @dogtags2010 Рік тому +35

      I believe the cops knew he was there and was going to do it. There's no way they wouldn't have cleared the route!

    • @madamecarly
      @madamecarly Рік тому +38

      @@dogtags2010 i would bet on it. Especially with the one cop yelling "Why Gary, WHY?!" They knew it was him.

    • @craigusselman546
      @craigusselman546 Рік тому +15

      Gary was one cool dad.

    • @danielgullet
      @danielgullet Рік тому +6

      @@madamecarly he knew him doe

    • @mattjarrells
      @mattjarrells Рік тому +4

      Plus he was drunk.

  • @lizerman74
    @lizerman74 Рік тому +23

    What they don't say here is that Doucet didn't just do what he did to Jody, he mentally tortured this family. He actually demanded that Gary turn over his other kids to him so he could adopt them. If the original assault hadn't put Gary over the edge, that would have.

  • @jacquelineskye6288
    @jacquelineskye6288 6 місяців тому +13

    Allison Parker was a journalism student at my university. I am also a journalism major and in that building there are many little memorials for her, we even talk about the event in some of my classes. It’s so weird seeing her name, and her story being told, but I’m glad it is.

  • @creacherfeacher8232
    @creacherfeacher8232 Рік тому +410

    Ah, I remember learning about the Doucet case. My dad was picking me up from the airport and was telling me the story. He ended it with "That's what I'd do to anyone who hurt you or your siblings."
    I don't blame Gary one bit, Doucet was a monster who didn't deserve to live. Gary made the world a slightly better place.

    • @DrLuke49
      @DrLuke49 Рік тому

      What I will never understand let alone accept is that there are governments the world over that stubbornly believe that ghouls like Doucet can be rehabilitated.
      There is no cure for true evil.

    • @ookalar665
      @ookalar665 Рік тому

      Story sounds fake

    • @creacherfeacher8232
      @creacherfeacher8232 Рік тому +4

      @@ookalar665 Ok?

    • @MontycelA
      @MontycelA Рік тому +3

      @@creacherfeacher8232 Great dad.

    • @alwaysflushinpublic
      @alwaysflushinpublic Рік тому

      This is why I never told my parents what happened to me. Mom would tell dad who was from an old "mountain"/hillbilly family. I did not want my dad going to prison for life and I knew what he would do if I ever spoke of what happened. So I suffered years of unspoken trauma out of fear of this kind of retaliation. Did Gary ever think that his son may have to grow up without him? Was he really thinking of his son?

  • @vitoralves6359
    @vitoralves6359 Рік тому +227

    Man, Senna was an actual good guy. He never was involved in any scandals, and lived his life in the most anonimity he could. Donated millions to charity and was always super inpiring and passionate about racing. Pretty much every brazilian would religiously turn their TVs on sundays to watch him race, and honestly some F1 fans still ball their eyes out talking about him. Super heartbreaking to see him go so early in his life, but super inspired by the person he was, big respect man.

    • @PassiveSmoking
      @PassiveSmoking Рік тому +9

      Sorry, but I remember the guy when he was racing. He was involved in multiple scandals, most notably his blood feud with Alan Prost which culminated in his winning the 1990 world championship by deliberately ramming Prost and destroying both their cars.
      Senna endangered his own life, Prost's life, the lives of the other drivers, the lives of the marshals and the lives of the spectators that day, all to feed his need to win at any cost. Prost had even called him out as a dangerous driver prior to this incident (over another one that happened the year before which was not quite so clear-cut as the 1990 crash), claiming that Senna believed he literally had a god-given right to win, and that god would protect him from harm no matter how dangerously he drove.
      As brilliant a driver as he was (and he was brilliant, there's no denying that), I just can never respect a driver that crashes deliberately and risks people's lives for his own selfish desires.
      He was no saint, he was a complicated human being with his good aspects and his bad aspects like any other person.

    • @uvuvwevwevweonyetenyevweug185
      @uvuvwevwevweonyetenyevweug185 Рік тому +5

      @@PassiveSmoking that’s just aggressive driving, senna was a very aggressive driver always has been. Prost would obviously say senna was a dangerous driver they were in a bitter rivalry. The wide majority of sennas colleagues deeply respected him even when they had crashes, there are many drivers like senna ie Micheal Schumacher, Schumacher is arguably more of an aggressive driver than senna purposely crashing into people countless times. Verstappen very aggressive driver gets into lots of accidents, piquet very aggressive driver. Really I think the point you made was how much of a ferris fan boy you are.

    • @chucksneed1807
      @chucksneed1807 Рік тому +4

      @@PassiveSmoking the 1990 Japanese GP wreck was very irresponsible but under little circumstance that would’ve caused a fatality

    • @PassiveSmoking
      @PassiveSmoking Рік тому +3

      @@uvuvwevwevweonyetenyevweug185 Schumacher is a bad example as I have even less respect for him.
      Verstappen seems to just be a hot-head. He gets into crashes because he gets overexcited and loses his self-control, which is why he's earned the nickname Mad Max. Schumacher and Senna would choose to deliberately crash if it suited them, which makes them far worse in my book.
      And who's ferris? Ferris Bueller? It's a fun film I guess.

    • @PassiveSmoking
      @PassiveSmoking Рік тому +2

      @@chucksneed1807 Every time there's a crash there's a non-zero chance of a serious injury or a fatality. Choosing to crash is choosing to risk lives.

  • @bananagodofbacon
    @bananagodofbacon 5 місяців тому +16

    Somewhat Fun Fact: In American Pie’s verse talking about the devil on stage and stuff, the Altamont concert was what he was referring to.

  • @dayziecakes
    @dayziecakes Рік тому +14

    Can I just say you have the most calming voice. I keep listening to your videos before bed and they never fail to get me off to sleep - which is great but I always have to rewatch your videos in the morning as I keep missing the endings 😅

  • @toniremer1594
    @toniremer1594 Рік тому +424

    I remember vividly watching the Challenger’s explosion, and my class was in shock. Since I had gone to an all girls Catholic high school, we immediately prayed for them, and their families. I can tell you all that there wasn’t a dry eye after that happened.

    • @vanessahenry7238
      @vanessahenry7238 Рік тому +27

      A classmate was nephew to one of the astronauts, which I didn't know. We were talking outside of class where he was still in shock - when a black car with two men and his mother was there to pick him up. He didn't know who the two men were, and his mum walked out he knew it was ok. When he came back, the school had a memorial service for his uncle and the others that passed.

