Flight Attendant reacts to SULLY | FIRST TIME WATCHING

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024
  • Enjoy my reaction as I watch Sully for the first time!
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    #sully #moviereaction #reaction #movie #tomhanks

КОМЕНТАРІ • 555

  • @BissFlix
    @BissFlix  Рік тому +33

    Thank you for watching the video, It means a lot to me .
    I will leave this pinned message here to REMIND everyone that i do not have TELEGRAM and there is no GIVEAWAY. Those you see are bot scams . Keep yourself safe and know that I would not ask for your info. ❤ ❤

    • @RolandDeschain19
      @RolandDeschain19 6 місяців тому

      36 Degrees are measured in Fahrenheit in the US. so it probably is 2.2°C

    • @MCscarfacematt
      @MCscarfacematt Місяць тому

      @@RolandDeschain19 as a canadian thats shorts and t shirt weather i mean hell i got a frost advisory last week tempatures as low as 1C

    • @roberormonde
      @roberormonde Місяць тому +1

      Tom hank does mostly great movies how doesn't want to watch amovie with you😊

  • @RyneMurray23
    @RyneMurray23 7 місяців тому +14

    He was one hundred percent a hero. He saved every single life on that plane. One miscalculation and the plane would've split in half and nose dived into the water.

  • @hamzabayoumy
    @hamzabayoumy 5 місяців тому +82

    Sully: Nice view of the Hudson!
    Birds: YOU WANNA HAVE A CLOSER LOOK?

  • @RogueJyn
    @RogueJyn Рік тому +11

    I was only 10 when it happened but I remember every news outlet and talk show talking about the miracle on the Hudson. Lot of Americans were happy to hear everything turned out great

  • @Kosh800
    @Kosh800 7 місяців тому

    So while I'm not a pilot I did train as one in college. Got the degree and everything. Turns out I wasn't medically cleared to fly because I take anti-depressants. Seems like a giant error on the part of the industry since all that will do is cause depressed pilots not want to get treatment, but whatever. ANYWAY, one of the really freaky parts about the opening moments of this movie and his nightmare is how, when Sully is about to crash, he says, "Lorrie, I love you." That might get missed by a ton of the audience as just him saying it because he's thinking it. In reality he's saying it because he knows that the plane has a flight recorder, and that after the crash they'll be able to retrieve it (the black box) and the crash investigators will be able to hear him say that. They'll also be able to make a copy or just let his wife know that he said that right before he crashed. It's a tiny little detail but it hit me like a truck because during my training we would learn about and investigate a lot of air plane and airline crashes, including their black box recordings. I wouldn't recommend anyone faint of heart listen to the recordings, because they're literally hearing the last moments of these people's lives. I distinctly remember a couple where the captain or first officer said something similar right at the last moment knowing it would be the last thing they said. It's really gut wrenching to listen to some of those audio recordings.

  • @dankefurnichts
    @dankefurnichts 7 місяців тому

    i realy wonder what the people of new york thought as an airbus came low towards the buildings ... after 9/11 i am sure there was a bit of panic.

  • @Databyter
    @Databyter Рік тому +4

    This movie does have a palpable sense of realism that touches you and gets you involved. And I was already very engaged, but when I saw the response of the New Yorkers, the Ferry Captains and crew, yeah, it's emotional. This movie was very well done. It captured the spirit of the event, and the emotion of the miracle of the lives saved, and jobs well done. It is a story of everything going right, and everybody doing their best. And we need to see those stories sometimes, because usually we are exposed only the the tragedies where many things have gone wrong. Databyter

  • @tgriffin8179
    @tgriffin8179 Рік тому +1

    A great movie - very nice react from an insider’s perspective. Keep’em coming!

  • @GregInHouston2
    @GregInHouston2 Рік тому

    Another flight attendant reacting to this move stated that control of the aircraft is with the captain only as long as the plane is in the air. Once it was on the ground, the head flight attendant is in charge. I wonder about that! But I enjoyed your reaction a lot. You said something about imagining going to jail after something like this. I don't have to imagine it; the movie "Flight" with Denzel Washington showed that.

  • @philmakris8507
    @philmakris8507 Рік тому

    A VIEW FROM THE TOP is a comedy/light drama about flight attendants

  • @Phenom24uk
    @Phenom24uk Рік тому

    Air traffic controllers? Watch Pushing Tin!

  • @datdudeinred
    @datdudeinred 9 місяців тому +55

    It's a shame that the crew didn't get the appreciation they deserve. The FO of that flight (jeff skilles) has commented on a reaction by a pilot channel 74 gear saying same thing. All those women deserve awards the whole crew does.

    • @davidlovingmusic
      @davidlovingmusic 7 днів тому +1

      Yes. +1 to the 74 Gear recommendation - his reaction is great. Also notes what a great job ATC did.

  • @charisma-hornum-fries
    @charisma-hornum-fries 8 місяців тому +49

    Thanks for showing people that a flight attended is not just a waitress in the sky but an important safety officer.

  • @PV1230
    @PV1230 Рік тому +180

    it;s important to note that Sully was a glider pilot and instructor in his past. he had alot of experience in non-powered flight. it was probably why he was able the nail the water landing so well.

