Trevor Jacob has been the subject of online criticism after posting a YouTube video where he parachuted from a Taylorcraft BL64 plane and filmed it crashing into the hills of the Los Padres National Forest near Cuyama, California.
During the flight the Taylorcraft's engine supposedly lost power, stalled, and could not be restarted. Jacob then points the plane nose-down and exits, sending the unoccupied aircraft into the ground.
Jacob continued to film himself as he descended and proclaimed, "This is why I always fly with a parachute." He then trekked back to the wreckage and hiked until a farmer, who he credits with saving his life, found him in the darkness.
The video of the incident was posted to YouTube where it immediately began racking up views. The aviation sector of YouTube wasted no time picking apart Jacob's claims. At the time of writing, the video has reached over one million views. It also amassed more than 5,000 comments, many of which called out the crash as being staged. Comments on the video have since been turned off, but that hasn't stopped people from making reaction and explainer videos that point out abnormalities in the pilot's videos.
aviation nerds are a force to be reckoned with. the hive mind in that domain is honestly super cool. "I think I heard a noise near my house last night." ... 5 seconds later someone replies "American Airlines flight 523 heading northwest at 6:12pm"
I’ve got an app on my phone with an AR took that can ID any civilian aircraft in a 30 mile radius, the type of plane, altitude, airspeed, and destination.
what app nerd
Flightradar24
Ackchyually AA523 flies between Washington DC and Chicago so it would be flying northeastEdit: fuck you were right, I just got east and west mixed up
isn't Chicago northwest of dc??
Error corrected :blob-no-thoughts:
all good. the funnier thing is that I picked a random airline, flight number, and direction--and I somehow picked not only an accurate direction, but a flight that could plausibly fly over my house. how tf?? :wut: