As an engineer that often feels pressure from managers... I frequently reach back to Challenger and Columbia to remember my motivations for pushing back. God bless those men and women.
I wish managers would be engineers, not economists and other all-sorts. It would be way easier to work with them and maybe they would actually for once understand how things function haha.
Molly Baker What horrified me was they have a documentary of the families of the victims on ground and their reactions were unimaginable as they watched in horror when it exploded. So sad..
I was one of those teachers that was showing this exciting mission to my classroom of elementary students. I felt so conscious-smitten that I allowed them to witness this emotionally overwhelming and heartbreaking tragedy, live and unfiltered. What a horrific day.
@@raygreen257 I think so as well, there was a teacher going, a civilan - regular person, she was the 1st one ever so yes, I believe many schools had students viewing. We didn't get any counseling or safe place to go to. We got President Regan and a speech televised for the Nation
There’s a reason “it’s not rocket science” is a phrase. When you’re dealing with such delicate technology, everything matters. Every little detail is important. If one thing goes wrong: the entire system fails.
I probably haven't seen this from the beginning since back then when I saw it live home from school with the flu. I just cried now like I did then. So sad.
This is what happens when the people who aren't risking their lives make the decisions. I bet a few of those managers would have taken a better look if they had to climb aboard.
"NEVER TRUST A COOK WHO WON'T EAT THEIR OWN FOOD". It's THAT simple. EX: our commander in chief should ALWAYS lead the troops into battle. (That's why we have a spare: Vice President!)
hiccup1001 no one is commenting with the intent of insensitivity. We all understand the severity/tragedy-- innocent people died. The point is to call out the dangers of (managerial driven) agendas. Sure, accidents happen, but when said accidents are preventable, and even cautioned against by engineers who have a far better understanding of the issue at hand, yet overturned by rather foolish decision making, clearly someone is at fault. In this case, it's those who overlooked the warning and approved the launch, anyways. Harsh, but when lives have been lost, it's the reality.
So these weren't random "accidents" that couldn't be avoided; they were the result of "better sorry than safe" policies. Typical. It's easy to throw caution to the wind when it's not YOU up there in the shuttle.
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS AN "ACCIDENT". JUST CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE. And no accountability. That's why NASA killed astronauts over and over and over and over. ZILLIONS of negligent acts.
YESTERDAY, I was reading about Challenger and was stunned to find Christa McAuliffe is buried in Concord NH... as I was getting ready to go to an afternoon music show in... Concord NH! "If the cemetery isn't so far, I'm going to drive over and smoke some pot on her grave and pay tribute to her, MURDERED BY CROOKED GOVT." INSANELY, her grave was directly across the street from where I was headed!!! Uncanny! It was spiritual (and next to it was a grave with a large statue of jesus on the cross... BEING MURDERED BY CROOKED GOVT). (!!!!) I wept a bunch of times. Just Christa and I hanging out. (Heck, the only reason she was ON that death trap was Crooked Govt: it was a PR stunt to trick the public to support spending money on space rather than education (!) or repaving roads!!) (Evil govt is killing us all, a thousand different ways. Last week, for instance, we found out the 20 people in that NY limo, all dead, DIED because the govt KNEW the intersection was a death trap and didn't solve the problem. SAME PATTERN EVERY TIME: govt or big biz CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE.)
Reagan argued with NASA about Challenger. NASA didn’t want to do it, saying it was unsafe. But Reagan overruled it and this happened. Also there was a miscalculation in the engine. I did research and you didn’t. 😀
Christa’s poor parents. That footage of them staring up at the exploded craft is still heartbreaking. I can’t imagine what they must have been feeling as it slowly dawned upon them what just happened.
The worst thing is people assuming they died instantly as the booster failed causing the assembly to explode. The astronauts in reality had 2m40s of free falling at 207mph before being instantly obliterated as it hit the water.
There's a video of Barbara Morgan the backup teacher who lost to McAuliffe, watching Challanger ascending and cheering her on. In McAuliffe's honor Barbara passed many tests and convinced NASA to finally let her go up.
I like how you are talking about mini documentaries and being happy about them while watching a video that has several people being obliterated by an explosion that occurred in the rocket
In my history book instead of showing a photo of challenger exploding, it showed the faces of teenagers sitting in a high school who watched the launch. It shook me to the core, as I had never thought of it from my own point of a view, as a teenager sitting in class watching historic events happen live. Heartbreaking.
My mom was one of those kids. She went to the Bronx High School for the Sciences in New York, so the student body was generally very excited about the launch because a significant number wanted to be astronauts. She told me that when the shuttle exploded, she sat there in stunned silence for about 20 minutes as several students around her started to cry. Nothing else got done that day, as even the teachers had no idea what to do, and a sizeable number of students just cut the rest of their classes that day. My mom had a younger friend from junior high (then 13 or 14) who'd wanted to be an astronaut since she was little- after that day she never mentioned it again. That woman is now 50 years old (my mom would be 53) and still refuses to talk about the disaster or her childhood dream.
My parents had Kennedy and I had this...my entire 4th grade class was assembled to see this gross negligence being carried out which lead to the deaths some pretty talented people, including one of my heroes, Ronald McNair.
I was in 6th grade; we weren't watching it live, but heard about it almost immediately. I was going to give a speech about Christa McAuliffe a day or two later. This still affects me very deeply.
Same. I was in class, and the teacher froze up when it happened, like it couldn't be true. She just stood there, for quite awhile, before the feed was cut(by the school), and she snapped out of it and left the room. Many of the kids still didn't realize what happened, and were talking about it. I finally said, "Hey! The shuttle exploded, those people are dead." Kids were crying, and wanted to go home, looking back, it was very surreal.
The kicker is that its generally assumed that the astronauts didn't die from the explosion but rather from impact. The crew cabin remained intact when it exploded leading for the astronauts to die when it impacted the ocean.
jcast39 this is the main thing that disturbs me. NASA engineered the cockpit to hold it's integrity if there an explosion. I don't understand why NASA didn't have parachutes engineered to the structure of the cockpit that would deploy if there's structure separation. Why were there no parachutes?
MOST of them were clearly guilty of MANSLAUGHTER. That's why the entire press REFUSED to use that word. The Establishment protects The Establishment. They are a threat to all public safety.
They'd made these same mistakes MANY TIMES before the Shuttle program. EX: Apollo 1. EVERY SINGLE TIME it was CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE and MANSLAUGHTER. EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. Because no one was jailed.
@@GrandProtectorDark They literally bent or broke the rules. Period. There weren't "mistakes". People were literally trying to get more information as soon as possible before they started the decent home. Because there were people requesting the photos of the tiles to see the extent. People in power literally resigned because they were the ones who made the ultimate decision and there were even more remorseful people who KNEW something was wrong. I used to build missiles and bombs for the USAF and it is ENCOURAGED to say something is wrong and stop an operation, no matter how big or small, to make sure everything and everyone is safe and secure. I've had to stop an operation of building and retrofitting 54 missiles by yelling on the shop intercom "KNOCK IT OFF OR YOU WILL BLOW THE PLACE UP" when i saw several people were not wearing grounding straps when assembling the nose cone and tail fins. I was given an Article 15 for it until i got QA and Jag involved - squadron leadership got a nice reaming from the Base Commander and Inspector General because of it. My Article 15 was literally removed from my record, and my shop was essentially off-limits to any non-essential personnel except for QA when there is running operation in the bomb-dump. Even if we were simply moving empty trailers.
I agree with your comment 1,000%😡 This is my pain about such a great loss that people don’t listen. I think 🤔 that all the failures is some kind of a sign to stop 🛑 ✋ going up there.