    • @hastegamingofficial
      @hastegamingofficial Рік тому +7

      My dad was born 4 months after the Challenger Explosion, but my Grandma remembers it vividly, she described it as if you were watching a gas chamber at work if it was also on fire

    • @toniremer1594
      @toniremer1594 Рік тому +9

      @@hastegamingofficial That’s an accurate description of what the explosion looked like. I can clearly remember, after The Challenger exploded, our principal immediately began to speak over the intercom, and started praying for all the astronauts, and their families. It was a very, very somber moment.
      There are many horrible events that has happened in this country, and there are so many people that’ll never forget where they were when it happened, what they were doing when it had happened, or anything about that day/night; another horrendous tragedy was 9/11. I highly doubt that anyone will ever forget what they were doing when the first plane hit The North Tower.
      Thank you for taking the time to read my comment and responding to it.

    • @toniremer1594
      @toniremer1594 Рік тому +1

      @@vanessahenry7238 I am so very, very sorry to hear that.

    • @thirtyfoursevenzero
      @thirtyfoursevenzero Рік тому +5

      Prayin's just a waste of your time...but Ronald Reagan's eulogy at the end said it all...I never met her, I never knew her, but I wept for Christa McAuliffe in 1986...and still do in 2023 it would seem.

  • @leighbert86
    @leighbert86 Рік тому +110

    Gary Plauche: The only man to bring a gun to an airport, kill a monster and avoid prison.
    That is legendary

  • @randyedwards3244
    @randyedwards3244 Рік тому +26

    Eleanor Cook, 8 years old, was one of the victims of the Hartford circus fire. For 46 years she was known as "Little Miss 1565". She had been trampled nearly to death in the mad rush of the crowd to escape. Eleanor was one of three children and three adults buried on July 10, 1944.

    • @princessatellaluma
      @princessatellaluma 4 місяці тому

      do you know what the nickname is referencing? its such a tragedy she died so young, surely the circus organizers could have guessed covering a flammable tent with gasoline wouldnt be a good idea...

  • @Tainted3840
    @Tainted3840 8 місяців тому +1

    Way way WAY late to the party, not even sure how I've even come by these videos, but loving them! Very nice work!

  • @jbrubin8274
    @jbrubin8274 Рік тому +490

    As a kid from New Hampshire and in middle school at the time- The Challenger Disaster definitely left a mark.
    The sheer cacophony that erupted throughout the entire school is something I’ll never forget. Nor the shocked, tear stained teachers.
    To this day I have yet to find the words to describe it. I also silently count to 74 seconds every launch. Manned or not.

    • @TheGMRGIRL
      @TheGMRGIRL Рік тому +3

      same here - awful!

    • @TheINFJChannel
      @TheINFJChannel Рік тому +7

      Concord NH here 🙌 As you probably know, there's a school and a planetarium named after Christa McAuliffe in town. 💜

    • @rubygirl214
      @rubygirl214 Рік тому +2

      Same… I’ll never forget that day 😢 it’s still hard to watch now.

    • @jbrubin8274
      @jbrubin8274 Рік тому +1

      @@TheGMRGIRL I’m so sorry you had a very similar situation yourself. It truly was just awful.

    • @jbrubin8274
      @jbrubin8274 Рік тому +3

      @@TheINFJChannel Hi Concord, Merrimack here. Omg, I can’t even imagine how much that day hurt you all. If even we had some teachers who left in tears immediately I won’t even pretend to know what your school’s reaction was. For a small group of kids in a state, that most of the country forgets about, unless it’s been four years. We were ALL so proud. No matter what grade you were in it’s pretty much all we talked about the two weeks prior.
      I still struggle to put into words that noise coming from my classmates, friends, teachers, and myself.
      I’ll never forget it though.

  • @GrimFelArt
    @GrimFelArt Рік тому +748

    We all love you, Gary. Thank you for saving probably many, many more innocent children from being violated by that monster. I'm not even a parent, and I'd have done the same. If I ever have kids, if anyone harms any kid of mine that person had better run and fucking hide. Gary is a goddamn hero.

    • @TheWeightsOver
      @TheWeightsOver Рік тому +23

      Yep. And he took the wrap like a boss and fortunately this was way back then when people stood up for what it is right and the judge understood why he did it and let him avoid any jail time!

    • @rebeccamangelsdorf3806
      @rebeccamangelsdorf3806 Рік тому +2

      Like I said in my comment, Gary should have been charged with murder in the 1st degree. No laws or consequences chaos! Jeff should have got life in prison or worse!

    • @BAKURA666
      @BAKURA666 Рік тому +6

      No we don't all love him. Making murder okay depending on the intention can only lead to wrong violence. It's not the right way.

    • @kenrickeason
      @kenrickeason Рік тому +1

      Gary is my hero! 👍🏿♥️ If he was alive today and I seen him in a restaurant I would have paid for his food immediately no questions asked... Guys and Gals like him need to be celebrated.. D___th to all P_d__s ...

    • @kenrickeason
      @kenrickeason Рік тому +1

      ​@@rebeccamangelsdorf3806 Either way Jeff was screwed.. If the Parents didn't get him the Prisoners sure would have got to him.. Once Jeff touched that kid he wrote his death certificate..

  • @CatsCrazyWorld
    @CatsCrazyWorld 9 місяців тому +1

    Informative video! Keep this kind of content going! Thank You for not filling it full of fluff like so many other channels do. Just the facts and you got it!

  • @beatleguise130
    @beatleguise130 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for this vid!

  • @juno128
    @juno128 Рік тому +424

    i was brought to tears at gary. the immense love he felt for his son was so beautiful. he did the right thing. seeing him say “oh yeah” so firmly made me tear up. he loved that boy with every fiber of his being.

    • @shadysif6220
      @shadysif6220 10 місяців тому +1

      That's not love, that's hubris. Gary at least got his son back, and the predator was going to prison. There are countless stories of parents whose kids were not only violated but also murdered. But they allow the justice system to hold them accountable.
      You think they aren't tempted to do the same thing? But the overwhelming majority don't, as they realize premeditated murder, no matter what a person did to you is almost a guaranteed prison sentence. His son needed a father, not an inmate, or a vigilante. The predator would've slaughtered in prison, they despise child molesters, no one would've shed a tear. He put his family in an even worse predicament by killing him. It was a completely selfish act.

    • @tysondennis1016
      @tysondennis1016 8 місяців тому +10

      @@shadysif6220He did what was needed to make sure the pedo never offends again.