    • @matsv201
      @matsv201 Рік тому +6

      That is fairly common due to the high amount of hours needed in the US. There are plenty of people that become instructors to just get the hours with out spending tons of cash. that don´t necessarily imply they was very good pilots, of cause in Sullys case, he was, but there been other crashes with former instructors that have proven to be pretty poor pilots.

    • @Maniacguy2777
      @Maniacguy2777 Рік тому +3

      He was the fighter pilot too.

    • @7thsealord888
      @7thsealord888 Рік тому +5

      It is well worth noting, that, prior to the Hudson River landing, Sully ran a small side-business where he lectured organizations about crisis management.

    • @TheShornak
      @TheShornak Рік тому +6

      Glad to see you called it a Water Landing and not a crash.

    • @vesstig
      @vesstig Рік тому +1

      @@7thsealord888 I saw this one crash of a couple guys in a small plane where they were apparently unable to clime due to the mountains affecting the atmosphere making it thicker and harder to climb through, they didnt make it sadly after the engine stalled but it goes to show that experience is earned and passed on for good reasons.

  • @lazyperfectionist1
    @lazyperfectionist1 Рік тому +28

    32:45 "Can we get serious, now? We've all heard about the computer simulations and now we are watching actual sims, but I can't quite believe you still haven't taken into account the _human_ factor."
    This, I think, is the _cornerstone,_ here. Two different simulators, each with a perfectly capable pilot and copilot. But each successfully pulled off this landing, _aware_ that, at the same time Sully and Skiles would lose the function of _their_ engines, they would _too._
    The problem was that, in each simulation, each pilot and copilot _knew_ at that moment that the engines would be unusable. Sully and Skiles _didn't._ They spent a good 30 seconds trying everything they could _think_ of to restart them, and the whole time, the plane was losing altitude.

  • @peperino25
    @peperino25 Рік тому +11

    NEED TO RECOMMEND YOU
    Flight (2012)
    starring Denzel Washington

  • @MazzieMay
    @MazzieMay 2 місяці тому +9

    Oh, sweetheart ♡ The way you jumped at the ditching and started going through the safety procedures on instincts
    I bet you were very good at your job ☺️

  • @Sure0Foot
    @Sure0Foot Місяць тому +4

    a quick method of temperature conversion between Fahrenheit & Celsius is this: double the C and add 30 to get the F. This works only between about 0-100 C but it's super handy for day-to-day temperature. So, at about 25:00 when Biss said "I don't know what 36 degrees is", just go the other way: subtract 30 then divide by 2. That's 3 C and that's effing COLD to be in water with below 0 wind chill.

  • @HankD13
    @HankD13 Рік тому +33

    This was indeed "The Miracle on the Hudson" and Sully deserves every accolade for this 2009 ditching. But nobody remembers the 16 Jan 2002 Garuda Indonesia Flight 421, a Boeing 737-3Q8. After losing both engines, (storm cell and water ingestion - no APU due to failure, unable to restart, no electrical systems at all) the pilots saw the very remote, Bengawan Solo River and decided to attempt to ditch with the flaps and gear retracted. The ditch procedure was successful, leaving the aircraft settled down on its belly in the shallow water, with the fuselage, wings and control surfaces largely intact. There was no fire. High speed impact, tail low, broke on the shallow river bottom, ripping the floor away and dumping to cabin attendants in the river - one of them being the sole fatality. It was 2hrs before rescue teams arrived! 13 injuries other injuries, with the one death - but really a miracle in its own right.

    • @jimreilly917
      @jimreilly917 Рік тому +2

      Yes it was.

    • @jakefromstatefarm6969
      @jakefromstatefarm6969 2 місяці тому +5

      Fascinating, never heard of this. This had the 6th most passengers in any water ditching.
      The larger water ditchings all had 20+ casualties except for the miracle on the hudson. And this one only had 1. A miracle too.

    • @gk5891
      @gk5891 Місяць тому +1

      TACA 110 on the levee outside Michoud in New Orkeans. They saved the passengers, crew and aircraft. I got to see them fly it off Saturn Blvd.

    • @derbydriver
      @derbydriver Місяць тому +1

      “The Miracle on the Hudson” got more attention because it felt sort of like a minor redemption for the helplessness felt on 9/11. You spend every September for the past 8 years reliving that day through the replays and memorials on TV, and every time you feel utterly helpless. There is nothing you can do.
      A plane goes down in New York again, and this time, not one single life is lost. Everyone who was able, did EVERYTHING they could to ensure this. “No One Dies Today.”
      Americans, but New Yorkers especially were finally able to experience some 9/11 closure vicariously through The Miracle on the Hudson. Similar to how a war vet could do nothing to save a dozen fellow soldiers from an IED, but provides life-saving CPR to an elderly person at home- redemption, closure.

  • @ccramit
    @ccramit Рік тому +73

    It's important to note that Sully was never blamed in real life like he was in the movie. In fact, Sully has stated that the NTSB and investigation team were very professional and only wanted to find out what went wrong and how to help in the future.
    Hollywood needed a 'bad guy' for the movie for drama because, well, Hollywood. But Sully was universally praised for his actions almost immediately from everyone involved with the investigation. And it was in fact someone at the NTSB who recommended the simulator pilots be forced to wait for some time to mimic the confusion of the moment they lost power.