Columbia was not due to SRBs at all. It was due to failure of heatshield tiles on the left wing. While gross incompetence was the core cause, Challenger disaster and Columbia Disaster are in no way related in technical terms.
I will be showing this tomorrow in my Organizational Behavior class tomorrow at the American University in the Emirates (in Dubai, UAE). I will then ask my students five questions about the culture of NASA and how poor decision making resulted in the death of the Challenger astronauts (and later the Columbia astronauts). 30 years later and this still makes me get teary-eyed. Thank you for this thoughtful and thorough documentary that is the perfect length!
Matthew A. Gilbert , the culture of NASA is in all organizations. Even the mom and pop restaurant that decides to serve older past the sell by date food, and give people food poisoning just because they don't want to throw out food and waste money. Cost drives everything!
Wow my management class used this example this semester too! Only it was a case study about a racing car and at the end it was revealed that it was using the same number values in the Challenger case.
Systemic riks in complex organizations with HIGH risks - Not only Challenger or Columbia launches. Further examples: Fukushima or Three Mile Island. Then of course Tchernobyl. or Windscale with a luckier ending. Those who know best would have ignored the engineers but the winner of the Nobel Prize Lord Cockroft continued to have objections. The chimney with the filters that were added later looked like a minarett - the locals coined the term Cockroft's folly for them. (They did not know that material for a nuclear bomb was to be produced there). That "folly" saved the day when the fire of which enineers had warned actually broke out. And then of course several incidents in German nuclear power plants and in Sweden. Nothing really bad happened, but they show the potential of how human "ingenuity "and hierarchy !! and being unaware of systemic risks effortlessly neuter whole handbooks on procedures and safety rules.
Thank you! I’ve been trying to find out if they were even in the discussion. I guarantee that they would have been ok with taking a closer look and rescheduling the launch.
“The love of money is the root of all evil.” It’s not the money that is evil. It’s the love of it, the “importance of it”, and the constant desire to make it, that creates evil. In the case of NASA, it was the ravenous desire to get these payloads out to space as quickly as they could, That greed cost 14 human lives between Challenger and Columbia. “Management” didn’t want to delay to make things right because it ate away at their profits AND their egos. They destroyed not only 14 astronauts lives but hundreds of lives of their families and loved ones. “The love of money is the root of all evil.”
I watched this in school. I was in second grade. Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. We were so excited to watch it. Our school prepped us all week. We did space projects, and presentations. When our teacher wheeled the television in, we were so happy to be able to watch it. When the shuttle exploded, I could hear a loud gasp from my class, and the others around us. Our teach jumped up so fast to turn the TV off. Our principal came on the loudspeaker to say something, but I don't remember what it was.
My teacher witness this in Highschool. She talked about how traumatizing it was and that screams echoed through the auditorium when it happened. The teachers and staff scrambled to turn it off. Everyone was sent home after that. She still teared up years later when she told us the story and what it was like to witness that first hand.
I actually thought of this as I watched the Space X launch. I felt so much anxiety. I saw the Challenger disaster on live TV in third grade. That was a very traumatizing event. So I was feeling on edge for the astronauts in this launch. Thankfully it went well.
Shouldn't god have been with them before the explosion? He could have put out the fire then grabbed the shuttle with his giant hand and lowered it back to earth.
I was in 2nd grade when this happened. We were watching on TV in our classroom. It was a special day all the kids were watching and I remember this happening and my teacher burst out in tears and ran out of the room. It was awful. Still makes me tear up. At least they didn't suffer.
Our class was part of the program, but we didn't watch the launch. On the west coast, the launch occurred before the start of the school day. We were told about it when we arrived in class.
A family friend had a large ranch in upper east Texas and heard the Columbia debris falling and said it sounded like a plane crash. He found what he thought was a piece of a suit or glove as well as several metal objects. His ranch was cordoned off for weeks while they searched for debris.
Everytime i hear this story i think about my grandfather (may he rest in peace) who was a worker at nasa at the time. I hope he did his best and tried everything he could to prevent this tragedy.
To advance, you have to take risks, that's how you learn. I watched challenger blow up on TV, and remember those 72seconds very clearly. I understood exactly what happened even at age 11, and would still have got on a shuttle given the opportunity.
Christian Buczko - That was an unacceptable risk with KNOWN danger. Totally preventable. :'( I live in Florida and we walked outside at work to watch, and saw it happen.
Right after the explosion an engineer was awakend by several phones ringing and pagers as his daughter described it. Poor guy immediately had tears streaming down his beard all the way to work. I'm sure his heart was very heavy from that day forward. More families than you realize are affected by one loss.... this was devastating to say the least.
I was in elementary school when this happened. I distinctly remember my teacher being disappointed when Christa McAuliffe was announced as the teacher selected for the flight. Apparently she put her name in the hat. All that changed later. We were so excited about space as children, and then the explosion happened. The space program basically shut down overnight.
I have never cried so much during a Retro Report. I cried three times during this. That opening was so terribly sad. The people who accept pressure to ignore life threatening data not only in these missions, but other everyday situations...why can we, as humans, not take that extra moment to consider things? The extra moment that could save lives? That extra moment to stop a disaster? Those poor people who died, and those poor people responsible. Nobody wins in times like this.
Most of the time, management doesn't know what it's like at the coal face. I'm experiencing this right now in my workplace. But in my workplace, it's the people at the coal face who get the blame if things go wrong, not management who make all the decisions.
Guarantee the people that had to fly in the shuttle was not privy to that information before lift off. That is terrible all the time going on behind their backs on their life. They was not given a choice. Never trust your employer
HOW DOES EVERYONE NOT KNOW THE WORD "MANSLAUGHTER"??? EVERY journalist LIED, LIED, LIED to protect The Establishment as did NASA et al. APOLLO 1, CHALLENGER, COLUMBIA, and all the rest ALL PROVED INTENTIONAL MANSLAUGHTER. OVER AND OVER. BY LAW, we taxpayers are owed TRILLIONS by everyone in charge of the FAKE SPace Race. But who will stick up for us? Every person in "Law enforcement" is a criminal who serves THE ESTABLISHMENT.
Shuttle program did not learn from the Apollo programme, and Boeing did not learn from the Shuttle programme! The greatest lesson in history is that man learns nothing from history!
Chilling, absolutely chilling. I still remember the day it happened, Challenger, I was in kindergarten and we were all so excited about the teacher going up.
I watched this on TV live as it happened. I will never forget it. When it blew I did not need to be told what I happened. I knew I have just seen those people die. I started screaming as loud as I could "NO!" over and over. My mother came running to see what was going on. I just lay on the floor crying like a baby. Even now as I type this I can barely see the keyboard for the tears.
@@boni9033 How so? People definitely had these reactions to the event. I wasn't alive at that point, but even I know how traumatising it was for everyone watching live. How is this NOT a real account?
I was 10 when this happened and remember my teachers watching it and screaming, then they brought us kids into the room to watch this unfortunate bit of history being made. God Bless those that died that day
I remember this vividly. I was listening on the car's radio as I exited I-95 and actually saw the rocket's flames during takeoff directly ahead of me, probably less than 10 miles away. I pulled the car over, got out of the car and told my parents who were with me, "look how beautiful it is". 15 to 20 seconds later, I saw a large plume of smoke and visually saw the 2 rockets flying in all directions. I immediately told my parents that the Challenger had exploded. Their initial reaction and words were, "That's impossible..." After all these years, I can still clearly see what happened.