    • @shadysif6220
      @shadysif6220 8 місяців тому +3

      @@tysondennis1016
      The son was the real victim. Had the father spent more time with his son, this could have been prevented. Helping his son mend should have been the priority. The father didn't do it for his son, he did it for himself. His son was horrified by what his father did, he admitted it took him years to forgive him.
      The kid was already traumatized, what the father did doubled it. There's a difference between understanding why the father did it, which most people do, and condoning what he did.
      To this very day he still gets messages and comments all the time about his father being a hero, as opposed to messages asking him how he's doing, or how he dealt with the trauma. I wonder why that is.

    • @nickhutcheson8580
      @nickhutcheson8580 7 місяців тому +3

      ​@shadysif6220 and he ignored his brother when he said that it was odd thay some man was spending so much time with their son. They basically let the man kidnap their son out of ignorance.

    • @SaltimusMaximus
      @SaltimusMaximus 5 місяців тому +2

      @@shadysif6220he did society a favour

  • @fritzthespookynightowl5546
    @fritzthespookynightowl5546 Рік тому +339

    I remember the challenger explosion on the news. I was in elementary school. They called everyone to auditorium to watch. I mainly remember that silence. Everyone knew what we had just seen but it took a long time to believe it. First real horror I had ever seen,complete shock.

    • @MiTBender
      @MiTBender Рік тому +13

      It was surreal.

    • @limejuice1858
      @limejuice1858 Рік тому +3

      Must have been pretty spooky

    • @aliencafe
      @aliencafe Рік тому +38

      I can't imagine the feeling in those classrooms when kids were expecting to see an incredible feat of technology and instead saw absolute horror. I can't even compare it to my childhood experiences of watching 9/11 footage in class because at least we all *knew* what we were watching was going to be upsetting. Kids that watched the Challenger were so excited.

    • @nickyblue4866
      @nickyblue4866 Рік тому

      It didnt even have anything go wrong tho....

    • @jackwhite8020
      @jackwhite8020 Рік тому +3

      I can't imagine seeing that as a kid in real time. I wasn't even born yet

  • @Him_He_Me
    @Him_He_Me Рік тому +4

    l really enjoyed this video. The backstories have opened up a lot the motivations for some of these incidents which have, on other channels, only shown the main event. Thanks for the amazing whole-story footage you provided, your work paid off. Subbed!!

  • @MonikaFerreira
    @MonikaFerreira Рік тому +64

    I wasn't born during Ayrton's death, but I can confirm that really was a shock for our country when his car crashed, my mom remembers the shock and told me how my dad couldn't even watch formula 1 races after that. The whole country froze when he was transported to the hospital and broke into tears when his death was confirmed

    • @du0lol
      @du0lol Рік тому +12

      It's very hard to convey how Senna's death affected us all back then. I was still a kid, but I remember the shock and everyone just giving up on having lunch that day. Senna was kinda like a beacon of hope for a country ravaged by economic and political crisis.

  • @MyoclonicJerkCough
    @MyoclonicJerkCough Рік тому +297

    What's worse is multiple people had tried to tell Gary something wasn't right with Jeff and the relationship with his son was inappropriate, but Gary thought he knew him and defended him... then to find out it was true, and he likely could have spared his son those months of abuse if he had done something then had to be more than he could bear with that S.O.B. alive

    • @j.khuster2024
      @j.khuster2024 Рік тому +35

      Ultimate betrayal.
      He done what every parent should do in this situation.
      He deserves a medal 🏅

    • @rubyy.7374
      @rubyy.7374 Рік тому +8

      I’m almost completely sure he realized that too. I can’t imagine the anguish he faced once he was confronted with the truth that he so ardently rooted against.

    • @superpredator4096
      @superpredator4096 Рік тому +3

      ALWAYS follow your gut feeling...it will NEVER lie to you....

    • @superpredator4096
      @superpredator4096 Рік тому +3

      @Jayyyyyyyyyyyy Sometimes it takes a little honing to get it sharpened. And too, I use to think EVERYBODY had those gut feelings...but I've been finding out different lately. You don't have gut feelings?

    • @haven_lady675
      @haven_lady675 Рік тому +8

      I guess killing him is his way of saying sorry to his son.

  • @roomum9829
    @roomum9829 Рік тому +196

    As a survivor, I thank you Plauche, for doing what justice systems around the world fail to do for innocent children every damn day!!!

  • @mikhail2400
    @mikhail2400 Рік тому +48

    Gary did what every father would want to do in such a situation. He had one hell of a wife too. To answer with "The least you could do was let me drive you." is perfect.

    • @lavielemond
      @lavielemond 4 місяці тому +1

      I couldn't possibly agree with you more, mate!! Re: both Gary's actions & what his wife (later ex-wife) said to him...BRILLIANT!!

  • @barryb.benson2402
    @barryb.benson2402 Рік тому +12

    "As they prepared for their journey and waved goodbye, slipped the solar bounds of earth, to touch the face of god" mad me tear up, such a well spoken individual. Rest in paradise to all who are now ethereal.

  • @smassiha7881
    @smassiha7881 Рік тому +181

    Fuck, I’m not even a parent, but I totally get why Plauche blasted away the monster who assaulted his son.

    • @j.khuster2024
      @j.khuster2024 Рік тому

      Same👏👏👏👏👏 I don't have kids but can see how he came to act on it.
      Betrayal and hurting his son while acting like a friend.....dirty piece of crap. Deserved what he got.

    • @lisabradford8180
      @lisabradford8180 Рік тому +1

      Me too. Totally get it 👍

  • @Gilbert_Dice_Gottfried
    @Gilbert_Dice_Gottfried Рік тому +146

    The challenger disaster is so harrowing. It’s tragic but also the footage and the fact that millions of kids saw it is insane. The idea of being in a failing spacecraft is absolutely haunting

    • @jjammmees
      @jjammmees Рік тому +9

      i had no idea they died upon impact i thought they died from the explosion but that is so sad i cant imagine what it must have been like for them falling to their death 😢

    • @helldomine68
      @helldomine68 Рік тому +9

      They were still alive until the crew compartment thingy hit the water

    • @darcihuddleston8224
      @darcihuddleston8224 Рік тому +1

      As 9 year old kids, we were on the playground having deep conversations. Some kids just went and played. Just as well. Let them worry about "kid stuff" instead.

    • @eltanko178
      @eltanko178 Рік тому

      I was one of the kids who saw it live. I was five and a half. It definitely affected me. We had to have someone come into our Kindergarten class and talk to us about it, because all my other classmates saw it live too.

    • @richardturpin3665
      @richardturpin3665 Рік тому

      @@helldomine68 they never got on the rocket they are still alive to this day. two of them work at cape canaveral pretending to be siblings. the chinease and negro guy. there's even old photographs and these peoples families these siblings ain't in them because it is them they are lying.

