I want to say this was the plot of an episode of the Twilight Zone that played in the 1980's. The 'button' was offered to an impoverished couple, in which the man wouldn't push the button, and was justifying it by stating the person that might die might be an innocent person. The wife disagreed. She hit the button. The man who offered the button returned to take the device back, in which it was given to another family to make the same decision. The twist is that the people who pushed the button were the people to die, whilst the person who decided not to push the button, got the money, I want to say in the form of an insurance settlement. Kinda like that story about the monkey paw or some other some such.
@@bigt2731you might not expect an answer like mine, but I guess the Americans would be discouraged from helping each other because they'd be scared to death that any of the skiers falling incorrectly could sue the helping person to destroy their life.
@@bigt2731What do you mean everybody I know runs from everything. I don't know what planet you're from but here everybody runs like a bunch of pussies. So yes it was inspiring to actually see a bunch of pussies work together
For anyone wondering what is happening this is a lift rollback meaning the brakes have failed and the lift is spinning freely with gravity pulling the chairs back to the base causing this situation. Like many other comments have said the people involved did a great job managing the situation and preventing a much worse scenario. Also lift rollbacks like this are super unlikely to occur.
Impressive how they worked together well to get most skiers to jump off early before crashing into the tower and then helped them to clear the path for the next ones. This mostly worked and prevented many injuries. Amazingly even those that were thrown around the tower did not have serious injuries.
Supposedly a brake failure. The mountain operator is responsible to see that brake failures don't occur. They're preventable, NOT inevitable. Negligence.
During my college years, I spent time working as a lift operator. We trained extensively for roll back accidents like this. Every morning we had to manually pull the emergency brake on each lift to make sure it worked. If it didn’t work, the chair was deemed inoperable. We also tested the emergency back up generator on each chair every morning before opening. Because generator and manual brake checking is done every morning on every lift everywhere I have ever heard of, how did this happen? This was awful to watch. May this never happen again!
Oh my wordddd. That was horrifying to watch...I can't imagine seeing this or hearing this in person. I am so happy nobody was critically injured. Beautiful job that everybody did helping others! Blessings from America.
The emergency stop de-energizes the lines, but it doesn't force a lock on the cable. There are reasons for that. Compression of the line in any way can compromise the integrity of the cable, creating a larger hazard. Sooo... not much can be done.
@@enigmalfidelity that's why you install multiple stoppers on different parts of the line. I could definitely see one or even 2 clamps grabbing it and the force just tear the line but if you have 5 or 6 that all work in unison to slowly grab it then bring it to a stop eventually I could see it working. I'm no engineer but I'm sure someone in the comments is so they can tell us if it would work or not lol
How that skier at 1:17 didn't get killed, or even seriously hurt, is absolutely astounding! It looks like he/she gets crushed up in the top of the tower and tangle of chairs. Damn!
It would be impossible to grip the metal bars strongly enough with ski gloves in order to prevent the multiple sideways g-force at the bottom from throwing you off the chair. Still safer to jump under your own control, though.
I saw EXACTLY what you are talking about and wondered that, too!! That part was TRULY horrific and you can hear it in the poor guy's voice when it happens!
@@drinnerd8532 Yeah, you can hear someone let out a cry right when it happens, probably whoever was taking the video. I'm sure the skier was thrown clear since it says nobody was badly injured, but at the moment we can't see him anymore it looks like he would be crushed in all those tangled-up chairs. Hard to watch even though I know he was OK.
and then a guy came in with a machine gun and shot up the place, so now I live in a hole--so then there was flooding and an earthquake and volcanic magma; so I just killed myself.
You wont believe it but i was there, I refused to go skiing that day and stayed for hot chocolate, I'm from georgia and this was a very traumatic moment, My family is all safe though, what a miracle I was lazy...
It really is heart warming to see people trying to help others with a sense of urgency. Like at the end with the person hanging. They helped minimise the impact. Well done
That's a TESLA ski lift prototype. This was the beta test and they found it ran as intended with no bugs. Will be put into production by end of winter.
@@wavpainter if I survived that I’d meme the absolute hell out of my near death experience. “Me smiling: Finally got GTA 6, Me being yeeted: Your PlayStation 5 does not meet the minimum requirements to play GTA 6”
I’m no engineer but I worked at a ski resort for many years and did all sorts maintenance on these macinces under the supervision of an engineer and his team. Guaranteed there had been no PM or required inspections on this machine. The emergency brake and anti-rollback obviously was nonexistent.. Gravity broought the haul rope ( cable) downward. All simple physics at that point. Totally avoidable. This was a horrific situation..
I seen the same thing happen at a smaller hill in Alberta. I was in line to load on a T-bar lift when it stopped and started going backwards. I yelled at the lifty to hit the brakes and he yelled back, "I don't know how!" I quickly kicked my skis off and ran over to the lift, pulled open a small door that covered the drive shaft and stood on the brake pad which stopped the shaft from turning. The lift stopped so suddenly, it wiped out absolutely everyone on the lift and broke a whole bunch of T's off of the main cable, but at least it stopped. You couldn't really blame the lifty for that as he hadn't been properly trained to even run the lift.
My friend was with her husband and 3 kids on a lift in Colorado. It was summer so only a few people were going up. The operators accidently left them on the lift for 8 hours. When one of the operators was about to fall asleep he couldn’t remember them and went back to check. This was before cell phones.
Lifties are hired at min wage and more often then not live in the worst conditions in the area, they work the longest hours and take the abuse of hundreds of people a day. They are treated like dirt by patrons and bosses and management, no one with any sense or options would take on a job as a liftie.. but those that do, end up drinking and doing anything else to keep what there is of their mind, sane. Also this makes no sense unless it was super early in the morning as Ski patrol do an end of day sweep, this includes prior to night skiing every run and every lift is checked. As well, all lifts are cycled prior to shut down.
@@Novastar.SaberCombat the Irony is that skiing in the 50's was considered a lower class endeavour, the 60's and 70's were hippie's and family , the 90's were the start of the downfall thanks to big Canadians companies like interwest, making cookie cutter ' villages', seriously i lived in whistler , and traveled to copper mtn, CO. , blue mtn, ON and Mt. Tremblant, QC. and they were almost identical. by the end of the 90's Skiing had become the domain of the Spore's, ( City person on rental equipment, but the owned a 1mil ski chalet off the hill side ) Along with that came mandatory helmets.. and black diamond runs that were once considered a solid blue square.. ah, don't get me started.. i went from Olympian and professional Skier, to quitting cold turkey. in the early 90's
@ianskinner1619 I am always nice to the lift operators. A lot of fragile egos with something to prove on the slopes. I hate skiers, but I love to ski. Anyone working for skiers needs to be treated with kindness. Nouveau Riche and Riche are not so classy sometimes or appallingly vulgar. They think that is how one is supposed to act id they have a few dollars in their pockets. Money should have nothing to do with how one treats others! Gross people annoy me.
I didn't think that much about chair lifts as a kid because they were just part of my life. I started riding them at 4 years old. But as an adult, the thought of sending my 4 year old up on a chair lift is terrifying! I am glad to see that there were no truly little children on this section of this chair life. I can't imagine being a parent trying to make the split second decision about when and how to get your preschooler or young elementary kid off that lift before the chair crashed.
@@stroso83This made me think of my teacher lecturing us all in class one day about how when he was young he had to do way more things than we’d ever understand because we were overprotected. It started with a kid saying he didn’t want to go alone to the office because it scared him to go through the dim hallways. My teacher listed a bunch of places he’d had to go to and things he’d had to do by himself as a kid until he got to talking about how he’d been 5 walking to his friends’ houses several blocks away. Suddenly he paused and said, “yikes. My daughter’s that age. I wouldn’t let her.” And one of my classmates just blurted out, “I don’t think your parents loved you.” It was so quiet and awkward after a couple of initial chuckles. He let the kid go to the office with a buddy. I’m not saying your parents didn’t live you btw, this just tugged at that memory. I think parents back then just felt comfortable in trusting their surroundings. They had a sense of safety we will never know. I think the internet makes us so much more aware of the dangers that are lurking out there that people just a couple of decades ago wouldn’t even consider a risk. I really wonder what things that we all consider safe today will be seen as irresponsible or dangerous parenting in the future.
@@shanephillips4011 Well, it is all hypothetical for me since I'm 50 and was never able to have kids, ;). I am very well aware of the car accident stats and I didn't suggest it was logical LOL. There is something about hitting puberty and especially as I got to around 21 or 22 that I started to have really strong reactions to heights, especially in the presence of children, whereas that had never been an issue before. My discussion with a child development expert who studied parental reaction to their children clued me into the biological reasons that they think this happens to women of childbearing ages: Their theory is that we are programmed to experience certain spacial relationships and heights differently than men. Presumably, this would allow us to be more wary around places that pose a danger to small children and to react more quickly (e.g.- think they are closer to the edge of a cliff than they really are) to get to them before they tumble off. The chair lift sparks those same kinds of "over"reactions in my being.
So the clutch of the ski lift malfunctioned resulting in the engine uncomfortably accelerating, qlso at that rpm engine will stop responding to kill switch etc. thats why it kept going for so long the general breaker had to be shut down and even then the clutch was gone so it had to slow down naturally. The ski lift was from like 1979. they replaced the engine after this. Qnd no one was seriously hurt.
@@КостюмчёрныйНиочень dude i just translated that holy shi, ngl i luaghed okay? dont judge. if anyone doesent want to translate it says (this is Georgia there are a lot of Ukrainians there)
I was chair lift operator at 18 in Bear Valley, CA. On very windy conditions we would pull the seat cushions so the wind wouldn't fling the chair sideways. Only saw the chair blow out to the side once on the turn at the bottom. That was insane 😳
This is pure negligence on th part of either th lift operators or th console engineers or both. Insane, that they did not hav it turned off within 10---15 sec after the 1st couple chairs dumped/flung skiers. In fact, a 5 to 6 sec pause is about all u r allowed, at areas I've worked at (i wz ski patrol, not lift op, but we trained w them)
@@maryanne7161 Cable cars in India are known for being the opposite of relaxing. Same goes for their other forms of public transit. A good example would be a train wreck in Japan.
Scary stuff. When I was a kid skiing at Snowbowl in Montana the chairlift stopped and people had to be rescued with a rope to lower then out of the chairs and some spots were very high above the ground. Luckily I was already on the ground watching.
when i was in school in socal during the late 60ties the ski club went to tahoe--the lift broke and messed up a lot of people--one kid was permantely disabled from our school--
That's just the lift to the expert trail. Wait until you see the trail. It's just a cliff. This could be a scene in Final Destiny 2024. They survived the plane crash and decided to celebrate by going on a ski trip together. Coming to a theater near you.