In Engineering the chances for failure are so high, that even manufacturing a flashlight without killing someone in the process is like a miracle. That's why we have procedures, our roadmap to dodge all chances of putting someone at risk unless 'The Boss Up There' wanted otherwise. Managers depend on reliable data from engineers to define the budget and schedules of any project. When data is too optimistic or not thoroughly checked, they set unrealistic deadlines, and that's how we end up with rockets blowing up, software bugs and patches, vehicle safety recalls, etc.
gonzalo060375 It is appropriate that you brought up software bugs, because the shuttle software development team is a perfect example of low failure rate engineering done *right*. A team committed to perfect engineering, redundancy, documentation and thorough bug-hunting. Because any flaw was the result of many people's input, nobody was ever assigned blame when there was a flaw - it was considered to be a result of a flawed development process, and their organization was changed to make similar flaws impossible in the future. The result was very arguably the most perfect code ever written. The guys who wrote that software must have lost the plot when they heard about the O-ring issue being given an "ehh, it's probably nothing" response. It's exactly the type of systematic flaw that they had weeded out. I guess that's the outcome when the smart people are peons and the actual decisions are made by yes-men.
+Joseph Fabian what you have to keep in mind also is that quality control is crucial with the development of projects of this magnitude and precision. remember, this is a government project that vendors bid on for the projects. usually opting for the lowest qualified bidder.
I remember watching this on tv when I was small. My dad let me stay home that day so we could watch it together. Thank God he did in hindsight. When it burst, I asked if that's normal, but I could tell by the look on his face that I just watched a bunch of people die in a fire in real time.
We didn’t watch it in 6th grade but my science teacher came into class after lunch and was white as a ghost. He told us what happened but we didn’t really understand. We thought it just landed in the ocean and they were going to be saved. It was very sad.
But if they had found major damage before they tried re-entry, what exactly could have been done? I read that they couldn’t repair the shuttle in outer space.
@ For The United States to publicly accept that they had to ask Russians space system to carry American astronauts into space it takes alot of humility and sense of responsibility. Which means that these disasters really happened. The US would never bow down to Russia like that if this were a hoax.
But they didn't want to wait any longer because if they didn't launch that day it was going to screw up the teacher's scheduled lesson plans with all of the schools. smh
How horrible for the family watching loved ones blown into pieces in front of their eyes, heartbreaking beyond words? If that had my son I would have died right there with a heart attack
Keep a watch out, guarantee theres going to be someone in here claiming to be childhood friends with every single crewmember at once with vague anecdotal stories that cant really be confirmed or denied but also dont amount to much so that people dont press. Happens on every single video of a disaster.
Human arrogance kills. Its what also destroyed the Columbia. Very sad. They ignored the blow by evidence and assumed the secondary would always hold, when that was a major warning total failure was very possible.
Human Arrogance causes BILLIONS of crimes per day (ex: car crashes) (ex: govt and press telling us for centuries that tobacco was GOOD for you!).... b/c THE ESTABLISHMENT PROTECTS THE ESTABLISHMENT.
I had just turned 5 years old a few weeks before Challenger. I was fascinated by what I was seeing on TV. I don’t know if I fully understood that people had died. I’ll never forget that day!
These retro reports are something else. This documentary short is particularly powerful. It is as interesting as it is moving. My deepest congratulations to all involved.
Caroll Spinney was actually supposed to go on the Challenger while portraying his character Big Bird, but was not able to due to complications with the puppet suit. Thank god.
Finally, after decades of arrogantly trying to put the blame on Engineering Data, I am glad to hear Mr. Larry Mulloy of NASA admit to making a "Grievous Error!" We are all humans and make mistakes. I respect Mr. Mulloy a little bit more after his saying that. It is still a shame that we un-necessarily lost 7 Astronauts over MONEY! (The Contract Renewal.)
@@exosianteatime1517 COOL DEFLECTION, lying liar. HONEST PEOPLE never deflect. EVER. SMART PEOPLE never deflect. EVER. But my opponents almost invariably deflect while I never do. CURIOUS PATTERN.
umpy Goodness But you just deflected her deflection by stating shes a liar without giving any proof as to how she is lying. You didn’t even link any evidence in your first post, so to me it seems like you made a crazy statement and are now going to deflect any further comments by calling us “liars” and you’re gonna keep telling us to “stay blind”, yet you’re never gonna cite your evidence.
@@umpygoodness2369 no one is going to take you seriously if all you do is spam the comments and capitalize some words for emphasis. You sound like a kid with tinfoil hat that blames everything on the government. Just shut up already.
this always gets me misty eyed every time I watch a special on it. It seems every time there's a major disaster, it's when the upper echelon decides not to listen to the people actually working on whatever it is.
I was in my late 20s. Had watched Mercury and Apollo launches and reentries all my life. I had come into work that morning, requesting to plug in a radio to listen to the launch. It was granted. I was immobile when I heard the explosion. As soon as they announced that Challenger had exploded, I went to my desk and sat down. I can remember hearing myself say "No", several times. Cried off and on for days. Went to a memorial at the Denver Museum of Natural History a few nights later. I was a Houston kid, had toured Mission Control and had a Saturn 5 rocket as a piggybank. This was devastating!
As someone who used to work somewhere where dishonest stuff was carried out on a daily basis.. It's not too hard to understand why people look the other way sometimes. It is really sobering though, to see what can result from it..
This is a wonderfully, if not tragically, informative mini-documentary about the dangers of a groupthink organizational culture. The voice of dissent is vital in any organization.
HOW IRONIC that the NYT has a century-long history of doing the EXACT SAME THINGS as NASA did, which killed numerous people. (THe NYT also detests dissent.)
except A) they never use the #1 WORD this story requires: "MANSLAUGHTER". But the NYT has always gotten corporate welfare from this same mass-murdering govt of war mongering crminals. (That's WHY NASA just kept killing astronauts.) B) the NYT every day does the EXACT same criminal negligence as NASA did in these stories. EX: look up the Jayson Blair scandal. EX: look up how the NYT LIED for 10 years to help murderous politicians FAKE the VIetnam war which killed 50,000 American TEEN BOYS. (!!!!)
Don't let NASA continue laughing at you!!! .....watch this right here on TH-cam...."when astronauts rise from the dead". It took a while for me to recover, I'd be interested in hearing from you either way please.
You know what realy makes me angry. That after so many debunks you guys still falling for that dumb picture. Alone the specialist called Ellison Onizuka. The picture in this Video shows his brother Claude Onizuka. Most the others dont even look close like the victims. The amount of disrespect towards this remarcable people is baffling.
The most disturbing part was watching the realization of what had just happened slowly dawn across the face of Christa McAuliffe’s mother. That was almost unbearable. Those poor families.
I had recently moved to Ft Lauderdale and went outside my apt to watch it in real time,with my own eyes.Holy cow,did not expect what was to happen next.
While the Challenger disaster could have been avoided, the Columbia disaster was unavoidable no matter what was done. Even if all the tiles were checked by a passing satellite there was nothing the crew could do about it. There were no replacement tiles on the shuttle with which to effect a repair. The Space Shuttle Columbia and her crew were doomed the moment that chunk of foam hit the wing. Maybe it's better that they didn't know?
what you are saying is complete nonsense. they could have docked at the international space station and sent a 2nd launch to bring spare parts to fix this problem or they could have aboarded the 2nd shuttle and left safely
It's not that easy to just throw another shuttle onto the launchpad, send it up, and save people from either an orbiting shuttle or the ISS. IIRC, Columbia also didn't have the fuel on board to push itself to the higher orbit to dock with the ISS. There was no way to get them once they were in the damaged shuttle in orbit. In order to do so, a lot of things would have to go just right, very quickly and even then you're looking at countless points of failure. That's not to say, Columbia was doomed from the start, NASA knew there were problems with the insulating foam falling off the tank and striking the thermal tiles and that the possibility of the tiles being damaged beyond the point of being useful was a real one. Those with the power to do so, just never pulled the trigger to do anything about it to make a more effective system for the insulation. Plenty could have be done, but like with the Challenger disaster, they put money over life. They knew there was a problem, but gambled they wouldn't have to deal with it.
