View Full Version : Erie in-cabin photo's from inside GOL 737 (0/1)
four-oh-four
December 1st 06, 06:54 PM
Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
board.
The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick.
You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there
is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the
tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one
of the passengers is being sucked out of the gaping hole.
INCREDIBLE. AMAZING.
Photos taken inside the plane.
These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in
Serra do Cachimbo.
Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered.
Major Antônio Nelson, from the Brazilian Air Force, is investigating
how the photos leaked into the Internet, pois representam graficamente
o ápice dessa tragédia, e não deveriam ter sido divulgadas.
Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be
identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children
known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre.
It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the
Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these
photos,
Seconds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was
found near the cockpit.
the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing
the falling speed, protecting the eletronic equipament but not,
unfortunatly, the victims.
Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters, Bruna and Beatriz, from a
previous relationship.
The authorities were still pondering about showing these photos.
john smith
December 1st 06, 07:20 PM
In article >,
four-oh-four > wrote:
> Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
> cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
> though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
> a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
> crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
> hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
> board.
>
> The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
> passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
> crashed.
Wow!!!
Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
television show LOST!
four-oh-four
December 1st 06, 07:44 PM
you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
>
>Wow!!!
>Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
>television show LOST!
Ron Snipes[_1_]
December 1st 06, 08:01 PM
Something stinks here, in my humble opinion! A couple of weeks ago, a
Powerpoint Presentation surfaced showing how the small jet clipped the left
wing. Maybe 15' or so got clipped off. The PPT is not written in english
either. Nothing is mentioned about the tail surfaces of the airliner being
damaged. So the photo of the entire tail section missing might just be a
stretch.
I wasn't there nor did I see it. Just my opinion.
ron
--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com
Mike Henley
December 1st 06, 08:03 PM
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
>>
>>Wow!!!
>>Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
>>television show LOST!
Look at the person on the left side, front row. You can see Evangeline Lilly
in handcuffs (a scene from LOST!).
Vincent D. DeSimone
December 1st 06, 08:58 PM
Hoax...Hoax...Hoax...
Shame on you for not confirming.
It is from Lost.
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
> >
> >Wow!!!
> >Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
> >television show LOST!
>
Andy[_2_]
December 1st 06, 09:07 PM
On Fri, 01 Dec 2006 14:44:54 -0500, four-oh-four wrote:
> you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
>>
>>Wow!!!
>>Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
>>television show LOST!
Nope, you're full of ****. Like the other respondents say, it's a scene
from LOST!
Paul Elliot
December 1st 06, 09:11 PM
four-oh-four wrote:
> you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
>
>>Wow!!!
>>Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
>>television show LOST!
>
>
naaahh!
You lose! We have a bunch of "LOST" nuts here in the office and they
were able to point out individual actors in the scene. Note the
handcuffs on the woman in the front row.
--
PC Paul
89 PC800
77 R100RS
Trip pics at: http://new.photos.yahoo.com/paul1cart/albums/
"To educate a man in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to
society" - Theodore Roosevelt
four-oh-four
December 1st 06, 09:13 PM
On Fri, 1 Dec 2006 15:01:45 -0500, "Ron Snipes" >
wrote:
>Something stinks here, in my humble opinion! A couple of weeks ago, a
>Powerpoint Presentation surfaced showing how the small jet clipped the left
>wing. Maybe 15' or so got clipped off. The PPT is not written in english
>either. Nothing is mentioned about the tail surfaces of the airliner being
>damaged. So the photo of the entire tail section missing might just be a
>stretch.
>
>I wasn't there nor did I see it. Just my opinion.
>ron
It looked pretty real to me. I flew Boeing airliners for 25 years, and
the kind of people that might want to make a fake picture like this
one, don't have access to airliner cabins. And what about all the
people in the picture? If it were faked, the ones that did it went to
an awful lot of trouble to do it. Someone might gain access to an
abbandoned airliner sitting at some airport, but where is one with a
hole in the roof? That plane broke up on the way down, so if it
doesn't fit the collision senario, it had to have been taken after
that. As the passengers have all had time to don their masks, after
they dropped down from the passenger service units. I'd vote the
pictures are the real thing. And until proven otherwise, it's
disrespectful to the deceased to say otherwise. A show like survivor
would have mockups of airliner cabins at their disposal,but I never
watch those ridiculous types of shows. Someone made a post earlier
that it looked like a scene from that show. That would be about the
only type of organization that would have the resources to fake
something like that.. If it is from that show, someone that watches
it might comment if they really think that's where it came from.