    • @CrasherFTW
      @CrasherFTW 11 місяців тому +5

      Do your research properly brotherman

    • @dwrdwlsn5
      @dwrdwlsn5 10 місяців тому +5

      NTSB are not there to be nice. They are there to figure out what went wrong and hopefully keep it form happening again. A REALLY nasty job on occasion.

    • @ShneekeyTheLost
      @ShneekeyTheLost 7 місяців тому +1

      @@dwrdwlsn5 True, but they also aren't there to bust anybody's chops. They're there for one reason and one reason only: to determine the truth of the situation. From there, if they determine that the pilot had acted appropriately, then their next job is to either modify existing procedures or to create procedures to handle the situation.
      It was entirely appropriate for them to question his habits, because Pilot Error is a thing that happens, and his habits can contribute to a pilot error. They're not being mean or cruel, they're doing their jobs. It is their job to be critical of everything until the facts can be determined, because people do generally try to cover stuff up. They need to ask repeatedly to try and spot discrepancies because they need to know if he's lying to them or not. This doesn't make them the 'bad guy'. It makes them professional. It's just that 'professional' in this context is different from what many other career lines would consider 'professional'.

    • @dwrdwlsn5
      @dwrdwlsn5 7 місяців тому +1

      @@ShneekeyTheLost Yeah. Hollywood made them out to be villains, but they are not. My dad was a private pilot and he always had a great deal of respect for NTSB personnel. He said it was a really crappy and messy job but a needed one and he was right.

    • @ChrissonatorOFL
      @ChrissonatorOFL 5 місяців тому +2

      I mean, the movie was made by Clint Eastwood as director and producer... he also painted the NTSB as the bad guys.

  • @roban28
    @roban28 Місяць тому +5

    What an amazing reaction! You're insights and visceral reactions were heartfelt & fabulous - particularly to Sully's reaction in the hospital to the 155 survivors. Great to watch this film along with you - many thanks x

  • @martindnajera
    @martindnajera Рік тому +8

    If you are looking for somenthing like this one, try Fligth whit Denzel Washington

  • @4325air
    @4325air Місяць тому +4

    I so enjoyed your reaction! It was wonderful! My younger sister was a "stew" for Delta Airlines back in the 1970s and 1980s. SHE reacted to Sully EXACTLY like YOU reacted: she could still do the safety briefing and the hand and arm signals, she got goosebumps, and she was so emotional when watching the scenes of "her" flight attendant "sisters." In her own way, and after almost 40 years, she was still right there with that cabin crew and her passengers.

  • @rickwoodham4570
    @rickwoodham4570 Рік тому +24

    Biss I loved your "technical" input from your knowledge & experience. 36°F = 2.2°C
    As a firefighter in New Jersey not far from the Hudson River, I'm very familiar with this story.
    And don't worry, i get chills & emotional watching it too.

  • @dwrdwlsn5
    @dwrdwlsn5 10 місяців тому +8

    Air Traffic controller is one of the most stressful jobs if not THE most stressful job in the world. The guy who handled this flight took weeks to recover from the stress. To his credit? He went back to work, afterwards!

    • @nathanwilliams2152
      @nathanwilliams2152 День тому

      I can imagine it is stressful. Split-second decision making being a way of life...how long are their shifts in America?

  • @EricPalmerBlog
    @EricPalmerBlog Місяць тому +5

    I love how Sully just turned on the auxiliary power unit (APU) in the tail of the aircraft. They were in a situation that wasn't in any known practice, but he realized having auxiliary power might be helpful.

  • @sebastianandres8781
    @sebastianandres8781 Рік тому +4

    '
    Please watch : Flight (2012)
    Starring Denzel Washington

  • @jimreilly917
    @jimreilly917 Рік тому +13

    It was a miracle. No deaths despite most water landings result in all hands lost. Landing in the Hudson in January…freezing. The rescue helos and barges that responded without training…saving lives. Your reaction was mine at the time. This was after 911. Sully is the best pilot in 50 years.

  • @marvinsarracino116
    @marvinsarracino116 Рік тому +18

    I'm so glad Biss got to react to this movie! One of my favorites 👍 next react to flight with Denzel Washington! Would Luv to hear more flight attendant stories!😊

  • @davidandrew6957
    @davidandrew6957 Рік тому +39

    I’d like to see her reaction to the movie “Flight” from 2012.

    • @FrancoisDressler
      @FrancoisDressler Рік тому +3

      Great film.

    • @flyflorida2001
      @flyflorida2001 Рік тому +6

      Take it from a 20 year airline captain. There is NOTHING accurate in that movie. I mean, NOTHING. It is a horrible movie made by people who have ZERO idea about aviation. Sully on the other hand was done very well

    • @funtclaps77
      @funtclaps77 Рік тому +4

      Flight is a terrible movie. Absolutely terrible movie. They took inspiration from a real tragedy with zero survivors and saved it with the most unrealistic flight sequences I’ve ever seen.
      Christ, Soul Plane is a better “aviation” movie!