Wow, this was great. It gives you insight into the dynamics of group crisis decision making. But moreso, I found the explanation of the two failures, especially the double O-ring, as clear and fascinating.
We don't need to waste the money on a space program in my opinion. We have too many problems and too much debt. I just don't see the benefit outweighing the cost.
@@Pumpkin3.14pi the entire scope of the mars missions is less than one month of US military spending. The money is readily available just how you spend it
12 years old when this happened, there had been so many cancelled launches that morning I told my mom I did not wat to go to school because it was going to blowup. My mom sent me to school and it exploded while we were in reeses.
I remember I was grade school, 2nd grade I think, and the school had a special assembly so we could watch the shuttle launch live. When it exploded I remember all the kids were in an uproar. Some laughed, some screamed, others were just sitting there frozen. It wasnt until I looked over at the teachers and saw one of them crying that I knew something horrible had happened. I didn't quite understand what had happened but when I saw her crying I knew it was serious business. I dont remember much after that except one of the local papers put out a special edition with huge photos of the explosion and a two page spread that had the classic photo of the astronauts in their suits.
As an engineer that often feels pressure from managers... I frequently reach back to Challenger and Columbia to remember my motivations for pushing back.
God bless those men and women.
The STS program was a death trap. It's a miracle more astronauts weren't killed.
Okay whatever
insaneapples
sadly, I don't think SLS will be any different
Random Guy
I think it will be: I don't think it will launch more than twice.
I wish managers would be engineers, not economists and other all-sorts. It would be way easier to work with them and maybe they would actually for once understand how things function haha.
Watching the astronauts happy and excited is painful because I'm watching them knowing exactly what happens. It's just so tragic. They had no clue.
Molly Baker Its like you wanna go back in time to tell them not to board. May they rest in peace
I think it was best they never knew what happened. They were happy for the last few minutes of life.
Darrin F. Not really. They likely spent their last minutes aware of what was happening.
Molly Baker What horrified me was they have a documentary of the families of the victims on ground and their reactions were unimaginable as they watched in horror when it exploded. So sad..
Molly Baker
Hard to believe 'they had no clue', rockets were always extremely risky biz and they should have been well aware of that.
Managers telling engineers how to do their jobs. Could not get worse than that.
There is always an engineer saying it won't work. If we left it up to the engineers to give the green light, nothing would get done.
you sure buddy?
Its almost as bad as the USSR, with a dash of the later Roman Empire.
And it is only getting worse.
Listen to this genius (David S.) and you will have have more fatal launches
this is pretty typical
I was one of those teachers that was showing this exciting mission to my classroom of elementary students.
I felt so conscious-smitten that I allowed them to witness this emotionally overwhelming and heartbreaking tragedy, live and unfiltered.
What a horrific day.
Kids are tough, they can deal with it... Didn't they?
@@robbhahn8897 It was a tough day. It hurt to see so many of them in tears.
We watched it live and in real time
@@susannpatton2893 sure did think a lot of schools show it
@@raygreen257 I think so as well, there was a teacher going, a civilan - regular person, she was the 1st one ever so yes, I believe many schools had students viewing. We didn't get any counseling or safe place to go to. We got President Regan and a speech televised for the Nation
There’s a reason “it’s not rocket science” is a phrase. When you’re dealing with such delicate technology, everything matters. Every little detail is important. If one thing goes wrong: the entire system fails.
Yea.
That's exactly right. I remember watching this as a teen n it was unbelievable.
No more
Stern sucks
You are absolutely right.
Watching the beginning of this it's so unsettling, since you know what's going to happen. I was so tense up until the explosion, just waiting.
Everything Fangirl me too I felt my heart racing
My stomach sinks everytime I hear "Go with throttle up."
I probably haven't seen this from the beginning since back then when I saw it live home from school with the flu. I just cried now like I did then. So sad.
It makes my heart sink as well. It's so sad. 💔
My heart was about to explode
This is what happens when the people who aren't risking their lives make the decisions. I bet a few of those managers would have taken a better look if they had to climb aboard.
"NEVER TRUST A COOK WHO WON'T EAT THEIR OWN FOOD".
It's THAT simple.
EX:
our commander in chief should ALWAYS lead the troops into battle. (That's why we have a spare: Vice President!)
hiccup1001 no one is commenting with the intent of insensitivity. We all understand the severity/tragedy-- innocent people died. The point is to call out the dangers of (managerial driven) agendas. Sure, accidents happen, but when said accidents are preventable, and even cautioned against by engineers who have a far better understanding of the issue at hand, yet overturned by rather foolish decision making, clearly someone is at fault. In this case, it's those who overlooked the warning and approved the launch, anyways. Harsh, but when lives have been lost, it's the reality.
@@hiccup1001 Did we watch the same video?
@@hiccup1001 it was 100% management's fault they were told it would fail by engineers. But they chose to launch anyways.
@@hiccup1001 do you have any braincells that allow you to operate the gray matter you are supposed to have on top of your shoulders?
So these weren't random "accidents" that couldn't be avoided; they were the result of "better sorry than safe" policies. Typical. It's easy to throw caution to the wind when it's not YOU up there in the shuttle.
Mary Microgram Soo true
THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS AN "ACCIDENT".
JUST CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE.
And no accountability.
That's why NASA killed astronauts over and over and over and over.
ZILLIONS of negligent acts.
YESTERDAY, I was reading about Challenger and was stunned to find Christa McAuliffe is buried in Concord NH... as I was getting ready to go to an afternoon music show in... Concord NH!
"If the cemetery isn't so far, I'm going to drive over and smoke some pot on her grave and pay tribute to her, MURDERED BY CROOKED GOVT."
INSANELY, her grave was directly across the street from where I was headed!!! Uncanny!
It was spiritual (and next to it was a grave with a large statue of jesus on the cross... BEING MURDERED BY CROOKED GOVT). (!!!!) I wept a bunch of times. Just Christa and I hanging out. (Heck, the only reason she was ON that death trap was Crooked Govt: it was a PR stunt to trick the public to support spending money on space rather than education (!) or repaving roads!!)
(Evil govt is killing us all, a thousand different ways. Last week, for instance, we found out the 20 people in that NY limo, all dead, DIED because the govt KNEW the intersection was a death trap and didn't solve the problem. SAME PATTERN EVERY TIME: govt or big biz CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE.)
Reagan argued with NASA about Challenger. NASA didn’t want to do it, saying it was unsafe. But Reagan overruled it and this happened. Also there was a miscalculation in the engine. I did research and you didn’t. 😀
@@veryhappyboi6944 What's your source? :D
The astronauts that willingly got on the next flight are truly some of the bravest humans ever.
AstroNots 👍
@@David-cv1se AstroNuts
Christa’s poor parents. That footage of them staring up at the exploded craft is still heartbreaking. I can’t imagine what they must have been feeling as it slowly dawned upon them what just happened.
Kinda like watching your kitten get run over
Your child being run over
Her husband and both their children were there as well. I can't even begin to imagine.
@@kennethestes4741dude what?
The worst thing is people assuming they died instantly as the booster failed causing the assembly to explode.
The astronauts in reality had 2m40s of free falling at 207mph before being instantly obliterated as it hit the water.
The astronauts being so happy and excited is heartbreaking :/
Of course they were. They thought, they were going home.
@Mat Beck Spirituality?
Or are you specifically referring to the Columbia crew?
@@maazkalim Columbia crew
There's a video of Barbara Morgan the backup teacher who lost to McAuliffe, watching Challanger ascending and cheering her on.
