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Incredible moment Cessna 150 light aircraft crash lands into the Seattle seafront

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Incredible moment Cessna 150 light aircraft crash lands into the Seattle seafront

The Cessna Sully! Aviation specialists reward 66-year-old pilot who pulled off ‘very best’ emergency water touchdown on Seattle’s Puget Sound (regardless of flipping it)

  • The 66-year-old pilot, who has not been named, managed to flee from aircraft
  • The aircraft crashed into Puget Sound simply off Seattle’s Alki Seaside on Tuesday
  • Video exhibits the plane flying near water earlier than crashing into estuary  

A light-weight plane made a dramatic emergency touchdown in shallow waters simply yards from a Seattle seaside earlier than upending with a large splash.

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The 66-year-old pilot, who has not been named, managed to flee from the sinking craft and miraculously swam away to shore and not using a scratch.

The small, single-engine Cessna 150 crashed into Puget Sound simply off Seattle’s Alki Seaside Tuesday afternoon at round 4.20pm. 

Video exhibits the plane flying near the water’s floor earlier than crashing into the estuary, with the impression of the crash flipping the aircraft over. The aircraft may very well be seen crashed nostril down within the water earlier than it started to sink.

A number of emergency crews responded to the scene as images confirmed the ghostly white define of the small aircraft sat beneath the water’s floor.

Video shows the aircraft flying close to the water's surface

Video exhibits the plane flying near the water’s floor of the Puget Sound simply off Seattle’s Alki Seaside

The plane then crashes into the estuary

The plane could be seen crashed nose down in the water before it began to sink

The aircraft then crashes into the estuary (left), with the impression of the crash flipping the aircraft over. The aircraft may very well be seen crashed nostril down within the water earlier than it started to sink (proper)

Multiple emergency crews responded to the scene as photographs showed the ghostly white outline of the small plane sat beneath the water's surface

A number of emergency crews responded to the scene as images confirmed the ghostly white define of the small aircraft sat beneath the water’s floor

The small, single-engine Cessna 150 crashed into Puget Sound just off Seattle's Alki Beach Tuesday afternoon at around 4.20pm

The small, single-engine Cessna 150 crashed into Puget Sound simply off Seattle’s Alki Seaside Tuesday afternoon at round 4.20pm

‘I used to be placing my toes within the water after which I noticed the aircraft coming after which it flipped over after which the aircraft was sinking,’ 10-year-old Zahra, who witnessed the crash, advised Fox 13. 

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One witness added: ‘He was taking place like he knew what he was doing. He was simply taking place and simply went easily and he simply went in there. He obtained out and he would simply sit there.

‘He obtained guts. And he was very calm, however that is what they’re studying to do. I wished to say “good job”,’ one other witness mentioned.

The US Coast Guard established a brief 150-yard security zone across the aircraft to ‘guarantee individuals and vessels preserve a secure distance from the plane.’

Officials said that the owner of the plane hired a specialist to remove the fuel from the plane to avoid an ecological disaster and to salvage the aircraft. Pictured: The aircraft is seen submerged

Officers mentioned that the proprietor of the aircraft employed a specialist to take away the gas from the aircraft to keep away from an ecological catastrophe and to salvage the plane. Pictured: The plane is seen submerged

The Coast Guard responded to the plane that crashed near Alki Point on Tuesday afternoon

The Coast Guard responded to the aircraft that crashed close to Alki Level on Tuesday afternoon

Officers mentioned that the proprietor of the aircraft employed a specialist to take away the gas from the aircraft to keep away from an ecological catastrophe and to salvage the plane.

The pilot, after swimming to shore, was taken to hospital for a check-up in a non-public automobile however had sustained no accidents, in keeping with the Seattle Hearth Division.

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Jeff Kaufer, a retired airline pilot who nonetheless flies as a interest, noticed the video of the crash and he mentioned he believes it was an emergency touchdown.

Kaufer advised native TV station King 5 that it seems the aircraft might have had an engine failure or not sufficient energy to remain aloft. 

‘He did, in my finest estimation, the perfect factor he might’ve carried out, and that was put it within the water,’ Kaufer mentioned, including there’s actually nowhere round Alki the place a aircraft can carry out an emergency touchdown.

‘From what I hear, he is OK and can stay to fly one other day,’ he mentioned.

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In 'Words with Wings and Magic Things,' poetry is beautifully illustrated — and fun!

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In 'Words with Wings and Magic Things,' poetry is beautifully illustrated — and fun!

‘Words with Wings and Magic Things’ by Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati, published by Tundra Books

Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati met on a blind date.

“We share the same agent,” explains Burgess. “She said, ‘You need to meet this client of mine.’” Over coffee in Brooklyn, they discovered that they both love poetry. They clicked.

