Why Planes Crash
Why Planes Crash is an American documentary television series that investigates the causes of notable aviation accidents and crashes. Produced by NBC News and originally aired on MSNBC from 2009 to 2015, the series features narration by Lester Holt and analysis from aviation experts such as Gregory Feith and John Cox.[1][2] Each episode examines a specific incident or theme, such as human error or mechanical failure, using reenactments, witness interviews, and black box data to explain what went wrong and the safety lessons learned. The series consists of two seasons, with production ceasing after 2015, though episodes continue to air in syndication on networks like The Weather Channel.[3]Overview
Concept and premise
Why Planes Crash is an investigative documentary series that examines real-life aviation accidents, delving into the underlying causes of plane crashes and the subsequent lessons learned to enhance aviation safety. The program analyzes historical incidents to provide viewers with a clear understanding of how such events unfold and how the aviation industry responds to prevent recurrences. Hosted by aviation safety expert Greg Feith, the series features detailed reconstructions and expert commentary to break down complex accident scenarios.[1] The series emphasizes key factors contributing to crashes, including human error, mechanical failures, adverse weather conditions, and systemic issues within both commercial and general aviation operations. By focusing on these elements, it illustrates how a combination of technical, procedural, and environmental challenges can lead to disasters, while underscoring the rarity of such events in modern air travel. Representative cases highlight how overlooked maintenance issues or pilot decision-making under pressure can escalate risks, drawing from a broad spectrum of aviation contexts.[1][4] With an educational intent, the series aims to demystify aviation accidents for the general public, alleviating common fears by explaining the rigorous safety protocols that have evolved from past tragedies. It spotlights preventive measures adopted post-incident, such as improved training protocols and technological advancements, demonstrating the aviation sector's commitment to continuous improvement. This approach not only informs but also builds confidence in air travel's safety record.[4] Originating in the late 2000s amid heightened public interest following high-profile accidents like the ditching of US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River, the series premiered on MSNBC on July 12, 2009, with its debut episode dedicated to that event. Created and produced by Caroline Sommers for NBC News, it was designed to capitalize on this curiosity by offering factual, accessible insights into aviation mishaps. The program later found a ongoing audience on The Weather Channel, where episodes continue to air in rotation.[4][1]Series format
The "Why Planes Crash" series adopts a documentary format dedicated to examining aviation accidents through structured storytelling that prioritizes education and safety lessons over dramatization. Each episode typically opens with an introduction to the incident, setting the scene with contextual details about the flight, weather conditions, and initial events leading to the crash. This is followed by a chronological reconstruction of the sequence, incorporating archival footage of the aircraft and locations involved, eyewitness interviews that provide personal perspectives, and survivor accounts where applicable to humanize the events. The narrative then transitions to expert analysis segments, where aviation professionals dissect the causal factors—such as mechanical failures, human error, or environmental influences—and highlight subsequent safety improvements implemented by regulators and airlines.[5][1] Visual elements play a central role in clarifying complex accident dynamics without resorting to sensationalism, maintaining a focus on technical accuracy. The series employs dramatic animations to recreate key moments, such as midair collisions or structural failures, allowing viewers to visualize the progression of events from multiple angles. 3D graphics illustrate aircraft trajectories, system malfunctions, and environmental interactions, while cockpit simulations recreate pilot decision-making and instrument readings based on official investigation reports. These tools are used judiciously to enhance understanding, often narrated in a measured tone that underscores the investigative process rather than emotional spectacle. Contributions from aviation experts in these analysis segments provide authoritative insights into preventive measures, as explored further in dedicated personnel discussions.[5] Episodes adhere to a runtime of approximately 60 minutes, fitting the slot on The Weather Channel, and employ a narrative style that emphasizes factual reporting grounded in National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) findings and industry data. The storytelling avoids speculative elements, instead weaving together verified evidence to build a clear, linear explanation of each crash's causes and resolutions, fostering viewer awareness of aviation risks and mitigations.[1] Between seasons, the format evolved to broaden its scope while retaining core structural elements. Season 1 primarily investigated high-profile commercial airline incidents, using the established reconstruction and analysis approach to cover themes like human error and onboard fires. In contrast, Season 2 expanded to include general aviation accidents, such as collisions involving smaller aircraft like Cessnas alongside commercial jets, reflecting a greater emphasis on diverse aviation sectors and their unique safety challenges. This shift allowed for comparative analyses across flight types, reinforcing the series' educational aim.[6]Production