In McAuliffe's honor Barbara passed many tests and convinced NASA to finally let her go up.
Theyre all still alive stupid.
Well all but one..
I Iove these mini docs. I've watched so many! Very well made
They're amazing. We need more of this on MSM.
They're merely an half-an-hour show you otherwise watch on TV.
Nothing different.
Why do you like dwarf doctors? 🐸🐸🐵😀😀😀
@@Anonymous-KB 0
I like how you are talking about mini documentaries and being happy about them while watching a video that has several people being obliterated by an explosion that occurred in the rocket
In my history book instead of showing a photo of challenger exploding, it showed the faces of teenagers sitting in a high school who watched the launch. It shook me to the core, as I had never thought of it from my own point of a view, as a teenager sitting in class watching historic events happen live. Heartbreaking.
It was middle school for me, just puzzled me.
My mom was one of those kids. She went to the Bronx High School for the Sciences in New York, so the student body was generally very excited about the launch because a significant number wanted to be astronauts. She told me that when the shuttle exploded, she sat there in stunned silence for about 20 minutes as several students around her started to cry. Nothing else got done that day, as even the teachers had no idea what to do, and a sizeable number of students just cut the rest of their classes that day. My mom had a younger friend from junior high (then 13 or 14) who'd wanted to be an astronaut since she was little- after that day she never mentioned it again. That woman is now 50 years old (my mom would be 53) and still refuses to talk about the disaster or her childhood dream.
I was watching it in elementary school live on TV.
That shot of their eyes after he said we made a grievous error is epic. You can see the pain, it’s still there.
It will always be there.
Which part?
@@gulen739 it's @12:45
1:04 that guy's reaction is definitely how everyone felt watching this
True
Make this one into a meme
My parents had Kennedy and I had this...my entire 4th grade class was assembled to see this gross negligence being carried out which lead to the deaths some pretty talented people, including one of my heroes, Ronald McNair.
I was in 6th grade; we weren't watching it live, but heard about it almost immediately. I was going to give a speech about Christa McAuliffe a day or two later. This still affects me very deeply.
Same. I was in class, and the teacher froze up when it happened, like it couldn't be true. She just stood there, for quite awhile, before the feed was cut(by the school), and she snapped out of it and left the room. Many of the kids still didn't realize what happened, and were talking about it. I finally said, "Hey! The shuttle exploded, those people are dead." Kids were crying, and wanted to go home, looking back, it was very surreal.
And I have a bunch of mass shootings, climate change, and a political mess(I live in America)
That has been for all ages.
RetroGuy76 - I remember both, as well as 9/11. Sad times in our history.
The kicker is that its generally assumed that the astronauts didn't die from the explosion but rather from impact. The crew cabin remained intact when it exploded leading for the astronauts to die when it impacted the ocean.
Jackson Games They were vaporized, get real!
Research the recovery operation and save the insults.
jcast39 this is the main thing that disturbs me. NASA engineered the cockpit to hold it's integrity if there an explosion. I don't understand why NASA didn't have parachutes engineered to the structure of the cockpit that would deploy if there's structure separation. Why were there no parachutes?
Parachutes are heavy, and fuel is money.
Whether the cabin actually lost pressure, or how quickly, remains disputed.
Larry Mulloy should have gone to jail for this thing. He really should have.
agreed. he wasn't concerned because he wasn't in the shuttle.
You could say the same about Linda hamm.
MOST of them were clearly guilty of MANSLAUGHTER.
That's why the entire press REFUSED to use that word.
The Establishment protects The Establishment.
They are a threat to all public safety.
Kelleymarie Jones Guaranteed.
@@kelleymariejones6388 you can't impeach an organization 🤦♂️
The silence when the Crew in Mission Control first see the explosion. Look at there faces. Utter shock…
So, no one has ever gone to jail for this? 🤦🏾♂️.
They are probably paying in other ways.
I don't think it's possible because it's not exactly one person's fault. Yes, there are major players, but it was a huge systemic problem.
@@severetiredamage6754 *probably* LMFAOOOO that’s 🧢
They really should have learned from the Challenger, but made the same mistake not listening to warning signs with the Columbia
They'd made these same mistakes MANY TIMES before the Shuttle program. EX: Apollo 1.
EVERY SINGLE TIME it was CRIMINAL NEGLIGENCE and MANSLAUGHTER.
EVERY.
SINGLE.
TIME.
Because no one was jailed.
GrandProtectorDark Mistakes do happen. But when NASA breaks their own protocols to get a shuttle up, that’s s choice, not a mistake.
@@GrandProtectorDark They literally bent or broke the rules. Period. There weren't "mistakes". People were literally trying to get more information as soon as possible before they started the decent home. Because there were people requesting the photos of the tiles to see the extent. People in power literally resigned because they were the ones who made the ultimate decision and there were even more remorseful people who KNEW something was wrong.
I used to build missiles and bombs for the USAF and it is ENCOURAGED to say something is wrong and stop an operation, no matter how big or small, to make sure everything and everyone is safe and secure.
I've had to stop an operation of building and retrofitting 54 missiles by yelling on the shop intercom "KNOCK IT OFF OR YOU WILL BLOW THE PLACE UP" when i saw several people were not wearing grounding straps when assembling the nose cone and tail fins.
I was given an Article 15 for it until i got QA and Jag involved - squadron leadership got a nice reaming from the Base Commander and Inspector General because of it. My Article 15 was literally removed from my record, and my shop was essentially off-limits to any non-essential personnel except for QA when there is running operation in the bomb-dump. Even if we were simply moving empty trailers.
I agree with your comment 1,000%😡 This is my pain about such a great loss that people don’t listen. I think 🤔 that all the failures is some kind of a sign to stop 🛑 ✋ going up there.
Columbia was not due to SRBs at all. It was due to failure of heatshield tiles on the left wing. While gross incompetence was the core cause, Challenger disaster and Columbia Disaster are in no way related in technical terms.
I will be showing this tomorrow in my Organizational Behavior class tomorrow at the American University in the Emirates (in Dubai, UAE). I will then ask my students five questions about the culture of NASA and how poor decision making resulted in the death of the Challenger astronauts (and later the Columbia astronauts). 30 years later and this still makes me get teary-eyed. Thank you for this thoughtful and thorough documentary that is the perfect length!
Matthew A. Gilbert , the culture of NASA is in all organizations. Even the mom and pop restaurant that decides to serve older past the sell by date food, and give people food poisoning just because they don't want to throw out food and waste money. Cost drives everything!
+Matthew A. Gilbert
Will you ask your students five questions about the pros and cons of living under a dictatorship?
Maybe you should just think about the questions, don't want to see you arrested :)
Wow my management class used this example this semester too! Only it was a case study about a racing car and at the end it was revealed that it was using the same number values in the Challenger case.
Systemic riks in complex organizations with HIGH risks - Not only Challenger or Columbia launches. Further examples: Fukushima or Three Mile Island. Then of course Tchernobyl.
or Windscale with a luckier ending. Those who know best would have ignored the engineers but the winner of the Nobel Prize Lord Cockroft continued to have objections. The chimney with the filters that were added later looked like a minarett - the locals coined the term Cockroft's folly for them. (They did not know that material for a nuclear bomb was to be produced there).
That "folly" saved the day when the fire of which enineers had warned actually broke out.
And then of course several incidents in German nuclear power plants and in Sweden. Nothing really bad happened, but they show the potential of how human "ingenuity "and hierarchy !! and being unaware of systemic risks effortlessly neuter whole handbooks on procedures and safety rules.
Maybe the astronauts, the ones who's lives are on the line, should be in on the discussions? Just a thought.
You meant interviews?
I agree. The crew was never told, not even the commander.