  • @debbiesoldaini4709
    @debbiesoldaini4709 Рік тому

    Yes your always worth the wait.😁As l always enjoy your clips.💕

  • @CopiousDoinksLLC
    @CopiousDoinksLLC Рік тому +7

    "Why, Gary, why?"
    "If it was your son, you'd have done the same thing."
    Absolute mic drop moment.

  • @harrybarnes9080
    @harrybarnes9080 Рік тому +125

    As a father myself, I applaud Gary. I would 100% do the same thing if my son was hurt like that.

  • @melissafaye915
    @melissafaye915 Рік тому +113

    Gary is what this world needs. More parents willing to fight for their children. Anyone willing to harm a child deserves the ultimate punishment.

    • @j.khuster2024
      @j.khuster2024 Рік тому

      And animal abusers can go in the same category.
      Both need shot between the eyes soon as proven guilty.

    • @mikehuff9793
      @mikehuff9793 Рік тому +8

      We in America are NOT proactive IN ANY WAY when it comes to protecting our children. We wait until a child’s life is permanently damaged FIRST, then we do something about the offender. This stigma, this “kill them all” mentality doesn’t scare them enough to stop molesting children. That’s obvious.
      What we need is a system that is pro-active, not reactive. We need a system by which the molesters can identify themselves before they offend; a society that looks to prevent child abuse BEFORE it happens by giving a potential child predator the ability to seek help for their mental illness without fear of being killed instantly.
      Once they offend, the damage has been done. We can do better for our children

    • @BM-qw8hy
      @BM-qw8hy Рік тому

      @@mikehuff9793 You cannot cure depravity anymore than you can cure heterosexuality, homosexuality, or force feed someone dog shit and get them to enjoy the taste of it. They need banishing from existence before they offend

  • @SirAsdf
    @SirAsdf Рік тому +6

    If you're a club owner and you lock the fire exits just so you can make a few extra bucks, you should go to prison for life when the inevitable happens.

  • @tyvulpintaur2732
    @tyvulpintaur2732 Місяць тому +3

    Actor/Director Charles Nelson Reilly (then 13 years old) snuck out to see the Hartford circus with his best friend. His mother caught them and is said to have yelled at them "I hope it burns down!". Both boys escaped, but for the rest of his life, Reilly refused to sit in an audience, saying it reminded him too much of that day.

  • @carllipsey1497
    @carllipsey1497 Рік тому +179

    Gary did the right thing in my opinion. If Jeff had gotten off, some other kid might have suffered the way Jodi did.

    • @imvandenh
      @imvandenh Рік тому

      Lots of other kids did suffer the way Jody did and they still do. Gary squashed the cockroach that raped his son but there are many more out there that you never see or hear about because they don't get caught. It's not like Gary's righteous kill ended pedophilia and child sex abuse for all time! He got his own justice, that's all.

  • @pattierotondo1108
    @pattierotondo1108 Рік тому +216

    I remember watching the 1972 Olympics and seeing this happen live as an 11 year old. Even 50 years later, I will never, ever, forget it. So horrible and senseless and hateful. My stomach turns to think about it even now. That the Germans and Palestinian terrorists colluded together makes it even worse, especially since those murderers got away with it. Totally disgusting.
    I was 25 when Challenger exploded and I will never forget that either. I can still remember all the names of the crew. President Reagan gave an amazing speech afterward, doing his best to comfort a nation in pain. A terrible day, especially for the thousands of children who were watching.

    • @circleancopan7748
      @circleancopan7748 Рік тому

      Blame those Germans who were old enough to witness the Holocaust and still had Nazi ideology drilled upon their skulls.
      They did that, not because they feared Palestinian terrorists, but they wanted vengeance upon those they viewed subhuman Jews.
      And German police still failed, so GSG9 was made. Like when the hostage situation in Manila, they drilled their respective SWAT teams with what to do in case of the same scenario.

    • @americand0lphin
      @americand0lphin Рік тому

      Free Palestine and screw Reagan

    • @RedFawcett
      @RedFawcett Рік тому +20

      Actually the terrorists were hunted down by the Israeli government who went after their organization in what was called Operation Wrath of God (the movie Munich by Spielberg covers this event), only one of the three surviving terrorists got away and lived in hiding for the rest of his life.

    • @ql6746
      @ql6746 Рік тому +3

      I was in 4th grade watching the challenger. When it happened, I didn’t know why until I did.

    • @carinaa.6394
      @carinaa.6394 Рік тому

      What German terrorists? What do people like you gain from spreading such nonsense?

  • @DeeperWithDiego
    @DeeperWithDiego 7 місяців тому +5

    The saddest thing from all of this are the millions and millions of lives destroyed by regulations due to the criminal negligence of a few. Punishing the innocent is unforgivable.

  • @6Satan6Child6
    @6Satan6Child6 Рік тому +207

    I'm so glad the judge had mercy on Gary Plauche. I've seen this incident covered several times but no one went further into what happened to the shooter (or even his background sometimes). The judge knew this was a man who loved his son & couldn't allow a monster who harmed him to continue breathing. Judge was probably a parent themselves.

  • @TriniGamerGirl7
    @TriniGamerGirl7 Рік тому +82

    Gary Plauche was definitely a hero.

  • @anthonyfranco88
    @anthonyfranco88 6 місяців тому +2

    I just found your account and read on your homepage that you intend to make a video at least once a year…
    That is not enough!! These are great.

  • @logann7942
    @logann7942 Рік тому +5

    “There were sharpshooters in the area, but they didn’t have sniper rifles. Or training.” Those are called guys. There were some guys in the area. Otherwise, I’m also a sharpshooter.

  • @ep.1646
    @ep.1646 Рік тому +252

    The sad thing about the challenger crash is that my dad watched it live on his birthday when it happened. RIP to all of those brave people.

    • @thiccerbro6956
      @thiccerbro6956 Рік тому +28

      Damn that’s fucked up I hope your dad had better birthdays

    • @minnietrout814
      @minnietrout814 Рік тому +29

      The sad part is that your dad watched it live?