    • @davidandrew6957
      @davidandrew6957 Рік тому +1

      @@funtclaps77 I agree that the flight scenes are unrealistic. I think Biss will like this movie partially because of the flight theme. But more so because of the great character relationships and their struggles. I think it’s a great film aside from the crash scenes. And although the flight scenes were unrealistic. They were cinematically awesome.

    • @dimitrijensk2845
      @dimitrijensk2845 Рік тому +3

      Bro don’t do that to her. That movie is SO bad aviation wise.

  • @7thsealord888
    @7thsealord888 Рік тому +6

    Great reaction, and your knowledge as a former flight attendant certainly added something.

  • @SergioArellano-yd7ik
    @SergioArellano-yd7ik 6 місяців тому +4

    "think is the guy who jumped first and decided to go to Nowhere" " oh Jesus take the wheel"

  • @robhorsey9906
    @robhorsey9906 Рік тому +21

    This was a great reaction, I appreciated your technical background as a flight attendant. It really confirmed the technical accuracy of the movie, along with the emotional impact. I remember thinking when the movie was announced how interesting could it be when we all know how it turned out. But a great cast and great director made an excellent movie. On a personal note, back in 2010 at a work conference I met one of the survivors of the crash, he had pictures of it on his phone, including from the wing. He said the whole flight crew was amazing, and Sully was perfectly calm the entire time.

    • @ghyslainabel
      @ghyslainabel Рік тому +1

      While the technical aspects of the movie were accurate, the investigation was not. In reality, the investigators were not so antagonistic, and it did not have a feeling of a trial.

  • @Ducayneau
    @Ducayneau Рік тому +3

    You should watch Flight with Denzel Washington

  • @jackmars931
    @jackmars931 Рік тому +25

    In reality, no one questioned his decisions, and any investigation was just a formality required by law. They've over-dramatized it for the film, but there was no one out to get him or trying to blame anything on him.

    • @bobespirit2112
      @bobespirit2112 Рік тому +2

      I imagine the airline was truly pissed at the loss of the plane - they were probably the only ones really putting any real heat in Sully.
      I know a AA pilot who was hit in another bird strike leaving LaGuardia in a 777 but she (yes, she) was able to come back and land at LaGuardi (just 1 engine).
      Man, I hate that approach into LaGuardi from the west, that crazy right left turn over the bay and then being 50 feet (or it seems) over the water before reaching that short runway. Scary as heck every time.

    • @nt78stonewobble
      @nt78stonewobble Рік тому +4

      "In reality, no one questioned his decisions, and any investigation was just a formality required by law. They've over-dramatized it for the film, but there was no one out to get him or trying to blame anything on him."
      Over-dramatized for the film for sure, but I could imagine how, even standard questions, could have felt like that, because you would also be questioning your own actions.

    • @nt78stonewobble
      @nt78stonewobble Рік тому +3

      @@bobespirit2112 "I imagine the airline was truly pissed at the loss of the plane - they were probably the only ones really putting any real heat in Sully."
      That would be so silly, considering how well it went and how well the crew acted and were perceived.

    • @ghyslainabel
      @ghyslainabel Рік тому +2

      @@nt78stonewobble from what I heard here and there, whenever there is an accident, the first thing the investigators do is question the decisions of the pilot, and it was no different in this case. That being said, the movie pushed that angle for way too long. During the landing in the simulators, it was the investigators themselves who told the pilots to not react immediately after the bird strike.

  • @ScarlettM
    @ScarlettM Рік тому +15

    If you haven't seen, consider reacting to "Flight" (2012) - it's not a masterpiece but interesting. And it would be great to hear your option on some moments!

    • @nochannel1q2321
      @nochannel1q2321 Рік тому +2

      I agree. Denzel stars, but to my knowledge it's not based on a true story other than maybe in a very general sense.

  • @sebastianandres8781
    @sebastianandres8781 Рік тому +2

    ,
    ✈︎ *Flight* (2012)︎ ✈
    ____________________________
    starring *Denzel Washington*

  • @morgan4574
    @morgan4574 Місяць тому +1

    Look i get it, water ditchings have almost never been successful, and is seen as a last resort. People felt like Sully resorted to something that had never been successfully done when technically there were alternatives. But when everything is examined, Sully's experience provides the basis for why he knew so quickly that there wasn't actually any other options, which is GOOD. And of course the mastery of the execution of the water ditching speaks for itself. But I understand why they don't want pilots attempting it unless there's no other option.

  • @crazyguy_1233
    @crazyguy_1233 Місяць тому +1

    Fun fact. They have the recovered plane in a museum and you can visit it. Oh they actually show it in the credits. Cool!

  • @ShortyLongstrokin
    @ShortyLongstrokin Рік тому +16

    I love seeing the humanity of New Yorkers on film. NY gets a bad rep from many people that aren't from there, but they always come together to help each other and total strangers whenever needed.

    • @J4ME5_
      @J4ME5_ Рік тому +5

      This is so true.. I was amazed by the kindness and care during 911.. NYC is a special place for sure

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 8 місяців тому

      "they always come together to help each other"
      Which New York do you live in?