Thank you! I’ve been trying to find out if they were even in the discussion. I guarantee that they would have been ok with taking a closer look and rescheduling the launch.
There are too many detail to overwhelm them. And in case of Columbia they were aware of the form debris hitting the wing.
@@abibnoor the crew was aware it had happened and that it was common. Just not how big of a deal it was
“The love of money is the root of all evil.” It’s not the money that is evil. It’s the love of it, the “importance of it”, and the constant desire to make it, that creates evil. In the case of NASA, it was the ravenous desire to get these payloads out to space as quickly as they could, That greed cost 14 human lives between Challenger and Columbia. “Management” didn’t want to delay to make things right because it ate away at their profits AND their egos. They destroyed not only 14 astronauts lives but hundreds of lives of their families and loved ones. “The love of money is the root of all evil.”
I watched this in school. I was in second grade. Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception. We were so excited to watch it. Our school prepped us all week. We did space projects, and presentations.
When our teacher wheeled the television in, we were so happy to be able to watch it. When the shuttle exploded, I could hear a loud gasp from my class, and the others around us. Our teach jumped up so fast to turn the TV off.
Our principal came on the loudspeaker to say something, but I don't remember what it was.
"Anything that can go wrong will go wrong".
Murphy's law
"Anything that humans do, they will corrupt" - Confuscius
It applies to everything
Linda Ham's Law
@@RishuKumar-je9ty >:/
@@seanholm8957 I am not aware of that 😕
Many tears were shed over this video, may the men and women who lost their lives Rest In Peace.
I still remember watching this on TV at school... so disturbing they sent us all home. Such a horrible memory, so traumatizing. :(
Lee Bruno I still remember my teacher screaming and scrambling to turn off the TV...
Me too. I was in 6th grade. All my classmates were crying.
We watched the Challenger explode on TV at school, we stayed, they sent you home. No wonder this generation is so overly sensitive.
Darrin F. Well yeah, totally agreed. But they were a bunch of little kids. What' do you expect.
I was in 2nd grade
My teacher witness this in Highschool. She talked about how traumatizing it was and that screams echoed through the auditorium when it happened. The teachers and staff scrambled to turn it off. Everyone was sent home after that. She still teared up years later when she told us the story and what it was like to witness that first hand.
I actually thought of this as I watched the Space X launch. I felt so much anxiety. I saw the Challenger disaster on live TV in third grade. That was a very traumatizing event. So I was feeling on edge for the astronauts in this launch. Thankfully it went well.
RIP Challenger And The Crew, May God Be With You
gob
Shouldn't god have been with them before the explosion? He could have put out the fire then grabbed the shuttle with his giant hand and lowered it back to earth.
There is no such a thing as god
God if it exists is a meany.
@JustAThought Bwahahaha!
So true.
The OP sounds no more than the lady waving the stars and stripes atop her rooftop.
Never trust managers. Always listen to engineers.
TQM
😂👍
It sounds very familiar…….Boeing.
Communist sabotage
Same Managers who worked at Ford and Produced the Torch Series, Pinto. 🥴🤔
The engineers been pressured by the managers. While the managers been pinned down by the high table or other stakeholders. It seem obvious.
I was in 2nd grade when this happened. We were watching on TV in our classroom. It was a special day all the kids were watching and I remember this happening and my teacher burst out in tears and ran out of the room. It was awful. Still makes me tear up. At least they didn't suffer.
They did suffer, they were alive until the cockpit hit the ocean.
Some controls were activated in attempt to do something.
Liz Bee I think that they DID suffer. I heard that they were still alive when they hit the water.
I was 1 year and a half when this happened.
Our class was part of the program, but we didn't watch the launch. On the west coast, the launch occurred before the start of the school day. We were told about it when we arrived in class.
A family friend had a large ranch in upper east Texas and heard the Columbia debris falling and said it sounded like a plane crash. He found what he thought was a piece of a suit or glove as well as several metal objects. His ranch was cordoned off for weeks while they searched for debris.
Everytime i hear this story i think about my grandfather (may he rest in peace) who was a worker at nasa at the time. I hope he did his best and tried everything he could to prevent this tragedy.
Lockheed built the tank not NASA.
Morton Thiokol built the boosters.
Looking back at Challenger and Columbia, and what they tell us about the nature of calamity.
To advance, you have to take risks, that's how you learn. I watched challenger blow up on TV, and remember those 72seconds very clearly. I understood exactly what happened even at age 11, and would still have got on a shuttle given the opportunity.
The New York Times hi I was wondering if you guys ever did a story on the pepcon disaster?
my first memory is this...............
Christian Buczko - That was an unacceptable risk with KNOWN danger. Totally preventable. :'( I live in Florida and we walked outside at work to watch, and saw it happen.
NASA, Need Another Seven Astronauts
Every time I hear the words “Challenger, go with throttle up.”, I can’t help but think, “Please don’t got to throttle up!”
Am I the only one?
Kellie Elder That's when I held my breath 😢
?
Same. I'm glad to not hear Mike Smith say "Uh oh" a split second before it fell apart.
Screaming at the dead won't save the living.
He says "Challenger, go at throttle up" which is meant to say challenger is steady at throttle up or all is okay at that point
When arrogance trumps intelligence.
ratboyninja “‘Trump? You racist and anti-feminist!”’- my uncle
This comment is before trump's era. The word trump has its bad meaning from the beginning of time.
At first I thought you were talking about our president and I couldn't figure out what you meant
Get over it billy
billy vandory
Sigh.
Right after the explosion an engineer was awakend by several phones ringing and pagers as his daughter described it. Poor guy immediately had tears streaming down his beard all the way to work. I'm sure his heart was very heavy from that day forward. More families than you realize are affected by one loss.... this was devastating to say the least.
Managers want money and results
Engineer: the science, safety and perfection
That's the difference
I was in elementary school when this happened. I distinctly remember my teacher being disappointed when Christa McAuliffe was announced as the teacher selected for the flight. Apparently she put her name in the hat. All that changed later. We were so excited about space as children, and then the explosion happened. The space program basically shut down overnight.
I have never cried so much during a Retro Report. I cried three times during this. That opening was so terribly sad. The people who accept pressure to ignore life threatening data not only in these missions, but other everyday situations...why can we, as humans, not take that extra moment to consider things? The extra moment that could save lives? That extra moment to stop a disaster? Those poor people who died, and those poor people responsible. Nobody wins in times like this.
Katie Wahl that opening was chilling. The total absence of music
Most of the time, management doesn't know what it's like at the coal face. I'm experiencing this right now in my workplace. But in my workplace, it's the people at the coal face who get the blame if things go wrong, not management who make all the decisions.
It's all about the MONEY!!!If someo e dies???Who cares....Very very sad
Guarantee the people that had to fly in the shuttle was not privy to that information before lift off. That is terrible all the time going on behind their backs on their life. They was not given a choice. Never trust your employer
HOW DOES EVERYONE NOT KNOW THE WORD "MANSLAUGHTER"??? EVERY journalist LIED, LIED, LIED to protect The Establishment as did NASA et al.
APOLLO 1, CHALLENGER, COLUMBIA, and all the rest ALL PROVED INTENTIONAL MANSLAUGHTER. OVER AND OVER.
BY LAW, we taxpayers are owed TRILLIONS by everyone in charge of the FAKE SPace Race. But who will stick up for us? Every person in "Law enforcement" is a criminal who serves THE ESTABLISHMENT.
Think4yourself especially if your employer is part of United States government!!!!
Adjust your meds big guy
@@umpygoodness2369 Calm down. An accident is not manslaughter. Yes, bad decisions were made. But it wasn't intentional.