This same thing happened on "The Hall of Presidents" just a few years ago. It was so out-of-control that Grover Cleveland was re-elected and we were all asked to leave the park.
Based off my own reaction and other peoples comments, my first reaction was that this looked comical…. But in reality, this is horrific and would have been terrifying to experience. Prayers to everyone involved. I hope everyone is ok
If you watched the video, it said only a few injuries, nothing too bad. Also it's not horrific and terrifying, using those words for a situation like this, makes those words lose their meaning. Falling off a cruise ship, seeing it sailing away from you to never be seen again is horrific and terrifying. Having to jump from a ski lift into snow at medium speed is not.
OMG that was the scariest thing ever. Im in my 70's and tears falling here...hope nobody was seriously or fataly injured. Why the hell did it take so long to get a message to the top!!!
I remembered riding ski lifts up a mountain in a ski resort, and when we would stop at times, I would literally panic and cry out of fear. I mean, we are really high up above the steep ground, sitting on a chair with no way down until it moves again, and while having a fear of heights. I was in sixth grade at the time. I stayed the hell away from these things since then, and I’ll make sure to avoid them in the future
My heart was in my throat the whole time watching this. I could only imagine being there and being horrified. But yet I’m reading comments were people were cracking up laughing. I just don’t get it.
i'm a driver instructor. When i show a compilation of car crashes to a new class, you'd think your in a comedy club. I think i can understand why they laugh..but.. a little more maturity and they probably wouldn't.
They're not registering what they're seeing. Like the reply above me thinking people are just being flung off. Jumping or being flung off is the best result. Catching something as you jump is a broken leg. Not getting clear of the next chair or still being on the chair when it gets to the pile of detached ones is a life and death situation.
this ski area at Gudauri has some of the most modern lifts. They are equipped way better than any of those ridicolously overpriced American ski areas. Real talk.
As a lift operator, first thing you would press is the emergency stop it takes so fing long for them to stop it It literally takes one second to push the emergency button
1:15 omg the way that person was being dragged after being stuck by the collar or neck area of the ski suit and then wildly whipped around and thrown 😮
one would assume that you would have a safety switch to turn this off in case of an emergency but I guess they didn't want one out in the public, since people can't be trusted, and you'd have kids trying to push it.
They do, there are giant emergency buttons that attendants can hit to instantly stop the lifts. Perhaps it failed, or this is a really crappy ski lift but its been standard on every lift I've ever ridden in the last 30 years to have a giant emergency stop button at both ends.
i went skiing when i was young. waiting for the ski lift to come up to me, a friend had his ski pole on my ski and I couldn't move, even while yelling move your pole! so, the lift came, hit me, sent me flying, and they had to stop the lift to many people yelling BOOO! at me. oh well. this looked much worse than what happened to me.
@StraightIntoMoney except there werent. Because the news station actually investigated this. How can you just 'tell' if someone's dying based off footage
Not at all. They are still in operation. They just had to fire the operator that made a mistake, and make new safety guidelines for their employees to follow.
@@renaissanceman3903 this was years ago, back in 2018 I believe. This ski hill is still open today, tomorrow and the foreseeable future. The situation wasn't due to a mechanical failure, or horrible maintenance, it was a matter of operator error. That operator got all of the backlash for this. The ski hill, just had to implement better workplace procedures. Mostly around not forgetting to turn on the backup generator, that was already in place so something like this shouldn't happen in the first place. When you can break down a incident like this to human error, there usually isn't much repercussions for the company. After all, shit flows downhill, as the saying goes.
Gotta bare in mind that these people are confused on whats going on and are racing backwards down a mountain, they don't know what is happening at the bottom on the other side of the station.
You want the only moron who managed to fall out of the chair on your team? (Yes, kids can be morons if they do something stupid that no other kids do.)
That is how I felt riding a ski lift. Of course, I learned to ski from a girl that had 3 more lessons than I had. The first day skiing it took me just 2 hours and 30 minutes to fall/ski down the slope. The second run was 45 minutes.
The responses had me shocked👀
Could You Press A Button to Make a Million Dollars Knowing Someone Dies?👇🏻
th-cam.com/video/isa9JwPl8KY/w-d-xo.html
Depends on 'someone'. Lot's of evil out there...I'd press that button for free.
I want to say this was the plot of an episode of the Twilight Zone that played in the 1980's. The 'button' was offered to an impoverished couple, in which the man wouldn't push the button, and was justifying it by stating the person that might die might be an innocent person. The wife disagreed. She hit the button. The man who offered the button returned to take the device back, in which it was given to another family to make the same decision. The twist is that the people who pushed the button were the people to die, whilst the person who decided not to push the button, got the money, I want to say in the form of an insurance settlement. Kinda like that story about the monkey paw or some other some such.
I’d press it for $10
So... would I kill a person for a million dollars?? Ah... no.
ID SMASH THAT BUTTON
seeing how all those random people working together in the face of a disaster is actually inspiring.
What’d you expect them to do? Just walk away?
@@bigt2731you might not expect an answer like mine, but I guess the Americans would be discouraged from helping each other because they'd be scared to death that any of the skiers falling incorrectly could sue the helping person to destroy their life.
@@Alarix246 Sad, but true!
