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Hi Jay;
I'm going to try something here. It may work. It may not, but I'll give it a go anyway just to see how you and the group in general react. If this post illicit a bad response, I'll call it a day on this issue. If it doesn't, I'll be glad to discuss it with those interested. First of all, I would like to thank you for making an effort at cleaning up the video page by deleting the word "enjoy" . That was personally hard for me to take, as I had a friend dying in one of those videos. You might consider also changing the link on the main page from "cool stuff" to something less "inviting", but that is entirely up to you. Aviation crash video is a very useful tool. In the right environment, it can be invaluable to safety investigators researching probable cause. In the airshow community, we welcome these videos, as they represent a much better and more solid base from which to view a crash than even the eye witness accounts, which unfortunately are subject to varying degrees of inaccuracy for several reasons that I won't get into here. When I say the right environment for viewing crash video, I'm talking about an environment where interested parties are gathered in closed session with expert investigators for the express purpose of using the video for safety related reasons. This invariably includes experts in the aircraft type, as all useful safety data being discussed will be type specific. I say this clearly because many of those who would use crash video on public sites like to push the safety and "educational" issues in justifying the showing of the videos. Likewise, many of those who like to view the crash videos; even pilots; like to justify the video's value by stating that they indeed have learned something from watching the video. Indeed, the pilot of a Cessna 172 or a Cherokee 180 can look at the crash of Czar 52 out of a knife edge turn during an airshow and then be able to say, "Man, I'm NEVER going to do THAT in MY pattern!!!!!!" In that most basic sense, you can assume of course that this pilot somehow managed to go through the entire training process and his entire flying experience not realizing that "flying an airplane" states emphatically that he shouldn't be doing knife edge turns in his airplane in the pattern, and that by viewing this particular video, he has been "educated" not to do this. In this sense, you could actually say that this pilot was "helped" by this video, and also in this sense, you have made the case for the safety issue. But in actuality, if this pilot needed to see this video to impress him with this information, the REAL safety issue here isn't the knife edge B52 teaching him a lesson, but rather that this pilot needs some serious basic rework! The point is that pushing the safety issue as justification for putting these videos on a public site is a known tool for those who wish to show crash videos simply for their entertainment value. In the professional world, we know this and mostly accept it. We do manage to lose our tempers once in a while as you no doubt have noticed :-) The bottom line on showing crash video the way you are doing it is this Jay. If you have to do it, no one can and should try and stop you. It's your right and your site as they say. There will be those who like it and those who don't. It's not really a big deal either way. You have seen reaction from both sides of this issue, and I believe I have explained clearly here how we in the professional community see the issue. For me personally, as I said, I appreciate your effort to clean up the site and attempt to present these videos in the best light possible. I would respectfully suggest to you along these lines that you consider changing the link "cool stuff" to something a bit more appropriate to viewing someone die. That would please me personally. The gist of what I have told you and others here about how we view the safety issue is entirely up to everyone's individual interpretation. Sincerely, Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Flight Instructor/Aerobatics/Retired |
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"Dudley Henriques" wrote in message
ink.net... The point is that pushing the safety issue as justification for putting these videos on a public site is a known tool for those who wish to show crash videos simply for their entertainment value. One question. Is "entertainment" the same as "interest"? A crash, particularly at an airshow, is reported widely. People will be interested in seeing the pictures as well as reading about it and about what happened. You could say that this is what television news is all about as opposed to perhaps radio news. Isn't it human nature to want to see pictures and/or video of something to try and understand it better, even if for interest's sake? Paul |
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![]() "Paul Sengupta" wrote in message ... "Dudley Henriques" wrote in message ink.net... The point is that pushing the safety issue as justification for putting these videos on a public site is a known tool for those who wish to show crash videos simply for their entertainment value. One question. Is "entertainment" the same as "interest"? A crash, particularly at an airshow, is reported widely. People will be interested in seeing the pictures as well as reading about it and about what happened. You could say that this is what television news is all about as opposed to perhaps radio news. Isn't it human nature to want to see pictures and/or video of something to try and understand it better, even if for interest's sake? Paul I believe you can make a case for at least some parity between interest and entertainment, as human nature really doesn't differentiate the motives that dictate why some people find something like a crash video either entertaining or interesting or both. You can most certainly be both interested and entertained at the same time, but I think the subtle difference I would make here when dealing with the specific issue of crash video in discussing it's presentation and the motivation for those who might be viewing it is that when the average person, even a GA pilot not involved in the scenario being depicted by a crash video, (say the Thunderbird Viper crash of Chris Stricklin) watches that video, they can be either interested, or be entertained, or both. When someone directly involved with a crash investigation is watching a crash video, they are extremely interested, but by no stretch of the imagination being entertained. There is of course a possibility that someone researching a crash could find a video entertaining, but FWIW, I haven't met someone like that in fifty years of associated safety work with the air show community. There is a subtle difference between the two environments that is notable. I also think that it's right to state that everyone has a right to their own reasons for either supplying or viewing these videos. It's just that my own reasons for viewing them have always been as a professional consultant, so I'm not in the "entertainment" side of the equation, but am deeply involved in the "interested" side of things. The folks on the "entertainment" side of things are simply not my cup of tea. I won't go out of my way to confront them unless provoked , but I will avoid them as friends or Usenet acquaintances because as an ex demonstration pilot myself, I find them shall we say....not necessarily my kind of people :-) Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Flight Instructor/Aerobatics/Retired Dudley Henriques International Fighter Pilots Fellowship Flight Instructor/Aerobatics/Retired |
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