    • @torimig2151
      @torimig2151 Рік тому +7

      I saw it live in school

    • @Vonage585
      @Vonage585 Рік тому +4

      I was in elementary school. Remember it like it was yesterday

    • @marklambert9864
      @marklambert9864 Рік тому +4

      First and foremost
      Jesus is Lord..
      Hallelujah!!!
      Yeah….you all need to pinch yourself…
      No-one died !!!
      All alive and well….
      It’s been proven…
      The deception was and is very strong…
      Wake up you lot….
      Jesus is Lord..
      Hallelujah hallelujah hallelujah!!!
      🕊❤️🙏☝️

  • @krispykrackers8826
    @krispykrackers8826 Рік тому +231

    Glad you've covered Senna's story, wasn't too graphic but it sure was tragic. Not sure if you covered this already, but the death of Dale Earnhardt also happened live on TV. Dale's death was so tragic too, with no one really being too concerned until he didn't climb from his car after the hit. Ken Schrader, also involved in Dale's crash and a friend of his, walked over to his window net, peered in the car, and immediately began freaking out calling for help. The TV cameras panning to the slow moving ambulance made things even more tense. Other motorsports deaths like Greg Moore and Gordon Smiley are equally as tragic and gruesome.

    • @Skooter-ko1yj
      @Skooter-ko1yj Рік тому +3

      I was about to comment requesting that if he makes another one of these that savox cover the death of dale earnhardt since he’s now covered the death of senna both deaths are extremely tragic

    • @stephanniemorin
      @stephanniemorin Рік тому

      @@Skooter-ko1yj Yes, but almost everyone has heard about his death, so I don't think he'll cover it if there's a part 5

    • @raymondhopwood9393
      @raymondhopwood9393 Рік тому +3

      I don't know if it was covered, but there was the Turn One massive multi- car pile up at the start of the 1964 Indy 500. It took the life of driver Eddie Sachs, and injured several others.

    • @RedFawcett
      @RedFawcett Рік тому +3

      Another Grand Prix incident that happened live was the South Africa edition in 1975 when Tim Pryce crashed his car into a steward on the track and was practically decapitated by the fire extinguisher the latter was carrying to put out another car crash. Gruesome as it was available on UA-cam a few years back and you could see it happen in real time.

    • @ebob4177
      @ebob4177 Рік тому

      Roger Williamson's death must be the worst of these single seater racing deaths.

  • @warmac88
    @warmac88 Рік тому +1

    Great video British bro

  • @tcontroversialg
    @tcontroversialg 10 місяців тому +7

    i had to write a whole report about the Munich massacre in my criminal psychology class

  • @kdashthedarkhero
    @kdashthedarkhero Рік тому +251

    Gary Plauche last interview actually made me cry to see him struggling and getting backlash for shooting a man who rape his son even tho the father did a right thing to do to protect his son and seeing like this,made me wanna cry more,you're a real hero Gary rest easy

    • @Julian-4
      @Julian-4 Рік тому +1

      Anyone who gave him backlash has a LOT of explaining to do defending trash like Doucet.

    • @darkyogaming5892
      @darkyogaming5892 Рік тому +13

      Look up Cain Velasquez, real case that's currently going on. Same situation, Cain is an ex UFC heavyweight champion and killed the man who did the thing to his kid.

    • @kevinwynn3251
      @kevinwynn3251 Рік тому +20

      @@darkyogaming5892 didn't kill him, but tried to. wish he would have succeeded

    • @cdes1776
      @cdes1776 Рік тому +3

      He looked like a broken man.

    • @bintagmina3755
      @bintagmina3755 Рік тому +2

      I think, in fact, a lot of guilt was reflected. Who lets his child spend free time together with an adult man? What do you think, what are the intentions behind it??? And there was probably not enough trust, the boy did not confide in his parents.

  • @jpmnky
    @jpmnky Рік тому +312

    I’m 41 and the first 20 years of my life I saw some crazy events on live television. The Challenger explosion, the Berlin Wall opening, the Gulf War and that reporter in Baghdad talking while bombs were dropping, the Waco siege and the fire that took so many, the OJ verdict, and of course 9/11, the entire event from the second they tuned in.

    • @scubadoll5278
      @scubadoll5278 Рік тому +15

      I’m 41 as well and remember witnessing each of these events live. I’ll never forget where I was or what I was doing on 9/11 before I tuned in to watch the second plane crash into the trade center.

    • @ql6746
      @ql6746 Рік тому +4

      Baghdad bob was fake

    • @cdes1776
      @cdes1776 Рік тому +6

      I was working nightshift at a coffee shop and so slept through the day. When I showed up for work someone told me about the Challenger. I didn't believe them. Later I saw for myself. What an absolute shocker - especially the faces of the stunned children.

    • @sarahmaureencadigen9948
      @sarahmaureencadigen9948 Рік тому +3

      I'm 42 and was in a small Catholic school and the whole school watched the challenge blow up live and the teachers had no idea what happened and all ran to the front to figure out what on earth was happening

    • @1986kerrichinchilla
      @1986kerrichinchilla Рік тому +5

      I was 15 when 9/11 happened. I was off school and watched it live. I remember being so obsessed that night not wanting to miss a second my parents had to switch the TV off. Even now it still messes with my head what happened

  • @kingdavid3790
    @kingdavid3790 Рік тому +7

    "Would you kill him again?"
    Gary: "HELL YEAH!" 💪
    %100 agree with him

  • @angrybadger7946
    @angrybadger7946 11 місяців тому +7

    Honestly it was cool to hear someone talking about an event from my area’s local history. As someone who has lived in Connecticut for my whole life, I have known about that event for awhile, I remember learning about it in like 1st grade, and when I brought it up later to my mom, who grew up in the south, she had never heard of it, while her good friend who had lived in CT her whole life also knew the event. It is interesting what stories we hear from our local histories, which if not for the Internet, may have been unknown to the rest of the world.

    • @katybug6572
      @katybug6572 6 місяців тому +2

      Me too! 👋 hello to another lifetime CT resident! You never really hear much about our small lil state! ❤✌️

  • @ninxflametail9134
    @ninxflametail9134 Рік тому +182

    I remember the WDBJ7 incident like it was yesterday. I was in middle school (8th grade) when it happened and I wasn’t surprised to see it on here. Our school went on lockdown when the chase began. I’ll never forget how terrifying that incident was 7 years later. I can’t believe someone as sick and twisted that man was would do something as horrible as that. Also, the fact that he killed his cats out of anger really made me wanna hold both my cats close

    • @deboralee1623
      @deboralee1623 Рік тому +21

      thought i would be the only one commenting about the cats.

    • @marcellepesek3038
      @marcellepesek3038 Рік тому +11

      Ninx Flametail, I certainly understand your feelings, Ninx, as Debora Lee's, who also
      commented about this horror. It is so sickening how much cruelty some people get up to. I hurt for the human victims and get outraged about brutality to every creature. It is a tragic fact that someone who likes killing humans will often start out by abusing innocent
      animals. When they do both, you'd like to send them off the planet so they can't do
      it ever again. Rest in peace, all those dear souls who perished so violently.

