100 episodes

Join hosts Shelly Price and Stephanie Hubka as they take a weekly look at the facts, details, and surprises behind some of the disasters that occur at 35,000 feet.

Take to the Sky: the Air Disaster Podcast Shelly Price and Stephanie Hubka

    • True Crime
    • 4.3 • 223 Ratings

Join hosts Shelly Price and Stephanie Hubka as they take a weekly look at the facts, details, and surprises behind some of the disasters that occur at 35,000 feet.

    Japan Air Lines Flight 123

    Japan Air Lines Flight 123

    On August 12, 1985, more than 500 passengers boarded Japan Air Lines Flight 123 for a short flight between Tokyo and Osaka. 12 minutes into the flight, passengers found themselves fearing for their lives as the flight crew fought desperately to save a plane that was suddenly uncontrollable. In this week's episode of Take to the Sky: the Air Disaster Podcast-- our final episode outside of Patreon-- Stephanie shares the story of the deadliest single-aircraft accident in aviation history and the people who are part of a legacy that changed what safe flight means across the world.
    It's official: this is our last episode! If you're still looking for new episodes, you'll find us exclusively on Patreon sharing a new episode and layover episode each month. Thank you for spending the last three years- and 150 Thursdays- with us!

    • 1 hr 11 min
    The 1977 Tenerife Airport Disaster

    The 1977 Tenerife Airport Disaster

    It was the deadliest disaster of all time – and it never should have happened. In our next-to-final regular episode of Take to the Sky: The Air Disaster Podcast, Shelly walks us through the fateful events of March 27, 1977, that led to two 747 passenger planes, Pan Am 1736 and KLM 4508, being on the same runway at the same time - and how aviation safety was never the same because of this mega disaster.

    • 1 hr 17 min
    Air Canada Flight 143 - The Gimli Glider

    Air Canada Flight 143 - The Gimli Glider

    July 23, 1983 should have been just another day in the skies for Captain Bob Pearson and First Officer Maurice Quintal, but a series of miscommunications and mechanicals issues caught up with them and their brand-new Boeing 767 once they reached their cruising altitude. In this week's episode of Take to the Sky: The Air Disaster Podcast, we talk about the incredible story of Air Canada Flight 143, a flight crew who found themselves to be uniquely qualified for the most unexpected of issues, and the shocking reasons the plane-- now known as the Gimli Glider-- came to be powerless in the sky.
    (Only 2 episodes left! Starting in June we'll be exclusively on Patreon to share a new episode and layover episode each month.)
     

    • 1 hr 14 min
    Air France 4590 and the Story of the Concorde

    Air France 4590 and the Story of the Concorde

    Whenever Concorde took off, it was a mesmerizing spectacle. But on July 25, 2000, when an Air France Concorde took the skies, it did so with flames trailing behind it. Join Shelly for this episode of Take to the Sky: The Air Disaster Podcast where she shares the story of the only deadly Concorde disaster and how it led to the downfall of the entire fleet and spelled the end of supersonic passenger transport.
    (Only 3 episodes left! Starting in June we'll be exclusively on Patreon sharing a new episode and layover episode each month.)
     

    • 1 hr 4 min
    1960 New York Mid-Air Collision

    1960 New York Mid-Air Collision

    On a quiet December morning in 1960, the streets of New York city turned from festive cheer to chaos when an aviation disaster played out in the skies above. In this week's episode of Take to the Sky: the Air Disaster Podcast, Stephanie shares the story of two planes headed to two different airports and the tragic chain of events that brought them to the same place at the same time.
    (Only 4 episodes left! Starting in June we'll be exclusively on Patreon sharing a new episode and layover episode each month.)
     

    • 1 hr 6 min
    Santa Barbara Airlines 518

    Santa Barbara Airlines 518

    Anyone onboard Santa Barbara Airlines Flight 518 on February 21, 2008 would have been taking in the gorgeous views of the Andes as the plane began to climb. But soon, as the mountain tops got closer and closer, some may have started to worry if the plane was flying too low. Join Shelly in this episode of Take to the Sky: The Air Disaster Podcast for our latest episode where we encounter a flight crew who seemed to be lost in the clouds.
    (Only 5 episodes left! Starting in June we'll be exclusively on Patreon sharing a new episode and layover episode each month.)

    • 1 hr 4 min

Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5
223 Ratings

223 Ratings

jenorbit ,

I Miss You Already

I only just discovered this pod, and the only reason I didn’t give 5 stars is I’ve never heard of a podcast that doesn’t have any free access. I’m mostly through the back episodes and I’ll miss Stephanie and Shelly’s masterful storytelling. I hope the Patreon peeps continue to enjoy these skies.

pond9515 ,

Overexaggerated

I’ve listened to dozens of true crime and disaster podcasts, and I’ve found this one hard to listen. 7 minutes in the beginning of the episodes to talk about random things before they even get to the ‘housekeeping’ rants. They are very overexggerated about numerous things per episode. I get it, it’s sad, and it just gets annoying to hear things overdone like they do it on this podcast. “ I just need to take a moment to absorb what you just told me” is an exact quote from an early episode available on Apple, it is so exaggerated to the point I immediately turned it off with a cringe face. They portray the incidents and accidents in a manner that’s obviously making it about them, and how it makes them feel, it’s not about them in any capacity, they are telling of the story of how things happened, in which they do very well. They are accurate and do incredible deep dives and try to tell you in a way to understand the technology, I just can’t listen to the way they tell it. It takes on a whole “thoughts and prayers” vibe to me in the way they speak. If you can get past that aspect, they might be enjoyable, but I’m not one of those who can.

😝l ,

More hurricane hunters

Love it 😍 best ever

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