The salient fact of this afternoon’s Hudson River water landing is that it involved no casualties. So far, US Airways Flight 1549’s 153 passengers and crew have survived—and the majority of people who emerged from the chilly waters this afternoon, shaken and shocked but intact, seem to be physically unscathed.
This is a story that, considering how tragic its outcome could have been, has a happy ending.
So the word “crash”—which literally means violent collision, and figuratively implies much, much worse—really has no place in the coverage of the US Airways story. On the one hand, it’s an inaccurate depiction of this afternoon’s water landing (which was hard, according to passenger interviews, but nothing worse). On the other, the panic and fear inherent in the word—particularly when it’s used in relation to the word “plane”—miss the main point of this story completely. “Crash” suggests death, when the lede, here, is survival.
To many, that’s an obvious point. Online, in particular, the coverage of this afternoon’s breaking news—coverage that requires the act of writing, which in turn requires some degree of thoughtfulness—has featured a conspicuous lack of the word “crash.” The Washington Post’s write-up, headlined “US Airways Plane Goes Down in Hudson River,” doesn’t use the word once, choosing instead the more accurate—and more palliative—terms “went down” and “controlled landing in the water”:
A US Airways flight from LaGuardia Airport in New York went down in the Hudson River this afternoon, and rescuers moved quickly to remove passengers from the plane.
Authorities said there were no fatalities.
Flight 1549, an Airbus A320 with nearly 150 passengers on board, appeared to make a controlled landing in the water shortly after takeoff from New York bound for Charlotte, N.C.
The New York Times chose an even more things worked out fine tone in its write-up, headlined “Jet Ditches in Hudson; All Are Said Safe”:
A US Airways jetliner with 148 passengers and 5 crew members plunged into the icy Hudson River on Thursday afternoon five minutes after taking off from LaGuardia Airport, and a spokeswoman for the Federal Aviation Administration said everyone on board escaped safely.
Moments after the plane, a twin jet Airbus A320 bound for Charlotte, N.C., landed on the river near the mouth of the Lincoln Tunnel, at least a half-dozen small craft rushed to aircraft to rescue the freezing passengers and crew.
All in all: Pretty sober. Pretty reassuring. Pretty accurate.
Not so cable. Here’s just a small sampling, courtesy of the transcript database TVEyes, of the coverage TV news provided this afternoon:
MSNBC: “You will see a lot written about this crash as a miracle.”
CNN: “Brian Todd is taking a look at what apparently was the cause of the crash: birds.”
Fox: “This pilot is a walking miracle himself, if he survived this plane crash.”
CNN: “The crash happened in the Hudson River around 48th Street, but the plane is now drifting or being towed, that’s unclear, moving down the Hudson River.”
MSNBC: “…one of four here said to be prepared to care for any of the survivors of this crash.”
Fox: “The FBI is saying it has no information that this New York plane crash—that this crash was an act of terrorism.”
MSNBC: “Right now, looking at this live picture, we can report that New York waterway ferries helping make rescues following the plane crash in the Hudson River.”
CNN: “There are some amazing stories coming out of this crash.”
Et cetera.
Television coverage occasionally acknowledged the inappropriateness, in this context, of the word “crash”—“the landing or crash landing or splash landing,” CNN put it, indecisively, at one point; the plane “was going to make an intentional water landing, which I guess it did, but not a crash landing,” said MSNBC—and yet network anchors and commentators continued to use the word. Repeatedly. Precisely (again, per TVEyes) thirty-one times on the three major cable networks between 3:30 and 6:00 today.
Part of this is explainable by the fact that “crash,” as a word, simply flows more easily in speech than, say, “water landing”—and that it’s much more common than the NYT’s relatively obscure “ditch.” Cable’s “crash”-ophilia, in this instance, isn’t likely a case of conscious sensationalism so much as it’s a case of the unconscious: TV, in breaking-news coverage, traffics in spur-of-the-moment commentary from its narrators, and therefore is more susceptible than print to the vagaries of human emotion. (Were I talking to my friends about this afternoon’s event, I’d call it a crash; were I writing about it for public consumption, I would not.)
That’s an explanation, though—not an excuse. Any event that combines the terms “plane” and “New York City” and “crash” is bound to create panic, even if, in the next moment, the real situation—apparently-casualty-free water landing—is revealed. Those relating the story of that event, therefore, have an even greater responsibility than they usually do to be both accurate and sensitive in their narratives. Here’s yet another area where TV news can take a cue from its fellows in print: before you share information with the public…choose your words carefully.

None of the teevee talkers have any aviation safety expertise. They are no more informed than any other gawker on the street.
Matthew Wald, on the other hand, has systematically and carefully investigated the aviation industry and aviation safety, in particular.
I find your word choice analysis interesting, but the absence of analysis into the qualifications and expertise of the talker gawkers versus investigative journalists to be puzzling.
#1 Posted by Annie, CJR on Fri 16 Jan 2009 at 07:04 AM
I found ABC's John Berman most infuriating when he attributed Governor Patterson's comment about a "miracle on the Hudson" to Mayor Bloomberg.
I also found ABC's reliance on "eyewitness Robin Roberts" whose apartment is on Riverside Drive some 50 blocks north of the site to be over-reach write large. She really did not see anything.
#2 Posted by steve@esrati.com, CJR on Fri 16 Jan 2009 at 08:41 AM
There are two typos in my letter above. The governor's name is Paterson and I said "writ large."
#3 Posted by Stephen G. Esrati, CJR on Fri 16 Jan 2009 at 10:18 AM
If there was a miracle it was that there was no boat traffic and the water was dead calm. Pilots simulate this thing all the time, and Sullenberger executed what appeared to be a very good water landing. I particularly liked his second walk of the aisle.
Naturally the dribbling MSM want to expand this into some sort of miracle, that way they can jabber about it for days and ignore things with consequences to us all.
#4 Posted by messagecomplete, CJR on Mon 19 Jan 2009 at 04:11 PM
"Any landing you can walk away from was a good landing. Any landing you can walk away from and use the plane again was a great landing."
I am both a College grad [AB, 1968] and an experienced former professional pilot and flight instructor. The NTSB defines an accident as "an occurrence associated with the operation of an aircraft ... in which any person suffers death or serious injury, [sic] or in which the aircraft receives substantial damage." Given that the flight attendant's leg gash was classified as "serious" and the aircraft lost an engine, US Airways 549's ditching was an accident.
Captain Sullenberger made a good landing, but there's no point in sugar coating what could have happened. Focusing only on his landing means that we will fail to recognize and correct the conditions which made such a landing inevitable.
And sooner or later they will result in a major tragedy instead of a near one!
I can say with near certainty that this accident was caused by much more -- and much less -- than a multiple bird strike!
If you'd like to know more, visit me at:
http://us-airways-1549-crash-analysis.blogspot.com/
---Captain DT [Deep Throat]
#5 Posted by Captain DT [Deep Throat], CJR on Tue 10 Feb 2009 at 11:25 AM