3/10/2024 0 Comments Programa head start![]() ![]() ![]() Hey folks, please stay in your seats with your seatbelts securely fastened until you are told to stand up. I think a lot of them are thinking the worst. This is a really, really scary moment for a lot of passengers. We just depressurized and we’re declaring a emergency. Give me the nature of the emergency and your intentions. Passengers start realizing there’s a giant hole now in the plane. So at first, I thought it was just the window, and then I realized it was the whole panel. The plane rattles, the oxygen masks drop, lights flicker. It was silent for, like, one second, and then you would just feel and hear a lot of air going around, freezing cold air. And about 10 minutes after takeoff, at about 16,000 feet - archived recording On January 5, Alaska Airlines flight 1282 takes off from Portland International Airport heading to Ontario, California. But then, this incident in January happens, this time with a MAX 9. And these crashes cost Boeing billions of dollars, and it vowed to make the MAX 8’s much, much safer. This had become one of Boeing’s best selling planes. Important plane for Boeing and for airlines in the United States, right? sydney emberĮxtremely important. So Boeing has been under the microscope for about five years after two crashes in late 201 and early 2019 killed nearly 350 people, and these planes, which are Boeing 737 MAX 8 planes. And so last week, we started to get some of our first clear answers.īut let’s start with the accident itself. And since then, there’s been this kind of laundry list of unanswered questions about what went wrong, and ultimately, who was responsible for that. A door fell off the plane while it was in mid-air. So Sydney, last month, there was this terrifying incident on an Alaska Airlines flight. Today, my colleague Sydney Ember explains. Last week in Washington, we started to get some answers. Questions have swirled for weeks over what went wrong on an Alaska Airlines flight where a piece of the plane blew out into the sky, terrifying passengers and renewing concerns about the plane’s manufacturer, Boeing. sabrina taverniseįrom “The New York Times,” I’m Sabrina Tavernise, and this is “The Daily.” Please review the episode audio before quoting from this transcript and email with any questions. While it has been reviewed by human transcribers, it may contain errors. This transcript was created using speech recognition software. Transcript Why Boeing’s Top Airplanes Keep Failing After a panel blew off an Alaska Airlines flight, questions have again swirled around the manufacturer. ![]()
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