@@bigt2731What do you mean everybody I know runs from everything. I don't know what planet you're from but here everybody runs like a bunch of pussies. So yes it was inspiring to actually see a bunch of pussies work together
I was a little frightened about ski lifts, and this didn't help at all. So glad everyone was able to get down safely though.
For anyone wondering what is happening this is a lift rollback meaning the brakes have failed and the lift is spinning freely with gravity pulling the chairs back to the base causing this situation. Like many other comments have said the people involved did a great job managing the situation and preventing a much worse scenario. Also lift rollbacks like this are super unlikely to occur.
Impressive how they worked together well to get most skiers to jump off early before crashing into the tower and then helped them to clear the path for the next ones. This mostly worked and prevented many injuries. Amazingly even those that were thrown around the tower did not have serious injuries.
Not impressive, expected.
Impressive? You see this mess in front of you, you jump.
but they didnt so youre a dot ard. look at the lifeless people getting hit over and over while everyone just watches lol
Supposedly a brake failure. The mountain operator is responsible to see that brake failures don't occur. They're preventable, NOT inevitable. Negligence.
Your supposed to ride your skis/board downhill if your smart
During my college years, I spent time working as a lift operator. We trained extensively for roll back accidents like this. Every morning we had to manually pull the emergency brake on each lift to make sure it worked. If it didn’t work, the chair was deemed inoperable. We also tested the emergency back up generator on each chair every morning before opening. Because generator and manual brake checking is done every morning on every lift everywhere I have ever heard of, how did this happen? This was awful to watch. May this never happen again!
It's Georgia, ex Soviet republic. They probably had lax safety standards or corrupt managers cutting corners.
It happened because it was at a ski resort you didn't work at. So, in a way, yes, it was your fault. You should have worked at that ski resort.
It happened because your girlfriend chose me
😂@@drewodessa2483
Seems like the first Russian lift has some inspections to catch up on. Sounds about right 😬
Oh my wordddd. That was horrifying to watch...I can't imagine seeing this or hearing this in person. I am so happy nobody was critically injured. Beautiful job that everybody did helping others! Blessings from America.
Bro this is comedy 😂 I couldn't stop laughing 🤣 is that bad?
@@MONOblue1999 ehhh...I laugh at terrible shit too sometimes. I get it. LOL.
@@MONOblue1999Yes. That isn't a movie. Real event, real ppl, real danger. You could have witnessed someone die and you think it's comedy.
I enjoyed it.
I’m pretty sure I saw a few bodies laying lifeless in the pile of crushed lift chairs.
How the hell did it take so long to turn it off? Seriously, WTF!!
It was going backwards. Somehow the gears unlocked from the cable that pulls them up to the top.
The emergency stop de-energizes the lines, but it doesn't force a lock on the cable.
There are reasons for that. Compression of the line in any way can compromise the integrity of the cable, creating a larger hazard.
Sooo... not much can be done.
Plus, if the machine wasn’t going, people might’ve been stuck near the top. Then how would they get closer to the ground? 🤔
@@enigmalfidelity that's why you install multiple stoppers on different parts of the line. I could definitely see one or even 2 clamps grabbing it and the force just tear the line but if you have 5 or 6 that all work in unison to slowly grab it then bring it to a stop eventually I could see it working. I'm no engineer but I'm sure someone in the comments is so they can tell us if it would work or not lol
It was turned of. Gravity pulled the side with people (more weight) downward.
How that skier at 1:17 didn't get killed, or even seriously hurt, is absolutely astounding! It looks like he/she gets crushed up in the top of the tower and tangle of chairs. Damn!
It would be impossible to grip the metal bars strongly enough with ski gloves in order to prevent the multiple sideways g-force at the bottom from throwing you off the chair. Still safer to jump under your own control, though.
I saw EXACTLY what you are talking about and wondered that, too!! That part was TRULY horrific and you can hear it in the poor guy's voice when it happens!
@@drinnerd8532 Yeah, you can hear someone let out a cry right when it happens, probably whoever was taking the video. I'm sure the skier was thrown clear since it says nobody was badly injured, but at the moment we can't see him anymore it looks like he would be crushed in all those tangled-up chairs. Hard to watch even though I know he was OK.
They were just sitting there patiently? Like didn't they hear everyone around them screaming???
I know! Like no one ie going to comment on that ? Had to slow mo it and it looked like Yula got crushed, but thankfully she is alright!
And this is why I haven’t been out of my house in 37 years.
😂😂
and then a guy came in with a machine gun and shot up the place, so now I live in a hole--so then there was flooding and an earthquake and volcanic magma; so I just killed myself.
The smell though...
Yep! I'm going on 23 years. So much nicer!
🤣🤣🤣🤣
“Let’s go skiing they said. You’ll have fun they said…”
You wont believe it but i was there, I refused to go skiing that day and stayed for hot chocolate, I'm from georgia and this was a very traumatic moment, My family is all safe though, what a miracle I was lazy...
Thank goodness you WERE lazy that day......
You're right. I don't believe you.
@@Wayzor_ Fair enough, some people lie so that can happen.
Omg yo-yo so lucky
Me too
Little guy is holding on like a champ
Yea 1:13 was inspiring.
@@suntzu4691💀
I’d get back in line tbh
OK IM SORRY FOR LAUGJING 💀 IM CACKLING UP 😭
You spelled wimp wrong
It really is heart warming to see people trying to help others with a sense of urgency. Like at the end with the person hanging. They helped minimise the impact. Well done
There’s nothing heartwarming here you soft marshmallow.