    • @mustloveAlastor8880
      @mustloveAlastor8880 Рік тому +12

      I agree. The REAL victims where those innocent cats. I hope they didn't suffer much.

    • @whadatmowfdu7320
      @whadatmowfdu7320 Рік тому +15

      I’m from Roanoke as well and, while I have and love cats… how in the hell can you make this comment? Yea it sucks that an innocent man and woman were gunned down in cold blood but, I feel so bad for the murderers cats. What the hell is wrong with you? And all y’all “my fur babies are my kids” people can miss me with that shit. You’ve obviously never had children. Go tell those reporters parents “sorry your kids were murdered but, be glad your cats are ok”.

    • @Blunko_McSqwuntley
      @Blunko_McSqwuntley Рік тому

      @@whadatmowfdu7320 Nobody cares about your choice to spit forth a crotch goblin. Any two people with working male and female sex organs can do that.Sometimes by mistake!omg:O I mean your unremarkable ass pulled it off. That being said; what in being a parent lets you carve into stone what is worthy of more or less of any individual's empathy? Billions of people living on this ball of shit hurtling thru space and your claim to authority is because "I had a baby/babies? No YOU can miss ME with that punkass weak bull shit. I have 4 cats and I would never expect because of the way I feel for them that is how everybody else must feel. That's just plain retarded and unrealistic just like the argument you shat forth.

  • @Account_Not_Applicable
    @Account_Not_Applicable Рік тому +117

    Something that personally fascinates me with the Hartford Circus Fire as a true crime and mystery fan, is that there was only one unidentifed/unclaimed body in the fire, a little girl who was called Little Miss 1565. While someone claimed to have identified her as being Eleanor Cook, and Little Miss is buried in the Cook family plot, I and others do not see the resemblance between Little Miss's post-mortem photo and Eleanor's portrait.
    Edit: I have been informed there were other bodies from the fire that were unidentified, not just Little Miss. Sorry about that.

    • @donavonseibert507
      @donavonseibert507 Рік тому +15

      That unidentified little girl randomly pops into my head once in a while. It's just so peculiar that she was never identified. She'd definitely be identified if it happened these days, one would think. Things weren't as well documented like they are today unfortunately😕.

    • @waxeightoneeight
      @waxeightoneeight Рік тому +15

      There are actually two additional unidentified bodies from the Hartford Circus Fire and the DNA Doe Project is currently working on identifying them through forensic genealogy. But yes, Little Miss 1565 stuck with me as well and I am surprised Savox didn't mention her, even if he couldn't include the post-mortem photo in the video for obvious reasons.

    • @Account_Not_Applicable
      @Account_Not_Applicable Рік тому +5

      @@waxeightoneeight oh? I was always told Little Miss was the only one. Props to DNA Doe for keeping up with things

    • @waxeightoneeight
      @waxeightoneeight Рік тому +13

      @@Account_Not_Applicable Just double checked and apparently there were actually five unidentified decedents recovered from the fire, aside from Little Miss 1565, and the DNA Doe Project had tried to uncover the identity of two unidentified women, but unfortunately they weren't able to retrieve enough DNA to make any kind of comparison :(

  • @eggreedgious5194
    @eggreedgious5194 Рік тому +8

    Your coverage of the deaths of Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger was very well done.

    • @lavielemond
      @lavielemond 4 місяці тому +1

      Wasn't it?! As soon as I saw Ayrton's name came up on the screen & being the lifelong Ayrton Senna da Silva NUT that I have ALWAYS been since the mid-80s (I turned 50 last month, btw), I expected a really piss-poor piece of coverage that got PLENTY of facts wrong about that 'Black Weekend at Imola" but I was well-impressed & only a fanatic like myself could find fault with anything that he said & none of that was serious enough to warrant a complaint from me, nor change the importance of the story for the average punter! I'm so glad that someone else was impressed with the coverage of that terrible weekend that still churns my stomach to this day, as I wrote in a near-novel of a reply to a previous comment from Brazil! AYRTON SENNA DA SILVA SEMPRE...cheers & best wishes from sunny 'Down Under', mate...Matt.

    • @eggreedgious5194
      @eggreedgious5194 4 місяці тому +1

      @@lavielemond cheers from America dude! Still a die hard F1 fan, even recent events haven't tainted the magic for me. Still love getting up at 3am to watch racing halfway across the world. Best sport hands down.

    • @lavielemond
      @lavielemond 4 місяці тому

      ​@@eggreedgious5194 G'day again, legend! Man, I can't believe that you actually read all of that fucking novel that I wrote...assuming that you did actually read all of it, of course?! I'm rapt for you that you're still able to enjoy the 'sport' of F1 nowadays but without that incredible sound that they used to emit (did you ever attend an F1 race & hear that utter SCREAM before the poxy hybrid things that they've run this century, perchance?), I just can't get into it & it feels as though I'm simply watching Scalextric/slot cars running around a track', they're so quiet now. Man, it was bad enough for me when they banned refuelling (because that played such a MASSIVE part of a team's/driver's race strategy in each race & obviously, it involved the entire TEAM far more than it does now) but these poxy new engines & all of their other introductions to F1 over the past decade or so make me feel sick whenever I've tried to watch it.
      But while HONDA's exit from the sport & then Ayrton's death a couple of years later heavily affected my enjoyment of F1, I still continued to follow it during the late '90s & early '00s & I thoroughly enjoyed watching Hakkinen & Coulthard at McLaren, trying to defeat Schumacher...& to this day, I still own a limited edition (1500 made) TAG Heuer 'Link' West McLaren Mercedes watch that features their 'signatures' inscribed upon the inner face of the watch, although I've very rarely worn it & far prefer a few of my other watches, especially my TAG Heuer 'Link' Senna memorial watch - what a massive surprise there, eh?!
      And I even very much enjoyed the first few years of Vettel's arrival, & subsequent immense success at Red Bull but even the team director, Christian Horner still misses the former, high-revving F1 engines, as the following quote from an F1 article from last year states:
      "Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner has previously echoed the sentiment of fans worldwide, calling loud engines part of F1’s DNA. He also revealed mechanics are still driven by the sound of a V8 or V10 engine: “The noise is part of the emotion. It’s part of the DNA of the sport. It’s funny how you get used to things because the V6s with the energy recovery systems they currently have are much quieter than the old V10s and V12s or even the V8s. So now when we roll out a show car and you hear a V10 or a V8 engine, all the mechanics put their tools down to go and watch the car.”
      Nah, very sadly, just as MotoGP lost so much of its buzz when they tried to 'update' the former 500cc two-stroke motorbikes, so too has the PC-style hybridisation of the F1 engines & all of the other B/S changes destroyed F1 for me.
      OK, well that's enough of (yet more) ranting from me this time & I wish you the very best from a (VERY HOT) 'Down Under', mate...take good care out there...Matt.