Shuttle program did not learn from the Apollo programme, and Boeing did not learn from the Shuttle programme! The greatest lesson in history is that man learns nothing from history!
The look on the mans face when it exploded is heart breaking
Chilling, absolutely chilling. I still remember the day it happened, Challenger, I was in kindergarten and we were all so excited about the teacher going up.
Don't lie.
Lmao liar.
How can y'all tell he's lying?
Teacher going up and he was excited. He aint lying.
U lying bra
I watched this on TV live as it happened. I will never forget it. When it blew I did not need to be told what I happened. I knew I have just seen those people die. I started screaming as loud as I could "NO!" over and over. My mother came running to see what was going on. I just lay on the floor crying like a baby. Even now as I type this I can barely see the keyboard for the tears.
🧢
@@SourKosher I do not know what that blue cap emoji means but it says online that is you calling me a lair. I need you to explain just what you mean.
this is either a lie or dramaticized. lmao nice try
@@boni9033 How so? People definitely had these reactions to the event. I wasn't alive at that point, but even I know how traumatising it was for everyone watching live. How is this NOT a real account?
And the most heartbreaking thing is... Everyone thought t they died immediately when it exploded. but they were alive the entire time.
The opening scene is very spooky to watch knowing what's going to happen. Excellent reporting by the NY Times
The #1 WORD re these stories is "MANSLAUGHTER" --- so how do you explain the NYT never ONCE mentions the #1 fact / word in this story??
Nice pfp
@@umpygoodness2369 Because that is for a judge to declare. Not the news. It's just like a person's death. A doctor pronounces the death, not the news.
I was 10 when this happened and remember my teachers watching it and screaming, then they brought us kids into the room to watch this unfortunate bit of history being made. God Bless those that died that day
I love these little docs. Short, to the point and very informative.
Super unclickbaity title but an unbelievable documentary. Should have way more views than half a mil
I remember this vividly. I was listening on the car's radio as I exited I-95 and actually saw the rocket's flames during takeoff directly ahead of me, probably less than 10 miles away. I pulled the car over, got out of the car and told my parents who were with me, "look how beautiful it is". 15 to 20 seconds later, I saw a large plume of smoke and visually saw the 2 rockets flying in all directions. I immediately told my parents that the Challenger had exploded. Their initial reaction and words were, "That's impossible..." After all these years, I can still clearly see what happened.
In Engineering the chances for failure are so high, that even manufacturing a flashlight without killing someone in the process is like a miracle. That's why we have procedures, our roadmap to dodge all chances of putting someone at risk unless 'The Boss Up There' wanted otherwise.
Managers depend on reliable data from engineers to define the budget and schedules of any project. When data is too optimistic or not thoroughly checked, they set unrealistic deadlines, and that's how we end up with rockets blowing up, software bugs and patches, vehicle safety recalls, etc.
gonzalo060375 It is appropriate that you brought up software bugs, because the shuttle software development team is a perfect example of low failure rate engineering done *right*. A team committed to perfect engineering, redundancy, documentation and thorough bug-hunting.
Because any flaw was the result of many people's input, nobody was ever assigned blame when there was a flaw - it was considered to be a result of a flawed development process, and their organization was changed to make similar flaws impossible in the future.
The result was very arguably the most perfect code ever written.
The guys who wrote that software must have lost the plot when they heard about the O-ring issue being given an "ehh, it's probably nothing" response. It's exactly the type of systematic flaw that they had weeded out. I guess that's the outcome when the smart people are peons and the actual decisions are made by yes-men.
Joseph Fabian Couldn't agree more, your comment was almost as good as the shuttle's software itself!
+Joseph Fabian what you have to keep in mind also is that quality control is crucial with the development of projects of this magnitude and precision. remember, this is a government project that vendors bid on for the projects. usually opting for the lowest qualified bidder.
Maybe we need better engineers, lol.
I don't think any of the engineers where I work even know high school algebra.
google ariane 5 failure to see what happens with bad software
I feel so bad that there is nothing that can bring them back ,but just knowing how young they were is heartbreaking
I remember watching this on tv when I was small. My dad let me stay home that day so we could watch it together. Thank God he did in hindsight. When it burst, I asked if that's normal, but I could tell by the look on his face that I just watched a bunch of people die in a fire in real time.
This is one of the best-made documentaries I have ever seen. Well done!
We didn’t watch it in 6th grade but my science teacher came into class after lunch and was white as a ghost. He told us what happened but we didn’t really understand. We thought it just landed in the ocean and they were going to be saved. It was very sad.
It is so sad that this happened
I was in 5th and I think I recall feeling that way too. I thought somehow they would be okay.
The crew cabin did land in the ocean, but the impact on the surface going 200 miles an hour was like hitting concrete. They were all killed instantly.
Can you imagine the guilt they carry? And deservedly so. So sad.
I saw it in their faces. When Larry said we made a grievous error..
And why are those managers not in jail for corporate manslaughter?
But if they had found major damage before they tried re-entry, what exactly could have been done? I read that they couldn’t repair the shuttle in outer space.
I really love these Retro Reports. I really miss the Space Shuttle Program so much...
This is an interesting story of how sometimes what we think is the problem is not the problem.
Just rewatched this one more time - and it is even clearer that sometimes the root cause isn't where you think it is.
I feel sorry for them........... I never had idea of this.
Same here
It's a hoax. They did not die.
@
For The United States to publicly accept that they had to ask Russians space system to carry American astronauts into space it takes alot of humility and sense of responsibility. Which means that these disasters really happened.
The US would never bow down to Russia like that if this were a hoax.
kell yup. I think one died or just cant be found.
@@mb4lunch You are a hoax. You don't exist.
i still remember watching this in my 6th grade class. Our little minds were confused. Our teacher, Ms Merritt broke out in tears
Shivers goes down my spine as he responds with: "Roger go with throttle up"
I live in Florida and in the winter if the temperature is low all you have to do is wait a day or two and the temp will go up.
But they didn't want to wait any longer because if they didn't launch that day it was going to screw up the teacher's scheduled lesson plans with all of the schools. smh
@@mattgator14 Plus Reagan had the State of the Union speech that night.
How horrible for the family watching loved ones blown into pieces in front of their eyes, heartbreaking beyond words? If that had my son I would have died right there with a heart attack
This is tragic but a great report.
No accountability. Greed and narcissism were responsible, not pressure. That’s just a bad excuse.
Keep a watch out, guarantee theres going to be someone in here claiming to be childhood friends with every single crewmember at once with vague anecdotal stories that cant really be confirmed or denied but also dont amount to much so that people dont press.
Happens on every single video of a disaster.
Human arrogance kills. Its what also destroyed the Columbia. Very sad. They ignored the blow by evidence and assumed the secondary would always hold, when that was a major warning total failure was very possible.
Human Arrogance causes BILLIONS of crimes per day (ex: car crashes) (ex: govt and press telling us for centuries that tobacco was GOOD for you!).... b/c THE ESTABLISHMENT PROTECTS THE ESTABLISHMENT.
@@umpygoodness2369 why are you like this
@@umpygoodness2369 Grow up.
I remember being in school gathered around the tv super excited to witness; then the explosion...it was tragic!
Rip, may God be with you
Xxx
I had just turned 5 years old a few weeks before Challenger. I was fascinated by what I was seeing on TV. I don’t know if I fully understood that people had died. I’ll never forget that day!
These retro reports are something else. This documentary short is particularly powerful. It is as interesting as it is moving. My deepest congratulations to all involved.
If you look at 5:44 mark you will notice that the black guy is Ron McNair, he was one of the astronauts who died during the Challenger explosion.
The crew was wonderfully diverse, with two women (one Jewish), a Black man, and a Buddhist of Asian heritage.