    • @corkyduke8673
      @corkyduke8673 Місяць тому

      That's my favorite scene in the movie, the passenger says, "I thought we were going to die." The ferry boat captain says, " No one dies today!"

  • @paularietta6744
    @paularietta6744 Рік тому +16

    So much appreciate your perspective as a previous flight attendant. You gave us a whole new demension to this incredible event. Great review.

  • @ShreveportJoe
    @ShreveportJoe Рік тому +16

    Loved the movie and your commentary. Another good film in a similar vein, but fictional is “Flight” with Denzel Washington as the pilot.

    • @flyflorida2001
      @flyflorida2001 Рік тому +4

      Fictional is right. Flight gets EVERYTHING wrong. -20 year airline captain

    • @SergioArellano-yd7ik
      @SergioArellano-yd7ik 6 місяців тому

      What? You mean jetliners can't really fly upside down?

  • @craigchamberlain
    @craigchamberlain 2 місяці тому +1

    I have flown many times over the last 40+ years and it's very easy to become complacent.
    But one time on a flight from Taipei to Bangkok, I experienced a rejected take off due to a fault with the automatic engine thrust mechanism which actually caused a much more intense acceleration than normal. It was a 747 and I was seated near the front of the aircraft sitting directly opposite a female flight attendant next to an exit door.
    I can recall vividly, as the aircraft started to accelerate and then violently braked, how the flight attendant went from a relaxed smile to a focussed poker face as she realised an evacuation was imminent. I remember catching her eye as I nodded in reassurance that I was on the same page and ready to assist. Moments later the pilot came on the intercom with the words "do not evacuate" at which point the flight attendant and I shared a smile and relaxed.
    The pilot then took the plane onto a taxiway and did some engine tests and confirmed a failed thrust sensor but decided to continue the flight to Bangkok as the sensor was only required for automated thrust setting.
    Ever since that flight (in 1999) I have always paid more attention to exit doors and procedures, and try to sit in an aisle seat either across the wing root which is the strongest part of the aircraft, or in the tail which has historically better survival rates as it tends to break off on impact.
    In an evacuation situation my intention is to get to the nearest doors/wing exits by fair means or by foul (ie. over the seats) and then try to drag as many people off the plane as possible before exiting myself at the last minute. No way am I going to be queuing patiently while people become hysterical over their hand luggage, only to become overcome by toxic smoke inhalation. To get hundreds of people off an aircraft in 90 seconds is not an elegant process but it will save lives.

  • @martinlatour9311
    @martinlatour9311 9 місяців тому +2

    Didn't know you were a flight attendant, pretty cool. Bet you looked gorgeous in that uniform

  • @dsboli
    @dsboli Місяць тому +1

    People forget that while the pilots were dealing with flight issue the flight attendants were dealing with the cabin. People don't really give them credit but they train just as hard on flight emergencies. They also train on the aircraft they fly in. They're aren't cocktail waiters, they are serious people.

  • @MichaelT77777
    @MichaelT77777 Рік тому +1

    Have you ever seen “Flight” ? Different but a pretty good movie.

  • @rondumesnil7838
    @rondumesnil7838 2 місяці тому +3

    Your reaction was so genuine that i have to watch again, you're awesome ❤

    • @BissFlix
      @BissFlix  2 місяці тому

      You are!

    • @roberormonde
      @roberormonde Місяць тому

      Water can drowed you it can also save you

  • @RopeResQ46
    @RopeResQ46 Рік тому +2

    36 degrees Fahrenheit is about 2 degrees Celsius

  • @Ryan_Christopher
    @Ryan_Christopher Місяць тому +1

    Temperatures to remember in degrees F when you already know them in C:
    Water Freezing Point: 32
    Normal Body Temp: 98
    Water Boiling Point: 212

  • @connorg.5231
    @connorg.5231 Рік тому +4

    The poor air traffic controller didn't know that they landed safely for a long time after the landing. He thought they all had died. There are some great interviews of him talking about his experience.

  • @erich930
    @erich930 Рік тому +7

    This was a BIG deal when it happened! I was 8 at the time, but I remember hearing about.
    This happened in January, 2009, just 7 years after 9/11, and after an American Airlines A300 crash in November 2001.
    Also, 36 degrees Fahrenheit is just above 2 degrees Celsius!🥶

  • @WeComingToGetYouBarbara
    @WeComingToGetYouBarbara Рік тому +14

    Movie: Flight
    Year: 2012
    Main Actors: Denzel Washington, Don Cheadle, Kelly Reilly
    IMDb Rating (as of 2020): 7.3/10
    Genre: Drama, Thriller

    • @Kosh800
      @Kosh800 7 місяців тому

      Also, sort of very loosely inspired by a true event. By loosely I mean like 10-20%. Still an interesting movie.

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Місяць тому

      What? No Harling Mays?