This is like 10 years old and still makes me laugh. Its very family guyish
A moment of silence for the employees who had to clean that mess up 😆
Didn't seem like any employees were even there...
no
A moment of silence for the ski operator who had to pay compensation to everybody involved
That's a TESLA ski lift prototype. This was the beta test and they found it ran as intended with no bugs. Will be put into production by end of winter.
A moment of silence for a knucklehead that would post a comment like that.
1:15 you’re trying to tell me they didn’t get FUXXED up from that? To say they were YEETED into a pile of broken piles is an understatement.
there was no trace of them after that
They definitely died
@@BirdsfromHuntingdon Teleported into the upper demention
@@wavpainter if I survived that I’d meme the absolute hell out of my near death experience.
“Me smiling: Finally got GTA 6,
Me being yeeted: Your PlayStation 5 does not meet the minimum requirements to play GTA 6”
@@wavpainter no deaths were reported
I’m no engineer but I worked at a ski resort for many years and did all sorts maintenance on these macinces under the supervision of an engineer and his team. Guaranteed there had been no PM or required inspections on this machine. The emergency brake and anti-rollback obviously was nonexistent.. Gravity broought the haul rope ( cable) downward. All simple physics at that point. Totally avoidable. This was a horrific situation..
All brakes worked perfectly on that day. The lifties manually opened them without connecting the emergency engine to the system...
Went for the skiing, stayed for the ski lift.
I love ragdoll physics 😂😂😂
"Yay! Big tech!"
The ONLY time not having the safety bar down is safer
That kid who held on is really strong. And it took guts to let go and trust people to catch him.
I seen the same thing happen at a smaller hill in Alberta. I was in line to load on a T-bar lift when it stopped and started going backwards. I yelled at the lifty to hit the brakes and he yelled back, "I don't know how!" I quickly kicked my skis off and ran over to the lift, pulled open a small door that covered the drive shaft and stood on the brake pad which stopped the shaft from turning. The lift stopped so suddenly, it wiped out absolutely everyone on the lift and broke a whole bunch of T's off of the main cable, but at least it stopped. You couldn't really blame the lifty for that as he hadn't been properly trained to even run the lift.
Nice work bro!
Wow good job!
@@Moonlark-Equestrian Hello fellow equestrian!
Personal injury lawyers helicoptered in, darkening the skies..
Lmao! 🤣
I don't think they have those there.
Man that looked scary, I hope everyone recovered ok. Terrifying
This is an old video from a couple of years ago. A few broken bones but no deaths as far as I remember.
The video says there were no critical injuries and no deaths, though there were injuries
Hardly 'terrifying' 😂. Get a grip
@@LewisNuke92 there were kids on there.. it could have ended in a bunch of fatalities so yes terrifying
@@BeardedGuy_Tawhid they were about 3ft from the ground 😂
So glad everyone is ok!!! God bless everyone who helped!!! Wishing much love and peace!!! Be well and safe out there guys!!!
I'm glad to see people helping one another. I hope everyone is alright.
I am so glad people screamed "jump" so not many other people got hurt!
That was an incredible scene. Makes me feel hope for the future of mankind to watch others helping each other.
Are you serious?
@@AshTownsend in what way?
My friend was with her husband and 3 kids on a lift in Colorado. It was summer so only a few people were going up. The operators accidently left them on the lift for 8 hours. When one of the operators was about to fall asleep he couldn’t remember them and went back to check. This was before cell phones.
Lifties are hired at min wage and more often then not live in the worst conditions in the area, they work the longest hours and take the abuse of hundreds of people a day. They are treated like dirt by patrons and bosses and management, no one with any sense or options would take on a job as a liftie.. but those that do, end up drinking and doing anything else to keep what there is of their mind, sane. Also this makes no sense unless it was super early in the morning as Ski patrol do an end of day sweep, this includes prior to night skiing every run and every lift is checked. As well, all lifts are cycled prior to shut down.
Humanity sure is classy. But rich people gotta ski.
@@Novastar.SaberCombat the Irony is that skiing in the 50's was considered a lower class endeavour, the 60's and 70's were hippie's and family , the 90's were the start of the downfall thanks to big Canadians companies like interwest, making cookie cutter ' villages', seriously i lived in whistler , and traveled to copper mtn, CO. , blue mtn, ON and Mt. Tremblant, QC. and they were almost identical. by the end of the 90's Skiing had become the domain of the Spore's, ( City person on rental equipment, but the owned a 1mil ski chalet off the hill side ) Along with that came mandatory helmets.. and black diamond runs that were once considered a solid blue square.. ah, don't get me started.. i went from Olympian and professional Skier, to quitting cold turkey. in the early 90's
My goodness there is a horror film about a similar situation. Never thought this could actually happen for real.
@ianskinner1619
I am always nice to the lift operators. A lot of fragile egos with something to prove on the slopes. I hate skiers, but I love to ski. Anyone working for skiers needs to be treated with kindness. Nouveau Riche and Riche are not so classy sometimes or appallingly vulgar. They think that is how one is supposed to act id they have a few dollars in their pockets. Money should have nothing to do with how one treats others! Gross people annoy me.
Some people would say time slows down when you think your life is about to end but I think it really flew by.
I’ve unfortunately had that experience. It does both.
They wanted a thrill ride and they got it
@@lewstone5430woosh. Had to.
@@gonelucid oh I get it. Just keeping it real for a second.