Julius Gilliard learn to spell
Caroll Spinney was actually supposed to go on the Challenger while portraying his character Big Bird, but was not able to due to complications with the puppet suit. Thank god.
15:50 Kalpna Chawla (Indian-American) feels proud emotional and sad. she is inspiration to many girls in India
We watched this live. I was a 15yo high school Sophomore. They sent us home. It was devastating to watch!
Imagine standing down there, knowing that your child is in that Shuttle and then watching that scene. This was beyond horrible
Gut-Wrenching to see and hear her enthusiasm 7:25
Finally, after decades of arrogantly trying to put the blame on Engineering Data, I am glad to hear Mr. Larry Mulloy of NASA admit to making a "Grievous Error!" We are all humans and make mistakes. I respect Mr. Mulloy a little bit more after his saying that. It is still a shame that we un-necessarily lost 7 Astronauts over MONEY! (The Contract Renewal.)
John Cool Proof which isn’t TH-cam videos?
Look up NASA's ENTIRE HISTORY.
This murderous negligence was the RULE, not the exception.
@@exosianteatime1517 COOL DEFLECTION, lying liar.
HONEST PEOPLE never deflect. EVER.
SMART PEOPLE never deflect. EVER.
But my opponents almost invariably deflect while I never do.
CURIOUS
PATTERN.
umpy Goodness But you just deflected her deflection by stating shes a liar without giving any proof as to how she is lying.
You didn’t even link any evidence in your first post, so to me it seems like you made a crazy statement and are now going to deflect any further comments by calling us “liars” and you’re gonna keep telling us to “stay blind”, yet you’re never gonna cite your evidence.
@@umpygoodness2369 no one is going to take you seriously if all you do is spam the comments and capitalize some words for emphasis. You sound like a kid with tinfoil hat that blames everything on the government. Just shut up already.
this always gets me misty eyed every time I watch a special on it. It seems every time there's a major disaster, it's when the upper echelon decides not to listen to the people actually working on whatever it is.
I like so many will never forget this day. It was shocking, and tragic.
I was in my late 20s. Had watched Mercury and Apollo launches and reentries all my life. I had come into work that morning, requesting to plug in a radio to listen to the launch. It was granted. I was immobile when I heard the explosion. As soon as they announced that Challenger had exploded, I went to my desk and sat down. I can remember hearing myself say "No", several times. Cried off and on for days. Went to a memorial at the Denver Museum of Natural History a few nights later. I was a Houston kid, had toured Mission Control and had a Saturn 5 rocket as a piggybank. This was devastating!
As someone who used to work somewhere where dishonest stuff was carried out on a daily basis.. It's not too hard to understand why people look the other way sometimes. It is really sobering though, to see what can result from it..
IT WAS MANSLAUGHTER AND NOTHING ELSE.
@@umpygoodness2369 It was an accident. Manslaughter is a ridiculous claim here.
This is a wonderfully, if not tragically, informative mini-documentary about the dangers of a groupthink organizational culture. The voice of dissent is vital in any organization.
HOW IRONIC that the NYT has a century-long history of doing the EXACT SAME THINGS as NASA did, which killed numerous people. (THe NYT also detests dissent.)
Thank you NTY, I think this is the best retro report yet
except
A)
they never use the #1 WORD this story requires: "MANSLAUGHTER".
But the NYT has always gotten corporate welfare from this same mass-murdering govt of war mongering crminals. (That's WHY NASA just kept killing astronauts.)
B)
the NYT every day does the EXACT same criminal negligence as NASA did in these stories.
EX: look up the Jayson Blair scandal.
EX: look up how the NYT LIED for 10 years to help murderous politicians FAKE the VIetnam war which killed 50,000 American TEEN BOYS. (!!!!)
Don't let NASA continue laughing at you!!! .....watch this right here on TH-cam...."when astronauts rise from the dead".
It took a while for me to recover, I'd be interested in hearing from you either way please.
You know what realy makes me angry. That after so many debunks you guys still falling for that dumb picture.
Alone the specialist called Ellison Onizuka. The picture in this Video shows his brother Claude Onizuka. Most the others dont even look close like the victims.
The amount of disrespect towards this remarcable people is baffling.
It is almost like they are forever in that final moment, facing upwards into the sky. It happened so quickly.
1:05 When the flight controller realized what happened, I burst in to sobs and tears. 😞
The most disturbing part was watching the realization of what had just happened slowly dawn across the face of Christa McAuliffe’s mother. That was almost unbearable. Those poor families.
I remember my dad telling me about this. It’s so sad and to think it could have been avoided.
I had recently moved to Ft Lauderdale and went outside my apt to watch it in real time,with my own eyes.Holy cow,did not expect what was to happen next.
While the Challenger disaster could have been avoided, the Columbia disaster was unavoidable no matter what was done. Even if all the tiles were checked by a passing satellite there was nothing the crew could do about it. There were no replacement tiles on the shuttle with which to effect a repair. The Space Shuttle Columbia and her crew were doomed the moment that chunk of foam hit the wing. Maybe it's better that they didn't know?
Nothing could be done? How about another launch to bring them back home?
They could have learned from previous flights that foam was tearing off.
what you are saying is complete nonsense. they could have docked at the international space station and sent a 2nd launch to bring spare parts to fix this problem or they could have aboarded the 2nd shuttle and left safely
theres another shuttle and if the other shuttle isnt operational we can ask russia for help.
It's not that easy to just throw another shuttle onto the launchpad, send it up, and save people from either an orbiting shuttle or the ISS. IIRC, Columbia also didn't have the fuel on board to push itself to the higher orbit to dock with the ISS. There was no way to get them once they were in the damaged shuttle in orbit. In order to do so, a lot of things would have to go just right, very quickly and even then you're looking at countless points of failure.
That's not to say, Columbia was doomed from the start, NASA knew there were problems with the insulating foam falling off the tank and striking the thermal tiles and that the possibility of the tiles being damaged beyond the point of being useful was a real one. Those with the power to do so, just never pulled the trigger to do anything about it to make a more effective system for the insulation.
Plenty could have be done, but like with the Challenger disaster, they put money over life. They knew there was a problem, but gambled they wouldn't have to deal with it.
Wow, this was great. It gives you insight into the dynamics of group crisis decision making. But moreso, I found the explanation of the two failures, especially the double O-ring, as clear and fascinating.
Unfortunate what happened to all those people. And to our space program. I can't believe we pay other people to take us into space. We need a reboot.
Millz Jacob it’s the same thing with the military so many contractors
Space X baby
We don't need to waste the money on a space program in my opinion. We have too many problems and too much debt. I just don't see the benefit outweighing the cost.
Not only other people. RUSSIANS
Russia is our astronaut's Uber lol
@@Pumpkin3.14pi the entire scope of the mars missions is less than one month of US military spending. The money is readily available just how you spend it
Redesigning the "O" Rings had been discussed since the late 70s, as and nothing was done! We as always have to learn our lessons the hard way!
12 years old when this happened, there had been so many cancelled launches that morning I told my mom I did not wat to go to school because it was going to blowup. My mom sent me to school and it exploded while we were in reeses.
I remember I was grade school, 2nd grade I think, and the school had a special assembly so we could watch the shuttle launch live. When it exploded I remember all the kids were in an uproar. Some laughed, some screamed, others were just sitting there frozen. It wasnt until I looked over at the teachers and saw one of them crying that I knew something horrible had happened. I didn't quite understand what had happened but when I saw her crying I knew it was serious business. I dont remember much after that except one of the local papers put out a special edition with huge photos of the explosion and a two page spread that had the classic photo of the astronauts in their suits.
Reading your comment made me want to cry.
What were they think when they laughed?!?!?!