  • @vesstig
    @vesstig Рік тому +3

    This movie is so emotional because it had really happened and that makes this more real than most movies out there

  • @liv5477
    @liv5477 Рік тому +3

    The scene with the mother and daughter saying they love each other makes me lose it EVERY TIME 😩

  • @rofyle
    @rofyle Рік тому +47

    I remember when this happened. There was no controversy. There was only a very short hearing that resulted in Sully being absolved of all blame. I remember people being surprised that a movie was being made about it, because there wasn't enough controversy to last an entire movie. Instead, the film makers invented the controversy to make their movie more interesting.

    • @thefixer1905
      @thefixer1905 Рік тому +15

      So you think a 15 month investigation and a 3 day public hearing was "short"? I suppose when most airline accidents virtually destroy the plane, and any investigation takes several years to come to accurate conclusions, 15 months might seem "short". And the public hearings were as short as they were because the flight simulations proved that Sullenberger did the only thing he could have done. [ and in case you didn't know, the HTSB did conduct several simulations.]
      "In eight of the 15 runs (53 percent), the pilot successfully landed after making an immediate turn to an airport after the loss of engine thrust. Specifically, two of the six runs to land on runway 22 at LGA, five of the seven runs to land on runway 13 at LGA, and one of the two runs to land on runway 19 at TEB immediately after the loss of engine thrust were successful. One run was made to return to an airport (runway 13 at LGA) after a 35-second delay, and the landing was not successful." --- NTSB findings report on flight 1549.
      There was some initial controversy. "When I asked staff during the Board Meeting why they believed this was a ditching instead of a forced landing, they replied that the crew had available options, but chose to land in the water." -- NTSB Summary. This shows that there was skepticism concerning Sullenberger's decision to land in the Hudson. There was addition controversy when the NTSB ran simulations where the pilots had pre-flight briefings and knew what they were about to face in the simulators. It may have been misleading to viewers to show Sullenberger asking to have the 35 second delay added to the simulation, but the fact is that they did not account for the delay in their initial simulations [and thus their conclusions based on that omission was in error].
      Here is the link to the NTSB final report (if you are interested in learning the facts).....
      www.ntsb.gov/investigations/accidentreports/reports/aar1003.pdf

    • @UpTheDown7
      @UpTheDown7 Рік тому +9

      Wrong. The media and the people thought he was a hero but that was all superficial. There absolutely was question in the minds of the airlines and the insurance companies and the NTSB hearings were anything but a guarantee. Regardless of the public opinion the controversy was there because it was money driven - the airlines lost a plane and insurance companies will always look for a way out. And although the NTSB investigation felt short to you, an outsider, the whole point of the movie is looking at it from the perspective of a man who did everything he could to save hundreds of lives but spent months wondering if he actually fucked up.

    • @rofyle
      @rofyle Рік тому +1

      @@thefixer1905 Yes, a three day public hearing was very short considering the average investigation lasts 12 to 24 months or more, and hearings can last weeks and even sometimes months. So yes, you bet your ass it was short. Very short.

    • @rofyle
      @rofyle Рік тому

      @@UpTheDown7 Wrong. The average air crash investigation often lasts for years - YEARS! - and hearings afterward can drag on for weeks and sometimes even months

    • @UpTheDown7
      @UpTheDown7 Рік тому +3

      @@rofyle LOL ok. Now do the average air crash investigation when a plane is recovered intact and when no deaths occurred. The final NTSB report wasn't submitted until May 2010 so the investigation lasted 16 months.

  • @АлексейПанченков-г3о

    August 15, 2019 in Russia, the pilot landed the plane in a cornfield. After taking off, they encountered birds. There were 233 passengers + crew on board. All survived. Miracles happen.

    • @nigelralphmurphy2852
      @nigelralphmurphy2852 Місяць тому

      There are no such thing as miracle, only luck.

    • @Wile_E._Wolf
      @Wile_E._Wolf Місяць тому

      ​@@nigelralphmurphy2852if you truly believe that, why bother doing anything? There's only luck, nothing you can/will do matters, so the Captain should've just thrown his hands in the air and sit and wait to see what luck deals him and the passengers.
      There's no such thing as luck, luck is just superstition and an overly-simplified means of trying to explain something beyond the individuals explanation. A miracle is the exact same thing. You say luck, they say miracle, both are the same thing

  • @nocalsteve
    @nocalsteve Рік тому +1

    The David Letterman interview with the flight crew is on UA-cam and is absolutely hilarious.

  • @markhenry8669
    @markhenry8669 Рік тому +1

    January 14 is my birthday. PLEASE Keep up the great work.. The little story about your ankle Is what makes your movie time special with us...Stay safe and STRONG GOD BLESS BLESS 🙏

  • @Magdavian
    @Magdavian Рік тому +3

    i have always loved Tom Hanks but his emotional performances are so genuine,..greatness for real,..

    • @RideAcrossTheRiver
      @RideAcrossTheRiver Місяць тому

      I love it when he turns to look at the 'July joke' ... "you are one nutty guy."

  • @idgaffritp
    @idgaffritp Рік тому +4

    I remember this miraculous news story. When I heard it was being made into a movie, I already knew I would love it. Another great movie is "United 93". I must warn you, though (without giving a spoiler), be prepared for a VERY different kind of ending.