  • @dominiquealaska7490
    @dominiquealaska7490 Рік тому +173

    Gary Plauche literally brought ducette into his home, fed him, everything.. he is a true hero for downright killing him for that unthinkable betrayal. Thank god Jodie thought to ask to call his parents after that trauma.. and that they were able to find him! I'm just surprised I haven't heard of that case before..

  • @natalie9884
    @natalie9884 Рік тому +173

    The wife saying, “The least you could have done was let me drive you.” 👌 🙌

    • @JoeG_420
      @JoeG_420 10 місяців тому +1

      Even his ex agreed he did the right thing

    • @soul1984vic
      @soul1984vic 4 місяці тому

      on some boss ish

  • @mrsRMT
    @mrsRMT Рік тому +1

    Bravo, Gary. Bravo. 👏

  • @Sonicjohnson10
    @Sonicjohnson10 Рік тому +62

    "The tent was covered in gasoline as a waterproofing method."
    Um....What? Who's bright idea was that? Reminds me of that thing I heard about people using gasoline to clean their floors.

    • @bigsteve6729
      @bigsteve6729 Рік тому +14

      Yeah I use it as moisturizer myself

    • @heavy-purple-mixx3779
      @heavy-purple-mixx3779 Рік тому +13

      @@bigsteve6729 I drink it, it's really refreshing at the summer 😊

    • @RogueAOV
      @RogueAOV Рік тому +5

      I had to rewind that sentence and relisten because i was sure that what i heard, was not what i heard.

    • @GhostRangerr
      @GhostRangerr Рік тому +4

      @@heavy-purple-mixx3779 I brush my teeth with it, it gives me fresh breath & white teeth :D

    • @MarkSentMe
      @MarkSentMe Рік тому +11

      It was the 1940s...people talk about the good ol' days. They did some really stupid stuff back then, too.

  • @cimengngialah2735
    @cimengngialah2735 Рік тому +115

    Fun Fact: Big Bird from Sesame Street was supposed to be on the Challenger, but due to his height, he was replaced by Christa instead.

    • @christopherwall2121
      @christopherwall2121 Рік тому +26

      Wasn't the height, from what I heard, it was the logistics of getting Carroll Spinney and the Big Bird suit into space, plus no way of knowing what effects zero-G would have on the costume.

    • @dannyspelman1468
      @dannyspelman1468 Рік тому +8

      Couldn't they have just gotten Elmo? 🤔

    • @Numb217
      @Numb217 Рік тому +11

      @@dannyspelman1468 He was too ticklish?

    • @kelliannj9473
      @kelliannj9473 Рік тому +1

      Not Elmo… noooo

  • @cassidylee9785
    @cassidylee9785 10 місяців тому +1

    Well done Gary, hats of to you 😊

  • @Replicaate
    @Replicaate Рік тому +6

    My boss remembers watching the Challenger blow up, as his high school class was watching one of the TV broadcasts of the launch. He tells me there was a lot less screaming in terror/confusion than you'd think - everyone just kind of looked like they were going to throw up, and someone actually did. It was a lot of stunned, silent weeping after that. His teacher gave up on that day's lesson since he figured nobody was going to be able to think straight after seeing that and told them all to take a moment, go sit outside the room if they had to.

  • @cheshirerose2001
    @cheshirerose2001 Рік тому +49

    I always get excited when Savox uploads

  • @whiskeykel
    @whiskeykel Рік тому +91

    The interview with the teacher before the Challenger disaster was heartbreaking

  • @hello_lydie
    @hello_lydie Рік тому +8

    ABC Correspondent Bill Stewart in Nicaragua 1979......
    I was there for the Challenger tragedy. 37 years later my heart still breaks for the crew and their loved ones and I still have no words to describe the devastation.

  • @oxitape1563
    @oxitape1563 Рік тому +88

    Gary Plauche is an absolute hero. One less monster on this planet is a blessing. Vigilantism isn’t always the right course of action but in this case it certainly was. Godspeed Gary.

  • @AkumaNoRobin
    @AkumaNoRobin Рік тому +53

    Thank you for covering the Cromañon incident, I remember being 9 at the time and watching tv with my mom when suddenly every channel started reporting the news about the fire happening, I remember it so clearly it doesnt feel like it's been almost two decades. I also remember how the trials just kept dragging on and dragging on with little to no justice being done.
    This is not an incident I've seen covered in other videos so I'm glad it finally got some international/Non-spanish speaking coverage.

    • @norman6492
      @norman6492 Рік тому +4

      Just like the Station Nightclub fire in Rhode Island the year before.

  • @slepslep4816
    @slepslep4816 Рік тому +8

    i think the most frightening part about the challenger disaster is if it had gone off without a hitch, that meant that a lot of citizens would've been able to go up into orbit without adequate training and more lives would've been put in danger, it's still a tragedy, but i feel like it prevented more people from being hurt/killed

  • @finisher3x
    @finisher3x 4 місяці тому +3

    Those nightclub fire stories are always the worst. Overpacked nightclub with the owners disregarding basic building and safety codes. Then compound the situation by having locked doors from the inside, or only one way in/out of the place.

  • @TheGelasiaBlythe
    @TheGelasiaBlythe Рік тому +141

    I remember watching the Challenger disaster on TV in school. Our long-term substitute teacher (the regular teacher was out on maternity leave) brought a cart with a CRT television on it - color, even! - and we watched this happen. The sub burst into tears. I'll never forget that, or the tasteless jokes that people made on comedy and late night television shows about the whole event.
    Interestingly, Alan Shepard was mentioned in this. He was also from NH, just like Christa McAuliffe, and the McAuliffe-Shepard Discovery Center (planetarium and space museum) in Concord, NH is named after both of them.

    • @newmanoutdoors1564
      @newmanoutdoors1564 Рік тому +4

      Thank you for sharing .