God damn
Alfred Hitchcock: The Lift
absolutely hilarious! thanks for posting!!
Bro how is this funny
@@everyrollercoasterrules if i have to explain it, you would not get it ,Bro!
I didn't think that much about chair lifts as a kid because they were just part of my life. I started riding them at 4 years old. But as an adult, the thought of sending my 4 year old up on a chair lift is terrifying! I am glad to see that there were no truly little children on this section of this chair life. I can't imagine being a parent trying to make the split second decision about when and how to get your preschooler or young elementary kid off that lift before the chair crashed.
The realization of what our parents let us do is kind of head scratching once you have your own kids. Pretty wild.
@@stroso83This made me think of my teacher lecturing us all in class one day about how when he was young he had to do way more things than we’d ever understand because we were overprotected. It started with a kid saying he didn’t want to go alone to the office because it scared him to go through the dim hallways. My teacher listed a bunch of places he’d had to go to and things he’d had to do by himself as a kid until he got to talking about how he’d been 5 walking to his friends’ houses several blocks away. Suddenly he paused and said, “yikes. My daughter’s that age. I wouldn’t let her.” And one of my classmates just blurted out, “I don’t think your parents loved you.” It was so quiet and awkward after a couple of initial chuckles. He let the kid go to the office with a buddy.
I’m not saying your parents didn’t live you btw, this just tugged at that memory. I think parents back then just felt comfortable in trusting their surroundings. They had a sense of safety we will never know.
I think the internet makes us so much more aware of the dangers that are lurking out there that people just a couple of decades ago wouldn’t even consider a risk. I really wonder what things that we all consider safe today will be seen as irresponsible or dangerous parenting in the future.
@@HyperWolf thanks for sharing the story and your thoughts! I think you're on to something, especially with our access to the internet.
Rather nonsensical if you ask me. Do you drive with your children in the vehicle? Look at statistics and reverse engineer my though process here.....
@@shanephillips4011 Well, it is all hypothetical for me since I'm 50 and was never able to have kids, ;). I am very well aware of the car accident stats and I didn't suggest it was logical LOL. There is something about hitting puberty and especially as I got to around 21 or 22 that I started to have really strong reactions to heights, especially in the presence of children, whereas that had never been an issue before. My discussion with a child development expert who studied parental reaction to their children clued me into the biological reasons that they think this happens to women of childbearing ages: Their theory is that we are programmed to experience certain spacial relationships and heights differently than men. Presumably, this would allow us to be more wary around places that pose a danger to small children and to react more quickly (e.g.- think they are closer to the edge of a cliff than they really are) to get to them before they tumble off. The chair lift sparks those same kinds of "over"reactions in my being.
props to those people hanging on till the end.
The idiots who didn't let go?
Maybe they didn't understand english.
I thought that was in the beginning when everyone was still trying to put together what was happening?
@@williv and can't turn their heads around to see whats happening
The fear of letting go defeats the reality of crashing horribly.
WOW! That was insane! Glad no one got seriously hurt from that ski lift.🙏
This happened several years ago. There was at least one killed, maybe two. Can't remember
What are you talking about "no one got seriously hurt"?????
Probably that person that didn't jump off at 1:15
A few broken bones but no confirmed deaths reported.
@@warriorpoetbear3912 the hell that person just sitting and watching what is going to happen ...
So the clutch of the ski lift malfunctioned resulting in the engine uncomfortably accelerating, qlso at that rpm engine will stop responding to kill switch etc. thats why it kept going for so long the general breaker had to be shut down and even then the clutch was gone so it had to slow down naturally. The ski lift was from like 1979. they replaced the engine after this. Qnd no one was seriously hurt.
In Soviet Russia, lift ride you.
i laughed, thanks
Это Грузия, там много украинцев
lovely comment.
@@КостюмчёрныйНиочень dude i just translated that holy shi,
ngl i luaghed okay? dont judge.
if anyone doesent want to translate it says (this is Georgia there are a lot of Ukrainians there)
@@jacobderdall3839 там акцент слышен
I was chair lift operator at 18 in Bear Valley, CA. On very windy conditions we would pull the seat cushions so the wind wouldn't fling the chair sideways. Only saw the chair blow out to the side once on the turn at the bottom. That was insane 😳
Bear Valley in Tehachapi, CA?
@@daretheballoon Alpine County. Hwy 4 central Sierra
Woot woot, Bear Valley! My home mountain!
I know of Bear Mountain in Big Bear
I put a fake poo 💩 log at the unloading zone of the chairlift to see people crash as to not ski over
Still far more Safe and Effective and fewer people injured than other things we're told are Safe and Effective.
Good one!
Condoms
That one Person has some serious strnegth for holding onto the lift for so long at the end.
Tech: "Now where is that stop button again..?"
Wow… this was a beautiful demonstration of how much we love each other. I’m sobbing. people are so good.
Man, I just wish I would have been on that lift. I would never have to pay to go skiing there ever again.
“Okay, it my last day. I’ve always wondered what would happen if I cranked this thing to 11 and just walked away.”
As a kid, i was terrified of any chairlifts i came accross, nowadays, i understand why i was scared of that thing..
Watching that second group of people go flying was hilarious! Fantastic video. Going straight into the favourites.
I’m surprised they’re speaking English in Georgia. Also lovely to see people helping people.
Maybe tourists
In Russia , Ski Lift Rides You
Russia?!! Don't offend people!