Development
The development of Why Planes Crash began in 2008 under NBC News Productions, spearheaded by producer Caroline Sommers, who created and named the series in response to a notable uptick in high-profile aviation incidents and growing public interest in accessible explanations of air safety. This period saw a 9 percent increase in global airline accidents in 2008 compared to the previous year, including major events like the Spanair Flight 5022 crash in Madrid that August, which heightened media and viewer demand for educational content on aviation mishaps. Sommers envisioned the program as a way to demystify complex accident investigations for a broad audience, drawing on real-time news coverage gaps in cable programming.[7][8] Commissioned initially as a limited documentary series for MSNBC, the project launched with its premiere episode, "Brace for Impact," on July 12, 2009, focusing on emergency water landings and inspired directly by the January 2009 "Miracle on the Hudson" ditching of US Airways Flight 1549. Key decisions during development included an initial emphasis on U.S.-centric crashes to align with American audience familiarity and regulatory frameworks, allowing for detailed reconstructions of domestic incidents under FAA and National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) oversight. To maintain factual integrity, the production incorporated consultations with aviation safety experts, including former investigators from the NTSB, ensuring reenactments and analyses adhered to official reports rather than sensationalism. This approach filled a perceived void in cable news, where aviation safety education was often fragmented or overly technical.[8][6] Following the success of Season 1 on MSNBC in 2009–2010, planning shifted toward broader distribution amid NBCUniversal's network realignments, leading to a transition for Season 2 to The Weather Channel in late 2014. This move capitalized on the channel's thematic fit with weather-influenced aviation risks and its potential for expanded viewership beyond news-heavy demographics, with the second season premiering on December 15, 2014. The relocation reflected strategic efforts to sustain the series' educational impact while adapting to evolving media landscapes within the NBCUniversal portfolio.[9]Production team
The production of Why Planes Crash was led by series producer Caroline Sommers, who oversaw all aspects of the series from initial research and scripting to final editing and post-production.[10] As the creator of the series, Sommers also contributed as writer and director for multiple episodes, ensuring a consistent narrative focus on aviation safety investigations.[11] Her role extended to coordinating the integration of expert consultations and visual reconstructions to maintain factual integrity across the two seasons.[12] Directors, writers, and editors on the team specialized in documentary formats, leveraging archival NTSB reports to accurately reconstruct crash sequences and causal factors. For instance, editors like Linda Diehl handled the assembly of narrative timelines, incorporating survivor testimonies alongside official investigation documents to build compelling yet precise episode structures.[13] Writers, often including Sommers herself, scripted episodes based on declassified reports and meteorological data, emphasizing human and mechanical elements without sensationalism.[14] Technical production elements involved meticulous sourcing of crash footage, combining authentic archival clips with custom visual effects to depict events not captured on video.[12] The team collaborated with visual effects studio Mechanism Digital, where executive producer and pilot Lucien Harriot supervised simulations using Autodesk Maya software and physics-based models to replicate aircraft dynamics, water impacts, and structural failures with high realism.[12] Fact-checking protocols were rigorous, involving cross-verification of details like aircraft paint schemes, control surfaces, and environmental conditions against primary sources to uphold educational accuracy.[12]On-air personnel
Host
Greg Feith serves as the primary on-air host for the documentary series Why Planes Crash, leveraging his expertise as a former Senior Air Safety Investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB). Over the course of more than two decades with the NTSB, Feith contributed significantly to aviation safety by investigating thousands of accidents worldwide, including serving as a Go-Team captain dispatched to major crash sites.[15][16] Prior to joining the series, Feith played key roles in high-profile investigations, such as leading the probe into the 1996 crash of ValuJet Flight 592 in the Florida Everglades, which resulted from a fire caused by improperly handled cargo. These experiences equipped him with deep insights into accident causation, which he brings to the series through detailed reconstructions and preventive lessons.[17] In his hosting duties, Feith narrates the chronological unfolding of crash events, conducts interviews with survivors, pilots, and fellow investigators, and delivers on-site explanations at wreckage locations to break down mechanical failures, human factors, and environmental contributors. His approach emphasizes factual analysis over sensationalism, collaborating briefly with recurring experts to explore multifaceted causes while maintaining a focus on accessibility for general audiences. Feith's delivery is noted for its purposeful and engaging clarity, making intricate technical details understandable without oversimplification.[1][18]Recurring experts