Maple1
December 1st 06, 09:27 PM
Sucker
LOL
Even an Idiot would notice that is from a TV Show
LOL
four-oh-four wrote:
> Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
> cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
> though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
> a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
> crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
> hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
> board.
>
> The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
> passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
> crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick.
> You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there
> is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the
> tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one
> of the passengers is being sucked out of the gaping hole.
> INCREDIBLE. AMAZING.
>
>
> Photos taken inside the plane.
>
>
> These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in
> Serra do Cachimbo.
> Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered.
> Major Antônio Nelson, from the Brazilian Air Force, is investigating
> how the photos leaked into the Internet, pois representam graficamente
> o ápice dessa tragédia, e não deveriam ter sido divulgadas.
> Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be
> identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children
> known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre.
> It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the
> Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these
> photos,
> Seconds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was
> found near the cockpit.
> the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing
> the falling speed, protecting the eletronic equipament but not,
> unfortunatly, the victims.
> Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters, Bruna and Beatriz, from a
> previous relationship.
> The authorities were still pondering about showing these photos.
>
Ray O'Hara
December 1st 06, 09:47 PM
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> On Fri, 1 Dec 2006 15:01:45 -0500, "Ron Snipes" >
> wrote:
>
> >Something stinks here, in my humble opinion! A couple of weeks ago, a
> >Powerpoint Presentation surfaced showing how the small jet clipped the
left
> >wing. Maybe 15' or so got clipped off. The PPT is not written in english
> >either. Nothing is mentioned about the tail surfaces of the airliner
being
> >damaged. So the photo of the entire tail section missing might just be a
> >stretch.
> >
> >I wasn't there nor did I see it. Just my opinion.
> >ron
>
>
> It looked pretty real to me. I flew Boeing airliners for 25 years, and
> the kind of people that might want to make a fake picture like this
> one, don't have access to airliner cabins. And what about all the
> people in the picture? If it were faked, the ones that did it went to
> an awful lot of trouble to do it. Someone might gain access to an
> abbandoned airliner sitting at some airport, but where is one with a
> hole in the roof? That plane broke up on the way down, so if it
> doesn't fit the collision senario, it had to have been taken after
> that. As the passengers have all had time to don their masks, after
> they dropped down from the passenger service units. I'd vote the
> pictures are the real thing. And until proven otherwise, it's
> disrespectful to the deceased to say otherwise. A show like survivor
> would have mockups of airliner cabins at their disposal,but I never
> watch those ridiculous types of shows. Someone made a post earlier
> that it looked like a scene from that show. That would be about the
> only type of organization that would have the resources to fake
> something like that.. If it is from that show, someone that watches
> it might comment if they really think that's where it came from.
they said LOST not survivor. LOST is a weekly drama.
look. if the planer had a hole the size of the one shown the
depressurization would suck the photog out.
Luke
December 1st 06, 09:58 PM
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> It looked pretty real to me. I flew Boeing airliners for 25 years, and
> the kind of people that might want to make a fake picture like this
> one, don't have access to airliner cabins. And what about all the
> people in the picture? If it were faked,.....(snip)
Blah, blah, blah.... Hollywood has lots of money, time, actors and
computers with graphics engines.
Try not to be so gulible in the future.
I've never seen "Lost" and I could tell this was a hoaxed story with a
hollywood picture from the get go. Don't believe me? Here is a picture of
a Gol Airlines 737. Check out the paintjob on the tail and compair it with
the tail of the aircraft you see breaking up in the background of your
alledged real deal.
You're welcome.
Luke
Alan[_1_]
December 1st 06, 10:15 PM
Nah....
Scene from the TV series "Lost"
Your source of information has made a fool of you.
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
> cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
> though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
> a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
> crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
> hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
> board.
>
> The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
> passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
> crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick.
> You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there
> is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the
> tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one
> of the passengers is being sucked out of the gaping hole.
> INCREDIBLE. AMAZING.
>
>
> Photos taken inside the plane.
>
>
> These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in
> Serra do Cachimbo.
> Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered.
> Major Antônio Nelson, from the Brazilian Air Force, is investigating
> how the photos leaked into the Internet, pois representam graficamente
> o ápice dessa tragédia, e não deveriam ter sido divulgadas.
> Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be
> identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children
> known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre.
> It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the
> Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these
> photos,
> Seconds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was
> found near the cockpit.
> the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing
> the falling speed, protecting the eletronic equipament but not,
> unfortunatly, the victims.
> Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters, Bruna and Beatriz, from a
> previous relationship.
> The authorities were still pondering about showing these photos.
>
CWO4 Dave Mann
December 1st 06, 11:03 PM
Mike Henley wrote:
> "four-oh-four" > wrote in message
> ...
>> you are full of .... there was nothing like that on the show.
>>> Wow!!!
>>> Those look amazingly just like the scenes from the plane crash from the
>>> television show LOST!
>
>
> Look at the person on the left side, front row. You can see Evangeline Lilly
> in handcuffs (a scene from LOST!).
>
>
Evangeline Lilly in Handcuffs? .. ALL RIGHT! Are there, errrr., ahem
'more' ?
Heh heh
Barnum said it all ....
Grumpy AuContraire
December 2nd 06, 12:39 AM
four-oh-four wrote:
>
> On Fri, 1 Dec 2006 15:01:45 -0500, "Ron Snipes" >
> wrote:
>
> >Something stinks here, in my humble opinion! A couple of weeks ago, a
> >Powerpoint Presentation surfaced showing how the small jet clipped the left
> >wing. Maybe 15' or so got clipped off. The PPT is not written in english
> >either. Nothing is mentioned about the tail surfaces of the airliner being
> >damaged. So the photo of the entire tail section missing might just be a
> >stretch.
> >
> >I wasn't there nor did I see it. Just my opinion.
> >ron
>
>
> It looked pretty real to me. I flew Boeing airliners for 25 years, and
> the kind of people that might want to make a fake picture like this
> one, don't have access to airliner cabins. And what about all the
> people in the picture? If it were faked, the ones that did it went to
> an awful lot of trouble to do it. Someone might gain access to an
> abbandoned airliner sitting at some airport, but where is one with a
> hole in the roof? That plane broke up on the way down, so if it
> doesn't fit the collision senario, it had to have been taken after
> that. As the passengers have all had time to don their masks, after
> they dropped down from the passenger service units. I'd vote the
> pictures are the real thing. And until proven otherwise, it's
> disrespectful to the deceased to say otherwise. A show like survivor
> would have mockups of airliner cabins at their disposal,but I never
> watch those ridiculous types of shows. Someone made a post earlier
> that it looked like a scene from that show. That would be about the
> only type of organization that would have the resources to fake
> something like that.. If it is from that show, someone that watches
> it might comment if they really think that's where it came from.
I hardly ever watched "Lost" but the photos appear to be that of one
side of a jumbo...
JT
Luke
December 2nd 06, 02:17 AM
"Grumpy AuContraire" > wrote in message
...
>
>
> I hardly ever watched "Lost" but the photos appear to be that of one
> side of a jumbo...
Anyone that has ever flown on a 737 knows that you speak the truth.
That isn't even the right seat configuration for a 737. It's a 747. Also
look at the graphics of the tail section breaking away into the distance.
Thats a 747 tail of I ever saw one (and I have seen many). And why is
nobody's hair messed up? And why are the stow bins so high?
Luke
Paul Manser
December 2nd 06, 08:28 AM
Hey people where are these photos I cant find them please help????
"four-oh-four" > wrote in message
...
> Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
> cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
> though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
> a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
> crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
> hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
> board.
>
> The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
> passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
> crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick.
> You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there
> is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the
> tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one
> of the passengers is being sucked out of the gaping hole.
> INCREDIBLE. AMAZING.
>
>
> Photos taken inside the plane.
>
>
> These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in
> Serra do Cachimbo.
> Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered.
> Major Antônio Nelson, from the Brazilian Air Force, is investigating
> how the photos leaked into the Internet, pois representam graficamente
> o ápice dessa tragédia, e não deveriam ter sido divulgadas.
> Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be
> identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children
> known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre.
> It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the
> Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these
> photos,
> Seconds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was
> found near the cockpit.
> the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing
> the falling speed, protecting the eletronic equipament but not,
> unfortunatly, the victims.
> Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters, Bruna and Beatriz, from a
> previous relationship.
> The authorities were still pondering about showing these photos.
>
Lynn in StLou
December 2nd 06, 03:17 PM
This is about as bad as the pics making the rounds
purporting to show the Columbia disintegrating in flight.
They are screen stills from Armageddon
--
Lynn in StLou
REMOVETHIS anti-spam measure to reply
Vincent D. DeSimone
December 2nd 06, 07:35 PM
> It looked pretty real to me. I flew Boeing airliners for 25 years, and
> the kind of people that might want to make a fake picture like this
> one, don't have access to airliner cabins.