    • @WJHaddix
      @WJHaddix Рік тому +1

      Great Movie..... and my god the ending.... No spoilers

  • @mikaltima
    @mikaltima Рік тому +7

    I love this reaction. The movie Flight is a movie about a pilot with a drinking problem. I'm wondering if you've ever experienced or you suspected a pilot of having a few drinks before flying? I hope not

  • @jasonp.1195
    @jasonp.1195 Місяць тому +1

    Fascinating to listen to your reaction with that real life tie-in to the world of Flight. Added a major dimension to this video. Thankyou.

    • @BissFlix
      @BissFlix  Місяць тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it

  • @nathanwilliams2152
    @nathanwilliams2152 День тому

    I've flown so many airlines...from Emirates, to British Airways, to EasyJet and Ural Airlines. Every flight attendant I've met was super-professional, knowledgeable, multi-lingual and very good at their jobs, no matter the budget of the airline, or rate of pay. And some of the airlines in Africa or the former USSR are very low-budget with very old, almost backward aircraft.

  • @RyneMurray23
    @RyneMurray23 7 місяців тому +1

    36 degrees with a -5 wind-chill is very cold.

  • @TheShornak
    @TheShornak Рік тому +2

    36 degrees F on C is about 2c. I saw this in the theater and loved it. Thought is was so good. Also I loved they included the scenes during the end with the real people.

  • @ianmc6583
    @ianmc6583 Рік тому +2

    This is a brilliant reaction as usual and it was great to have Bisscute's experienced inside information about flying commercial airlines 😄

  • @NancyPollyCy
    @NancyPollyCy 19 днів тому

    Those scenes aren't with the insurance company, they were with the FAA (Federal Aviation Agency) and NTSB (National Traffic Safety Board.) They're required to aggressively investigate any incident or accident.

  • @dstrong86bluecoffee
    @dstrong86bluecoffee 3 місяці тому

    New museum revisits actions of Capt. Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger after Hudson River rescue
    ua-cam.com/video/FxlwHNQKvhU/v-deo.html
    (Thanks - Dave Strong)

  • @djentyman4002
    @djentyman4002 Рік тому +8

    I hope you consider watching United 93 in the future. It’s very emotional and a tough watch but I believe it’s a great tribute and was done with great respect to the families involved but you, being a former flight attendant, could give some in depth knowledge of the before and afters of 9/11 just like you did with this movie

  • @yellowbeardjamesgibson9297
    @yellowbeardjamesgibson9297 Рік тому +1

    Hello Miss Bisscute !!! Stellar movie 🎥 & one in my over 5 K DVD Collection !!! Let Alone the Music collection 🎶🎵🎹🎸
    The Like Button 🔘 has been Illuminated 😁👍👍😎🌞

  • @Michaelgnizak
    @Michaelgnizak 14 днів тому

    I could never bring myself to watch it. It just seemed so stressful. Watching it with you was perfect. Thanks!

  • @robertvantine2810
    @robertvantine2810 Місяць тому

    Not the "Goat", but the "Scapegoat".
    A "Goat" is the 'Greatest Of All Time', a "Scapegoat" would be the complete opposite of that... 🙂

  • @EricPalmerBlog
    @EricPalmerBlog Місяць тому

    Few if any investigators judging Sully's decisions had hundreds of hours of combat experience in the F-4 (and the kind of work under extreme stress that produces).

  • @datdudeinred
    @datdudeinred 9 місяців тому +1

    Capt Carlos Dardano of TACA flight 110 deserves a movie made on him. Had he been American there would be books & movies made on him too. That man is true legend of Aviation infact much more than even sully.

  • @cherylsims5636
    @cherylsims5636 Рік тому

    Hi Biss. I am a Pilot so you know Im going to give u Hard Time...HA! HA! Do u know you got a sound problem? The sound level on the clips is 1/2 that of your voice, Yikes!.. Please do reaction to:: ""Brace for Impact, Hudson River, MayDay Air Disaster""" this is an accurate Documentary with the Real Flight Crew, Real Crash Investigators and the real results"""I grew up in a small plane also FYI. Now Boeing vs Airbus. Is more like Ford vs Chevy and flying a Boeing vs Airbus is NOT manual car to auto car.They are the same really.
    Flight procedures for big world airports are A L L the same. Yes individual company procedures do vary..At 18:00 I assure you flapping your arms in the air will not lift you out of the chair .Grey goose? Close ...it was 4 Canadian Geese that hit the plane engines.
    36 degrees (F) is 2.2 Degrees (C)..your survival time in this water temperature is less than 6 minutes
    No crying allowed...Incorrect this occurred in January 2009..
    Nice reaction BTW. I have aviation perspective like yourself so I did like the movie too.

  • @chrisrodriguez5154
    @chrisrodriguez5154 Місяць тому

    21:50 As someone from the NY/NJ metropolitan area. I can tell you exactly what those people were thinking: "Aw, sh*t! Not again!

  • @DavidAugustine-lc4cj
    @DavidAugustine-lc4cj Місяць тому

    Tom Hanks Whole Career: Play safe good guys so America loves me! Decent actor, but good does he play his career safe! Doesn't he get bored! He aint an actors actor that's for sure! 😂

  • @Rocamurderface187
    @Rocamurderface187 22 дні тому

    Biscuit it was huge. I was deployed over seas at the time but my mom and then girlfriend would send me screen shots of all the coverage. The FAA and NTSB tried so hard to make it out to be Pilot error and ended up with egg on their face.

