Drive don't fly
Howdy Bob .. I remember seeing that soon after release. Man .. just amazing that it never actually crashed Bob.
Not a story the passengers could really exaggerate about .. simply amazing. Wonder what the photographer was really thinking eh !
Jon
Yup, incredible survival. That wing was so overstressed it would have to be scrapped.
If I had been the pilot I would keep my feet on the ground from that day on.
Announcement heard, "Clean up aisle 1"
Drive don't fly
Howdy Bob .. I remember seeing that soon after release. Man .. just amazing that it never actually crashed Bob.
Not a story the passengers could really exaggerate about .. simply amazing. Wonder what the photographer was really thinking eh !
Jon
Yup, incredible survival. That wing was so overstressed it would have to be scrapped.
If I had been the pilot I would keep my feet on the ground from that day on.
Announcement heard, "Clean up aisle 1"
It's been published by multiple news websites and has been shared hundreds of thousands of times across multiple social media platforms.
To viewers who are used to similar types of hoaxes, the footage is obviously not genuine.
But thousands of people have been duped into thinking its real and have expressed their concern for the passengers onboard.
"Wow, great work by pilot, sooooo scary, glad all are OK," posted one concerned viewer.
"How the HELL did they land that... wow pilots... just... wow," posted another.
Fact-checking website Snopes tracked down the team behind the first part of the video, a company called MeniThings, who specialise in CGI.
Meni Tsirbas, the owner of the company, has even tweeted about the video's legitimacy.
"It's a CGI work published by @MeniThings," he confirmed in a tweet.
The second part of the video filmed on the ground was taken from news footage of an emergency landing in Shenzhen in August.