The recurring experts on Why Planes Crash provided specialized aviation analysis to complement the series' examinations of accident causes, drawing on their extensive professional backgrounds without overlapping primary hosting responsibilities. John Cox, a veteran pilot and founder of Safety Operating Systems LLC, served as the primary aviation analyst across multiple episodes, offering insights into pilot decision-making, human factors, and regulatory changes in aviation safety.[19][20][21] Former National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigators, such as Tom Haueter—who held the role of Chief of the Major Investigations Division—contributed technical breakdowns of mechanical failures, procedural errors, and investigative processes in several installments.[22] These experts appeared in interviews that dissected key evidence, including cockpit voice recorder data, flight data recorder transcripts, and wreckage examinations, to elucidate the sequence of events leading to crashes.[1] Their selection emphasized real-world investigative and operational experience, ensuring credible and multifaceted perspectives on the diverse factors behind aviation incidents.[19]Episodes
Season 1 (2009–2013)
Season 1 of Why Planes Crash premiered on MSNBC on July 12, 2009, as a five-episode documentary series focusing primarily on commercial aviation incidents in the United States and internationally, drawing from National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) investigations and survivor accounts to analyze causes such as mechanical failures, human factors, and environmental hazards.[23] The season emphasized the rarity of aviation accidents while highlighting systemic improvements in safety protocols post-crash, with each hour-long episode reconstructing events through animations, expert interviews, and archival footage. Hosted by Lester Holt, the series integrated MSNBC's newsroom resources for on-air narration and analysis, marking an early foray into investigative aviation programming for the network.[2] The episodes aired irregularly over several years, reflecting MSNBC's initial scheduling as standalone specials rather than a continuous run:- Brace for Impact (July 12, 2009): This premiere examined water ditchings, featuring the successful emergency landing of US Airways Flight 1549 on the Hudson River in 2009 due to bird strikes disabling both engines, the 1970 ditching of ALM Antillean Airlines Flight 980 amid fuel exhaustion and navigation errors in shark-infested waters, and the 1996 hijacking and crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 961 into the Indian Ocean after passengers stormed the cockpit.[24] The episode underscored pilot decision-making under extreme pressure and the evolution of ditching techniques.[25]
- Breaking Point (January 17, 2010): Focused on structural and engine failures, the installment covered the 1988 explosive decompression of Aloha Airlines Flight 243 caused by metal fatigue leading to a roof panel blowout, the 1985 rear pressure bulkhead rupture on Japan Airlines Flight 123 that doomed the Boeing 747 due to improper repairs, and the 1989 cargo door failure on United Airlines Flight 811 that ejected nine passengers mid-flight.[26] It highlighted maintenance oversights and material stress limits in aging aircraft.
- Human Error (November 21, 2010): This episode delved into pilot and crew mistakes, analyzing the 2009 stall and crash of Colgan Air Flight 3407 near Buffalo due to improper response to icing and automation reliance, the 2001 breakup of American Airlines Flight 587 over Queens from excessive rudder inputs post-wake turbulence, the 1972 distraction-induced crash of Eastern Air Lines Flight 401 into the Everglades while troubleshooting a landing gear indicator, and the 1990 fuel exhaustion of Avianca Flight 52 after communication breakdowns with air traffic control.[27] A key theme was the need for enhanced pilot training in high-workload scenarios, exemplified by cases like Air Florida Flight 90's 1982 Potomac River crash from ice accumulation and takeoff errors.
- Fire in the Sky (November 28, 2010): Investigated in-flight fires, including the 1998 rapid spread of smoke on Swissair Flight 111 from wiring insulation meltdown leading to a crash off Nova Scotia, the 2000 engine tire burst on Air France Flight 4590 that ignited fuel on the Concorde supersonic jet, the 1996 oxygen generator fire on ValuJet Flight 592 that downed the MD-82 in the Everglades, and the 1983 lavatory blaze on Air Canada Flight 797 that forced an emergency landing with 23 fatalities from toxic smoke.[28] The program stressed advancements in fire suppression systems and evacuation procedures.