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Burgess is an award-winning author and poetry teacher and Salati is a Caledecott Medalist. They now have an illustrated book of poetry called Words with Wings and Magic Things.

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‘Words with Wings and Magic Things’ by Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati, published by Tundra Books

“One of the ways I describe this book is Shel Silverstein meets Rumi for kids,” says Burgess, who remembers discovering Silverstein’s poetry when he was a child. “It really blew my mind in the best way because of the wordplay and the sense of fun. And then when I say Rumi for kids, there’s also this thread throughout the book that’s a little more mystical, a little quieter.”

The poems run the gamut. There’s a dragon piñata, a hungry yeti, primordial slime, a terrible, horrible idea, serious questions, dancing, and some magic tricks.

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“The biggest challenge,” says Salati, “was, OK, we have so many worlds, we have so many characters … how do we bring it all together?” But it was a fun challenge, he says. “It was also, as an illustrator, a completely different form to experiment with and to play with — separate, short, tight little moments.”

A lot of the illustrations in the book are small, to allow more space for the poems. But, at the beginning of each chapter, the poems are small: Burgess wrote couplets — two-line poems. That gave Salati space to play. He created die-cut illustrations — basically an image with a hole in the page. And then when you turn the page, an image from the first drawing is carried over to the illustration on the next page.

For Burgess’s poem Wild, Salati illustrated a summer backyard evening. There’s a metal slide, a swing set, an owl and a girl peering up at the moon. The moon is the die-cut, and when you turn the page, the owl is carried over and becomes part of a new scene — a whirling, rushing stampede of all these animals in space, with stardust and galaxies behind them.

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‘Words with Wings and Magic Things’ by Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati, published by Tundra Books

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‘Words with Wings and Magic Things’ by Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati, published by Tundra Books

Burgess says he wanted this book to be fun. “I teach at Brooklyn College… and college students often arrive with these ideas about poetry,” he says. Like: “Poetry is hard. Poetry is about rules. Poetry is stressful because when you read a poem in school, you’re supposed to solve a riddle or say the most intelligent thing.”

But, he wants everyone to know, this is not true! Poetry can be fun.

“When you write poems with kids, you see how immediately they get this,” Matthew Burgess says. “If you read a poem aloud to kids, they start to dance in their seats.”

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“What I love about this project was that it really reminded me of that time,” says Doug Salati, adding that when you’re a kid and you’re drawing on the living room floor, or writing in your diary, you’re not self-conscious. “You’re not worried so much about the product or the outcome or the finished thing. It’s the making.”

And, he and Burgess agree, making something for fun is the best kind of making there is.

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‘Words with Wings and Magic Things’ by Matthew Burgess and Doug Salati, published by Tundra Books

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Jesse Watters Claims Pope's Political Views Won't Affect U.S.A.

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Jesse Watters Claims Pope's Political Views Won't Affect U.S.A.

Jesse Watters
Pope’s Political Ideology Won’t Affect America …
‘Pope Does His Thing, America Does Ours’

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'Wait Wait' for May 24, 2025: With Not My Job guest Ego Nwodim

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'Wait Wait' for May 24, 2025: With Not My Job guest Ego Nwodim

US actress Ego Nwodim arrives for the 2025 Met Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 5, 2025, in New York. The Gala raises money for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Costume Institute. The 2025 Met Gala is themed “Tailored for You,” aligning with the Costume Institute’s exhibition, “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,” set to open to the public on May 10. (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP) (Photo by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images)

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This week’s show was recorded in Chicago with host Peter Sagal, judge and scorekeeper Bill Kurtis, Not My Job guest Ego Nwodim and panelists Hari Kondabolu, Dulcé Sloan, and Tom Papa. Click the audio link above to hear the whole show.

Who’s Bill This Time

Air Traffic Jam; Final Mission; Very Light Reading

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Panel Questions

A Stinky Way To Declutter

Bluff The Listener

Our panelists tell three stories about dental hygiene mistakes, only one of which is true.

Not My Job: Ego Nwodim talks Poker Face and how to get an SNL audience to swear in unison

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Ego Nwodim, star of Saturday Night Live and great guest on the latest season of Poker Face plays our game called, “You’ll Never Wear Out Your Welcome!” three questions about bad guests.

Panel Questions

Apple’s Vision Quest; The Purrfect Beast

Limericks

Bill Kurtis reads three news-related limericks: Hindenburg II; Soggy CSI; The Drink of The Summer

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Lightning Fill In The Blank

All the news we couldn’t fit anywhere else

Predictions

Our panelists predict what movie will Tom Cruise star in when he’s 100 years old.

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