@@gvertm3158the guy filming was speaking Russian. Although some of the voices were shouting “jump off!” in English, so not certain where this was.
@@phueal Georgia. Soon to be Russia It seems already grabbing a port there
@@phueal
March 16, 2018, Gudauri, Georgia.
Not Russia.
But Georgia was part of the USSR, many people in this country speak russian.
😏
In situations like this, it is preferable to film the carnage, rather than assist the injured
Here you're complaining the guy is filming instead of assisting and yet have you not see there are like 40 people standing around who can assist?
@@hhds113exactly! Only so many people can help, without too many people just getting in the way.
@@hhds113 did you even read the comment? 😂
I used to ski for many years and always worried about this happening.
This won't happen to you, it's definitely a freak accident
@@ascherlafayette8572
NOW IM REALLY WORRIED!!😎
Honestly, I am nervous about skiing with these things just due to my own awkwardness, let alone operator error.
That's like saying I never flew in an airplane because I thought this would happen
I only ride uphill lifts and only snowboard downhill
This is pure negligence on th part of either th lift operators or th console engineers or both.
Insane, that they did not hav it turned off within 10---15 sec after the 1st couple chairs dumped/flung skiers.
In fact, a 5 to 6 sec pause is about all u r allowed, at areas I've worked at (i wz ski patrol, not lift op, but we trained w them)
They manually opened the emergency brakes after a total power failure in that area.
I'm watching this an hour before my first skiing lesson 😮
Nope.....no ski lesson for me today.....
You won't find a more frightening situation in an environment of relaxation.
Probably a tsunami on a beach
@@gonelucid good call. 5 points.
Um a wolf pack snow storm I could think of many lmao
Google the cable car incident that happened in India
@@maryanne7161 Cable cars in India are known for being the opposite of relaxing. Same goes for their other forms of public transit. A good example would be a train wreck in Japan.
Scary stuff. When I was a kid skiing at Snowbowl in Montana the chairlift stopped and people had to be rescued with a rope to lower then out of the chairs and some spots were very high above the ground. Luckily I was already on the ground watching.
when i was in school in socal during the late 60ties the ski club went to tahoe--the lift broke and messed up a lot of people--one kid was permantely disabled from our school--
@@dethray1000 And one time, at band camp...
This one of the few times I want to thank the cameraman for filming and not helping out.
Great job for everyone working together to save the ones in dire need. God🙏bless you all.
That is absolutely crazy. Thank God so many of them were able to safely jump out before getting flung
Old video
@@Kawoaa I saw, thank you 😊
absolutely terrifying. As a skier, I hope and pray this never ever happens to me. I've fallen getting off of the lift, but nothing like that.
Brave strong child for holding on until he was safe to drop!
That's just the lift to the expert trail. Wait until you see the trail. It's just a cliff. This could be a scene in Final Destiny 2024. They survived the plane crash and decided to celebrate by going on a ski trip together. Coming to a theater near you.
This same thing happened on "The Hall of Presidents" just a few years ago.
It was so out-of-control that Grover Cleveland was re-elected and we were all asked to leave the park.
Based off my own reaction and other peoples comments, my first reaction was that this looked comical…. But in reality, this is horrific and would have been terrifying to experience. Prayers to everyone involved. I hope everyone is ok
If you watched the video, it said only a few injuries, nothing too bad. Also it's not horrific and terrifying, using those words for a situation like this, makes those words lose their meaning. Falling off a cruise ship, seeing it sailing away from you to never be seen again is horrific and terrifying. Having to jump from a ski lift into snow at medium speed is not.
Was still pretty funny
@@Naatewaardyou realize that those adjectives are subjective… right?
“Horrific and terrifying”
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
woman moment
They'll be fine...anyone who has skied long enough knows there's a trade off between pain and pleasure. Great story too.
OMG that was the scariest thing ever. Im in my 70's and tears falling here...hope nobody was seriously or fataly injured. Why the hell did it take so long to get a message to the top!!!
This was fantastic.
I remembered riding ski lifts up a mountain in a ski resort, and when we would stop at times, I would literally panic and cry out of fear. I mean, we are really high up above the steep ground, sitting on a chair with no way down until it moves again, and while having a fear of heights. I was in sixth grade at the time. I stayed the hell away from these things since then, and I’ll make sure to avoid them in the future
I dont blame you. That was your instincts telling something happened. It's like when your boss picking up your wife for Italian ice on Fridays.
I mean, They wanted an adrenaline rush
My heart was in my throat the whole time watching this. I could only imagine being there and being horrified. But yet I’m reading comments were people were cracking up laughing. I just don’t get it.
i'm a driver instructor. When i show a compilation of car crashes to a new class, you'd think your in a comedy club. I think i can understand why they laugh..but.. a little more maturity and they probably wouldn't.
Because it’s hilarious lol
I find it funny because it is so bizarre seeing lift go backwards and fling people off.
They're not registering what they're seeing. Like the reply above me thinking people are just being flung off. Jumping or being flung off is the best result. Catching something as you jump is a broken leg. Not getting clear of the next chair or still being on the chair when it gets to the pile of detached ones is a life and death situation.
This is what happens when you go skiing in a backwater country like Georgia. Great job 👏
this ski area at Gudauri has some of the most modern lifts. They are equipped way better than any of those ridicolously overpriced American ski areas. Real talk.
Totální selhání obsluhy! Obsluha nebyla řádně přiškolena.
That wasn't a ski lift. That was a ski dump.
