
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send a text
A window shatters at 32,000 feet, oxygen masks fall, and a 737 lurches into a violent roll. We walk through the harrowing chain of events aboard Southwest Flight 1380, from the first metallic thud to a high-speed single‑engine landing, unpacking how a tiny fatigue crack and a vulnerable cowling latch combined to break the cabin and the hearts of everyone on board. Along the way, we spotlight the calm precision of Captain Tammy Jo Schultz, the split-second choices around flaps and approach speed, and the heroic teamwork in row 14 where flight attendants and passengers fought brutal wind to pull a woman back inside.
We dig into the NTSB investigation and explain what a fan blade actually does, why visual dye inspections can miss early-stage fatigue, and how counting microscopic striations reveals a crack’s age. Then we map the debris path: a sheared blade driven into cowling latches, doors ripped by airflow, and fragments arcing over the wing to strike a window. You’ll hear how design assumptions about containment can falter when secondary structures fail, and why ultrasonic testing and a cowling redesign became urgent safety upgrades for 737 Next Generation aircraft.
Beyond the technicals, we talk about the human cost and the legacy that followed—legal actions, airline response, and the creation of the Jennifer Riordan Foundation. The story is painful and precise, but it’s also a case study in how aviation gets safer: disciplined crews, honest investigations, and design changes that close the gaps exposed by rare events. If this breakdown moved you or taught you something new about how planes survive the unexpected, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—what part of the chain surprised you most?
Facebook: historyisadisaster
Instagram: historysadisaster
email: [email protected]
Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/
By AndrewSend a text
A window shatters at 32,000 feet, oxygen masks fall, and a 737 lurches into a violent roll. We walk through the harrowing chain of events aboard Southwest Flight 1380, from the first metallic thud to a high-speed single‑engine landing, unpacking how a tiny fatigue crack and a vulnerable cowling latch combined to break the cabin and the hearts of everyone on board. Along the way, we spotlight the calm precision of Captain Tammy Jo Schultz, the split-second choices around flaps and approach speed, and the heroic teamwork in row 14 where flight attendants and passengers fought brutal wind to pull a woman back inside.
We dig into the NTSB investigation and explain what a fan blade actually does, why visual dye inspections can miss early-stage fatigue, and how counting microscopic striations reveals a crack’s age. Then we map the debris path: a sheared blade driven into cowling latches, doors ripped by airflow, and fragments arcing over the wing to strike a window. You’ll hear how design assumptions about containment can falter when secondary structures fail, and why ultrasonic testing and a cowling redesign became urgent safety upgrades for 737 Next Generation aircraft.
Beyond the technicals, we talk about the human cost and the legacy that followed—legal actions, airline response, and the creation of the Jennifer Riordan Foundation. The story is painful and precise, but it’s also a case study in how aviation gets safer: disciplined crews, honest investigations, and design changes that close the gaps exposed by rare events. If this breakdown moved you or taught you something new about how planes survive the unexpected, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review—what part of the chain surprised you most?
Facebook: historyisadisaster
Instagram: historysadisaster
email: [email protected]
Special thank you to Lunarfall Audio for producing and doing all the heavy lifting on audio editing since April 13, 2025, the Murder of Christopher Meyer episode https://lunarfallaudio.com/