  • @KufLMAO
    @KufLMAO 8 місяців тому

    30:30 How could that line possibly make more sense BEFORE 9/11?

  • @derbydriver
    @derbydriver Місяць тому

    The importance of this particular incident is definitely tied to 9/11. Not only does ANY plane crash stir up trauma from that day for all who witnessed it (either in person or on TV), but this would have been the biggest plane disaster in New York since 9/11, of things hadn’t gone so well.
    New Yorkers and Americans in general felt utterly hopeless and helpless on 9/11. We’ve watched replays of those planes hitting the towers countless times over the years, knowing there’s nothing we could, or can do to save those people.
    The boats who rushed to the downed plane in the Hudson River, and everyone else who helped in any way they could… they were surely all thinking to themselves “not this time.” Or as the one character says, “no one dies today”.
    Thought it was a comparatively minor incident next to 9/11 in terms of scope, saving those passengers was a sort of redemption.

  • @mnomadvfx
    @mnomadvfx Місяць тому

    25:10
    This guy was TOLD to jump by the flight attendants before they had deployed the inflatable raft for that section of the plane.
    Not sure if this was dramatised for the movie or just plain invention of the screenwriter.

  • @JohnSmith-dx6em
    @JohnSmith-dx6em Місяць тому

    I don't think it was shown in the video, but when they start taking into account the 35 seconds of wait time, you can actually see the male pilot (right around 34:11) shaking his head in the movie. He KNOWS that those 35 seconds is going to mean he's not going to make it long before he crashes.

  • @adamriehl8166
    @adamriehl8166 Місяць тому

    This is such a good movie. Also I’ve met Jeff and he is really cool. Read Sully’s book, it’s a good read.

  • @rdyer8764
    @rdyer8764 4 місяці тому

    A few years ago I spent several months flying from different German cities to Cluj-Napoca and back to Germany. I wonder if you were ever a flight attendant on any of my flights?

  • @TJMiton
    @TJMiton 19 днів тому

    This movie is about such a small and short event but it's a gripping film none the less. very well done and hanks is amazing here.

  • @fooddog45
    @fooddog45 7 місяців тому

    You should watch World Trade Center, or Flight 93 since you mentioned 9-11.

  • @J4ME5_
    @J4ME5_ Місяць тому

    I come from a long line of aviators and attendants. My mom flew as a flight attendant or 33 years (no ditchings!) no real trouble at all. A couple small things here and there, but nothing to write home about. I cried for this movie too.

  • @AustinB96
    @AustinB96 4 місяці тому

    That guy watching the plane go by the building😬 must remind him of 9/11😬

  • @johnbrowne2170
    @johnbrowne2170 Місяць тому

    Norm MacDonald's movie about Sully was better.

  • @sassyjintheuk
    @sassyjintheuk 11 місяців тому +1

    Really awesome film showing the absolute professionalism and care. Shining through this wonderful man and his crew. Your understanding and reaction was very welcome. And more enjoyable to join in with, thank you.

  • @michaelb1761
    @michaelb1761 6 місяців тому +1

    Well done, thanks for the added insight.

  • @GamerKatz_1971
    @GamerKatz_1971 Місяць тому

    It should be noted that the reaction of the FAA is total Hollywood. At no point during the actual crash did they blame Sully for landing in the river.

  • @JoshSmith-wo7zw
    @JoshSmith-wo7zw Місяць тому

    An A320 is roughly the same size as a 737 and yes airbus is basically fly by wire whereas Boeing is old school basically

  • @austinj3881
    @austinj3881 Місяць тому

    I can’t really think of many aviation movies and even fewer that are actually good or realistic. I was in aviation for just under 30 years and some of these movies are like listening to nails on a chalkboard. Of course Airplane isn’t to be taken seriously or snakes on a plane but for the ones that try to be realistic, they get it more wrong than right.

  • @taryn4629
    @taryn4629 4 години тому

    🫣 I keep getting distracted by her poster

  • @TomFurr-uc1hj
    @TomFurr-uc1hj 2 місяці тому

    Baby thanks for your never ending commentary,but would have preferred to here the movie😊

  • @BlackTalonGaming
    @BlackTalonGaming 4 місяці тому

    Dont worry. I'm a 6'2" dude, 255. SPent nearly a decade in the army. I cry like a lil bitch on this movie. :D

  • @dillonpierce7869
    @dillonpierce7869 Рік тому

    This and the deep water horizon movie put into perspective how much the US is about money not keeping people safe or alive. 🙈 All they were concerned with about Sully's crash is the cost of the plane.

  • @brettwillis6247
    @brettwillis6247 Місяць тому

    There is another aviation and catastrophic film called Airport it was made in 1970

  • @hugobranca
    @hugobranca 10 місяців тому

    I mean this in a not creepy or insulting way whatsoever. Full disclaimer. Just wanted to say you are beautiful and bright.