- Collision Course (April 27, 2013): Examined mid-air collisions, including the 2006 Uberlingen mid-air collision, the 1976 Zagreb mid-air collision involving a DC-8 and Lockheed Constellation, the 2006 Brazil mid-air collision between Gol Transportes Aéreos Flight 1907 and an Embraer Legacy, and the 1978 San Diego mid-air collision between PSA Flight 182 and a Cessna.[29]
Season 2 (2014–2015)
Season 2 of Why Planes Crash marked the revival of the series on The Weather Channel, airing from December 15, 2014, to January 26, 2015.[30] This season expanded the original format by producing eight episodes, a significant increase from the five in Season 1, with a greater emphasis on weather-related factors in aviation accidents and incidents involving general aviation aircraft.[31] The move to The Weather Channel aligned with this thematic shift, allowing integration of meteorological analysis into crash investigations to highlight environmental risks in flight safety.[32] The season's episodes delved deeper into weather-influenced disasters, such as thunderstorms, wind shear, and microbursts, while also addressing vulnerabilities in small aircraft operations. For instance, coverage included the 1996 crash of seven-year-old aspiring pilot Jessica Dubroff in a Cessna 177B during takeoff, underscoring risks in non-commercial flights.[33] This focus on general aviation complemented the network's mission to educate viewers on weather safety, portraying aviation incidents as cautionary tales for pilots navigating adverse conditions. Recurring experts from prior seasons provided continuity in analysis, drawing on their aviation backgrounds to explain causal factors.[31] Production for Season 2 incorporated updated visual effects and on-location reporting, enhancing recreations of crash sequences with more detailed field investigations at accident sites.[34] These elements aimed to make complex meteorological and mechanical breakdowns more accessible, tying directly into broader weather education initiatives on the network. The episodes are as follows:| Episode | Title | Air Date | Synopsis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Crisis in the Sky | December 15, 2014 | Examines crashes linked to communication breakdowns in the cockpit prior to the adoption of Crew Resource Management, featuring United Airlines Flight 173 (1978 fuel exhaustion), United Airlines Flight 232 (1989 engine failure), and Korean Air Flight 801 (1997 controlled flight into terrain).[31] |
| 2 | Brush with Death | December 22, 2014 | Survivors recount near-fatal incidents, including Air Florida Flight 90 (1982 icing on Potomac River), Downeast Airlines Flight 46 (1979 controlled flight into terrain), and a 2012 Cessna 401 crash.[31] |
| 3 | Severe Weather | December 29, 2014 | Investigates weather-induced accidents, such as Southern Airways Flight 242 (1977 hail and thunderstorm), Delta Air Lines Flight 191 (1985 microburst at Dallas-Fort Worth), and Air France Flight 358 (2005 overrun in thunderstorm).[31][35] |
| 4 | Small Planes, Big Problems | January 4, 2015 | Analyzes crashes in general aviation, covering John F. Kennedy Jr.'s 1999 Piper Saratoga accident (spatial disorientation), the 2006 New York City Learjet 45 mid-air collision, and the 1996 Cessna 177B crash involving Jessica Dubroff (engine failure on takeoff).[31][33] |
| 5 | Sudden Impact | January 5, 2015 | Details collisions with terrain or obstacles, including Air New Zealand Flight 901 (1979 Antarctic mountain strike), American Airlines Flight 965 (1995 terrain collision in Colombia), and Air Inter Flight 148 (1992 mountain impact in France).[31] |
| 6 | Chopper Down | January 12, 2015 | Explores helicopter mishaps, such as a 2002 U.S. Air Force HH-60G Pave Hawk crash (engine failure), the 2009 Hudson River mid-air collision between a tour helicopter and sightseeing plane, and a 2008 Sikorsky S-61N crash off Newfoundland.[31] |
| 7 | Who's Flying | January 19, 2015 | Focuses on automation-related errors, featuring Air France Flight 447 (2009 stall due to pitot tube icing and pilot response), China Airlines Flight 006 (1985 rudder hardover), and Turkish Airlines Flight 1951 (2009 altimeter failure).[31] |
| 8 | Fatal Flaws | January 26, 2015 | Covers mechanical and systemic failures, including USAir Flight 427 (1994 Boeing 737 rudder reversal), United Airlines Flight 585 (1996 similar rudder issue), TWA Flight 800 (1996 center fuel tank explosion), and the 2002 Überlingen mid-air collision between DHL Flight 611 and Bashkirian Airlines Flight 2937.[31] |