The Captain Who Survived Being Sucked Out of His Own Cockpit
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On 10 June 1990, British Airways Flight 5390 departed Birmingham for Malaga with a catastrophic flaw: a cockpit windscreen secured with the wrong bolts. Thirteen minutes into the flight, the panel blew out at 23,000 feet, dragging Captain Tim Lancaster headfirst through the opening. Flight attendant Nigel Ogden grabbed his legs and held on through 500-mile-per-hour winds and sub-zero temperatures, whilst co-pilot Alastair Atchison executed an emergency landing at Southampton with a captain dangling outside the aircraft. All 81 people aboard survived. The episode also marks the 1935 founding of Alcoholics Anonymous, when Dr Bob Smith took his last drink in Akron, Ohio, and recalls Kevin Warwick’s 2002 neural communication experiment and fifteen-year-old Joe Nuxhall’s chaotic 1944 baseball debut. A day of extraordinary human resilience in the face of impossible circumstances.
Chapters- Intro A British Airways flight, a Monday morning in June 1990, and a cockpit windscreen that blows out at 23,000 feet over the English Channel.
- British Airways Flight 5390 Captain Tim Lancaster is sucked through the windscreen after incorrectly sized bolts fail. Flight attendant Nigel Ogden holds his legs for twenty minutes whilst co-pilot Alastair Atchison performs an emergency landing at Southampton. All survive. The investigation reveals maintenance failures that transformed aviation safety procedures.
- Alcoholics Anonymous Founded On 10 June 1935, Dr Bob Smith takes his last drink in Akron, Ohio, marking the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous. The peer support model he developed with Bill Wilson becomes one of the world’s most widespread mutual aid movements.
- Kevin Warwick’s Nervous System Experiment In 2002, cybernetics professor Kevin Warwick and his wife undergo the first direct electronic communication between two human nervous systems via implanted electrode arrays, exploring whether neural signals could bypass language entirely.
- Joe Nuxhall, Youngest Major League Player On 10 June 1944, fifteen-year-old Joe Nuxhall becomes the youngest player in Major League Baseball history, pitching for the Cincinnati Reds during wartime roster shortages. He later returns for a long professional career and broadcasting legacy.
- Outro Reflections on ordinary moments containing extraordinary decisions, and an invitation to follow, rate, and share the show.
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-43336156
- https://www.aaib.gov.uk/publications/formal-reports/
- https://www.aa.org/the-ten-steps
- https://www.reading.ac.uk/news-archive/press-releases/pr4502.html
- https://www.baseball-reference.com/players/n/nuxhajo01.shtml
- https://www.nytsa.gov/aviation-safety