    • @TheScarlett618
      @TheScarlett618 Рік тому +20

      What broke my heart was that National news showed Christa leaving her house that morning. Saying goodbye to her little boy at the door. He clung to her saying "I don't want you to go !" and her last words to him were "I'll be back...I promise ". 😞

    • @VegasMilgauss
      @VegasMilgauss Рік тому

      Died, squealing like pigs

    • @lizzieoswald6679
      @lizzieoswald6679 Рік тому +3

      I'm almost positive that your substitute teacher was my high school teacher. She described being a regular sub and everyone (herself included) was super excited to watch a teacher go into space. But the aftermath left her and everyone else just shattered. When she told us this story, I wasn't too familiar with the disaster, so I looked it up and remember asking her "Wait, so you saw that?" How horrible for anyone to witness this.

    • @TheGelasiaBlythe
      @TheGelasiaBlythe Рік тому

      @@lizzieoswald6679 if her last name (maiden name) rhymed with berry and she was in a northeastern state at the time, then yes. It could have been the same teacher.

  • @lacymarie78
    @lacymarie78 Рік тому +58

    No matter how many years go by, I still remember the day that the challenger exploded like it was yesterday. I remember crying with my family watching President Reagan’s speech. I got choked up watching it here all over again. It could’ve been prevented, had NASA listened to the warnings and pulled their heads out of their asses. RIP to the Challenger 7.

    • @rush1er
      @rush1er Рік тому +5

      I was in 3rd grade and we got to watch it live in our classroom.... my teacher realizing what happened, solemnly turned off the TV and with the utmost level of compassion and respect, explained to us exactly what happened.

    • @aliencafe
      @aliencafe Рік тому +1

      It's such an awful situation all around. In one of my communication classes we covered the explosion as a situation where nearly everyone in charge had done something fatally wrong and I remember my hands shaking when I went to pick up my water bottle after talking about it. It was so, so preventable.

    • @aliencafe
      @aliencafe Рік тому +5

      @@rush1er Can't imagine what it would have been like as a teacher, realizing what you saw and having to keep calm for the sake of keeping your class from panicking. What a difficult situation to be placed in, those teachers deserve all of the credit in the world.

  • @steveroark6393
    @steveroark6393 2 місяці тому +3

    On the shuttle I just found out the crew was still alive in their cone after the explosion and they rode it down alive and hit the water at 800 MPH. Look it up.

  • @usmale49
    @usmale49 Рік тому +4

    What a great video. Interesting and informative with wonderful narration! I feel for every one of these victims...it's so, so sad! My Mom told me about the Cocoanut fire as it was national news. She read about it here in CO. Thank you for creating, uploading and sharing!
    PS: I just subscribed...and is it possible for you to cover the fire at the Catholic School in Chicago in November/December 1958? I believe the school was named St. Mary of the Angels or something similar! Thanking you in advance! 🙂

  • @roomum9829
    @roomum9829 Рік тому +36

    I took my lunchbreak at work here in Australia so that I could watch the Challenger launch. I saw it blow up as it happened and stumbled back to work in shock. People were asking me about it and all I could say was "it blew up, it exploded". I could feel how pale I was after the blood had drained out of my face and the rest of the day was spent in a complete daze.

  • @fluttzkrieg4392
    @fluttzkrieg4392 Рік тому +125

    Just so you can have an idea of how much us Brazilians loved Senna: Up until his accident, F1 viewership was as big as it is with soccer games. After he died, F1 viewership practically died with him.

    • @ghunter182003
      @ghunter182003 Рік тому +8

      A lot of people would say the same thing about Dale Earnhardt’s death. When he died, NASCAR died with him.

    • @zimutes
      @zimutes Рік тому +7

      Not only in Brazil. In Portugal, for example, happened the same.

    • @FH4Player6397
      @FH4Player6397 Рік тому +5

      *Football

  • @patricianolan5053
    @patricianolan5053 8 місяців тому +2

    So very Interesting great content amazing presentation RIP to all who perished

  • @antonanderson1965
    @antonanderson1965 Рік тому +2

    I was not there when Challenger blew up, but of all the stories mentioned in this video, somehow it hit me the hardest. May we never forget the bravery and memory of the Challenger Seven.

  • @rickgould334
    @rickgould334 Рік тому +52

    I was in my 6th grade History class at the time they launched the Challenger. Our teacher Mrs. Morris had the television set up, so we could watch the launch. I will never forget the expression on her face, and the emotion in the classroom, when we realized what happened. I can't fathom how the family felt, as they watched it live from Cape Canaveral.

    • @banana9106
      @banana9106 Рік тому +3

      I am in the UK and on that day I was off school ill with flu and so I also saw it happen live too.

    • @xXluluchanelXx
      @xXluluchanelXx Рік тому +2

      when I had a bad day in high school with my friends getting sent home over ridiculous wardrobe critiques, this older online friend told me that when she was in high school, she went the day the Challenger blew up.. wearing a pajama top that featured an astronaut and his astronaut dog adrift in space with little pieces of ship wreckage floating around. they angrily forced her to go change as if she had done it on purpose.

    • @banana9106
      @banana9106 Рік тому +3

      @@xXluluchanelXx No one could have guessed the failures that happened.

    • @chelsthegameruiner8669
      @chelsthegameruiner8669 Рік тому +6

      My parents saw it live in their high school years and were stunned when I asked them what the Challenger was. Unfortunately, classes where I live skip over many of these events in favor of teaching about the rivalry between America and the Soviet Union after the Second World War, leading to many not knowing about these topics. If it weren't for my great grandfather who served in Korea, I wouldn't know about half the stuff in history that I know now

  • @jeremyknight9980
    @jeremyknight9980 Рік тому +41

    48:31 "There is going to be 10 souls I'm taking with me." Some of the darkest foreshadowing I have ever heard.

    • @cierra7071
      @cierra7071 Рік тому +10

      I thought the same thing. My heart and stomach sank when she said it and I thought “Why in the WORLD would you think to put something like that on yourself and others??”. I guess people know better know that you can speak things into existence.

    • @jeremyknight9980
      @jeremyknight9980 Рік тому +9

      @@cierra7071 To be fair she and everyone else didn't know what was going to happen.

  • @FastFreddy007
    @FastFreddy007 Рік тому

    It sure brought back a lot of memories. Is there some requirement that states back round music is required? It can become annoying for sure. Thanks for the great video!

  • @Chironseth1970
    @Chironseth1970 Рік тому +5

    Ayrton Senna was an absolute genius behind the wheel. I was watching the San Marino GP live with a friend and a brother. That whole weekend was a nightmare. Even with the deaths, with the helicopter landed on the track to take Senna away a GP car cam screaming round the corner even though no cars should’ve been on the track. Absolutely heart breaking time in F1