As a lift operator, first thing you would press is the emergency stop it takes so fing long for them to stop it It literally takes one second to push the emergency button
ever heard of a power failure? You can push those buttons as hard as you want, nothing happens.
My family has owned 6 ski resorts... 3 of which were built from scratch. I have NEVER seen anything like this in my entire life.
You must be filthy rich
Not gonna lie, looked kinda fun. Thank god no one was seriously injured tho 🙏🏾
Broken bones was the worst injuries received.
1:15 omg the way that person was being dragged after being stuck by the collar or neck area of the ski suit and then wildly whipped around and thrown 😮
Good ol soviet era ski lifts.
nope, this is a perfectly working Doppelmayr lift from 2008. Much better than 95% of the American ski lifts today. Human error caused this accident.
At 1:15 👀 thought they messed up in the narrative about no one dying, thought this dude was unalived fr.
How this is what the internet was made for! Love it
Old but gold
The ski lift operator guy used to work the Music Express, he is very sorry for the mix up
We use chairlifts for uphill usually here 😂
It’s not that funny but your comment is. I feel bad for the folks who suffered broken bones, broken bones are no joke.
one would assume that you would have a safety switch to turn this off in case of an emergency but I guess they didn't want one out in the public, since people can't be trusted, and you'd have kids trying to push it.
They do, there are giant emergency buttons that attendants can hit to instantly stop the lifts. Perhaps it failed, or this is a really crappy ski lift but its been standard on every lift I've ever ridden in the last 30 years to have a giant emergency stop button at both ends.
A backup generator wasn't turned on.
One of the scariest things about skiing and snowboarding.... these sketchy lifts.....
The ride looks more fun than the skiing!!
i went skiing when i was young. waiting for the ski lift to come up to me, a friend had his ski pole on my ski and I couldn't move, even while yelling move your pole! so, the lift came, hit me, sent me flying, and they had to stop the lift to many people yelling BOOO! at me. oh well. this looked much worse than what happened to me.
1:08 no now was critically injured seconds later a person flys while hanging on and another person gets stuck in the chairlifts (looks like it)
Yeah there is definitely injuries and deaths going on here from the looks of it
@StraightIntoMoney except there werent. Because the news station actually investigated this. How can you just 'tell' if someone's dying based off footage
That place went from being open to permanently closed down real quick.
Not at all. They are still in operation. They just had to fire the operator that made a mistake, and make new safety guidelines for their employees to follow.
@@northernsnow6982 all those people are bout to sue the crap out of them.
@@renaissanceman3903 this was years ago, back in 2018 I believe. This ski hill is still open today, tomorrow and the foreseeable future.
The situation wasn't due to a mechanical failure, or horrible maintenance, it was a matter of operator error. That operator got all of the backlash for this.
The ski hill, just had to implement better workplace procedures. Mostly around not forgetting to turn on the backup generator, that was already in place so something like this shouldn't happen in the first place.
When you can break down a incident like this to human error, there usually isn't much repercussions for the company. After all, shit flows downhill, as the saying goes.
@northernsnow6982 oh they make it seem like it was yesterday.
@@renaissanceman3903 yeah that's the internet for ya.
Thank you for my new reoccurring nightmare
I can't believe that several people thought taking their chances riding the wheel of death was preferable to an 8 foot jump into soft, comfy snow.
Gotta bare in mind that these people are confused on whats going on and are racing backwards down a mountain, they don't know what is happening at the bottom on the other side of the station.
@@ryancooper3629 They have only to turn their heads and look behind them. Plus, maybe listen to all the people yelling for them to jump.
@@Cucumberflavoredmustardsome people freeze. They say fight or flight, but the third response is to freeze
It’s Christmas. And I laughed waaaaay too long and hard at this video. I’m sorry / not sorry. I hope everyone was ok tho
Me too lmao
my life is probably going the wrong direction because im laughing and the thought of people getting flinged off the ski lift...
You’re not the only one that was laughing 😂
How can I like this 20 times??
Looks people having good time
I have never skied, or snow boarded, but even I could tell that the ski lift was malfunctioning, and moving too fast! Jesus help us all!
what about the Jews and the Muslims?
@@o0GrayMatters0othey have yet to find Jesus and accept him as our Lord and saviour. Until then, they'll not be saved
Have you genius also noticed that it is going the wring way?
@@profix25lodefinitely the "wring way", but it's also running backwards. What a perfect storm!
so are you saying that the covenant the LORD made with Israel is invalid@@jrea424
Glad everyone is ok because I laughed so hard at that.
If this is already happening, imaging how worst it'll get with DEI factor thrown into the mix
mostly peacfull ski from hell
No. It happened in Georgia (a country) , several years ago.
Bad ass video
this looks hella fun and chaotic, but i hope they are ok
I want the kid at the end on my team. He does not give up.
You want the only moron who managed to fall out of the chair on your team? (Yes, kids can be morons if they do something stupid that no other kids do.)
I know this is dangerous, but watching people rag doll fly off, made me laugh pretty hard 😅
😂 i loved it too
I never knew skying could be so much fun. Maybe I try it some day.
The 2 who did not jump really deserve the Darwin Award …
They probably were too scared to react and froze
That is how I felt riding a ski lift. Of course, I learned to ski from a girl that had 3 more lessons than I had. The first day skiing it took me just 2 hours and 30 minutes to fall/ski down the slope. The second run was 45 minutes.