Don't need access. Plenty of images and videos of airline cabins on the
internet.
>And what about all the
> people in the picture? If it were faked, the ones that did it went to
> an awful lot of trouble to do it.
No trouble at all. It only takes a little time, money, software, and
computers. Which Hollywood studios have plenty of.
>Someone might gain access to an
> abbandoned airliner sitting at some airport, but where is one with a
> hole in the roof? That plane broke up on the way down, so if it
> doesn't fit the collision senario, it had to have been taken after
> that. As the passengers have all had time to don their masks, after
> they dropped down from the passenger service units. I'd vote the
> pictures are the real thing.
OK, you voted. So has everyone else here who responded to your post. You
lose. So do us all a favor. Since we can't convince you, rent the 1st DVD
in the "Lost, Season One" set. Watch the pilot episode, say the first 5
minutes or so. Hit freeze frame. Compare. Then appoligise.
>And until proven otherwise, it's
> disrespectful to the deceased to say otherwise.
Nobody here is being disrepectful to the poor souls lost on that flight.
However, _you_ are showing some measure of disrespect to their memories for
inadvertently passing on this hoax. Of course, the true losers are the
person or persons that duped you to begin with. Which makes me wonder,
where DID you get this "information", anyway?
>A show like survivor
> would have mockups of airliner cabins at their disposal,but I never
> watch those ridiculous types of shows.
Maybe you should. You'd then see what special effects can do these days.
>Someone made a post earlier
> that it looked like a scene from that show. That would be about the
> only type of organization that would have the resources to fake
> something like that.. If it is from that show, someone that watches
> it might comment if they really think that's where it came from.
Spend some time at www.snopes.com and look at all of the other hoaxes that
have been and are being foisted on people through the internet. It might
help develop a healthy skepticism in you as well as an appreciation of what
can be done with some time and a computer.
I have a simple rule that I _always_ follow: the chances that I have
"found" something on the internet that NO ONE else on the internet has seen
before is zero. Nada. Zip. Zilch. So I don't post anything unless I can
personally confirm that it is correct. Why? My reputation is at stake. It
takes a lifetime to build it, and only one stupid mistake to ruin it
forever.
People are going to remember "four-oh-four" for a long time to come.
Ray O'Hara
December 4th 06, 03:41 AM
"Paul Manser" > wrote in message
...
> Hey people where are these photos I cant find them please help????
>
in the post of the same name but marked 1/1.
Vincent D. DeSimone
December 8th 06, 09:01 PM
> Last month a B737 had a mid air collision with a Embraer Legacy while
> cruising at 35,000 feet over South America. The Embraer Legacy,
> though seriously damaged, with the winglet ripped off, managed to make
> a landing at a nearby airstrip in the midst of the Amazon jungle. The
> crew and passengers of the Embraer Legacy had no idea what they had
> hit. The B737, however, crashed killing all crew and passengers on
> board.
>
> The two photos attached above were apparently taken by one of the
> passengers in the B737, after the collision and before the aircraft
> crashed. The photos were retrieved from the camera's memory stick.
> You will never get to see photos like this. In the first photo there
> is a gaping hole in the fuselage through which you can see the
> tailplane and vertical fin of the aircraft. In the second photo one
> of the passengers is being sucked out of the gaping hole.
> INCREDIBLE. AMAZING.
>
>
> Photos taken inside the plane.
>
>
> These photos were found in a digital Casio Z750, amidst the remains in
> Serra do Cachimbo.
> Although the camera was destroyed, the Memory Stick was recovered.
> Major Antônio Nelson, from the Brazilian Air Force, is investigating
> how the photos leaked into the Internet, pois representam graficamente
> o ápice dessa tragédia, e não deveriam ter sido divulgadas.
> Investigating the serial number of the camera the owner could be
> identified, as Paulo G. Muller, an actor of a theatre for children
> known in the outskirts of Porto Alegre.
> It can be imagined that he was standing during the impact with the
> Embraer Legacy, and during the turbulence he managed to take these
> photos,
> Seconds after the tail loss the aircraft plunged, so the camera was
> found near the cockpit.
> the structural stress probably ripped the engines away, diminishing
> the falling speed, protecting the eletronic equipament but not,
> unfortunatly, the victims.
> Paulo Muller leaves behind two daughters, Bruna and Beatriz, from a
> previous relationship.
> The authorities were still pondering about showing these photos.
Snopes has confirmed that the photos are a hoax. See:
http://www.snopes.com/photos/accident/brazil737.asp
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