MH370: The Plane That Disappeared is a documentary series directed by Louise Malkinson.
239 missing persons, a mysterious cargo, theories about espionage, hijacking… one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history.
About the documentary series
MH370 is a mystery within a mystery: a plane that took off and quite simply disappeared without a trace. What happened to the Malaysian Airlines plane?
Right on March 7 – now almost ten years ago – a flight between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing that still remains, to this day, an unsolved mystery.
As for the documentary series… an exceptionally well-documented piece of work, which tries to cover all the angles and offer us theories about the disappearance of the flight, testimonies, cover all the aspects surrounding its disappearance, tell the stories of its crew members, and all the media coverage that surrounded the event.
Three episodes to immerse ourselves in one of the great journalistic mysteries of the modern era.
239 missing persons, a mysterious cargo, theories about espionage, hijacking… one of the greatest mysteries in aviation history.
About the documentary series
MH370 is a mystery within a mystery: a plane that took off and quite simply disappeared without a trace. What happened to the Malaysian Airlines plane?
Right on March 7 – now almost ten years ago – a flight between Kuala Lumpur and Beijing that still remains, to this day, an unsolved mystery.
As for the documentary series… an exceptionally well-documented piece of work, which tries to cover all the angles and offer us theories about the disappearance of the flight, testimonies, cover all the aspects surrounding its disappearance, tell the stories of its crew members, and all the media coverage that surrounded the event.
Three episodes to immerse ourselves in one of the great journalistic mysteries of the modern era.
- 3/8/2023
- by TV Shows Martin Cid Magazine
- Martin Cid - TV
Planes go up. Planes go down. What planes don’t do is just vanish off the face of the Earth.” These are the words of aviation journalist Jeff Wise, who features in Netflix’s chilling new docuseries, MH370: The Plane that Disappeared. But on 8 March 2014, that’s precisely what happened. A Malaysia Airlines flight with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board departed its home capital of Kuala Lumpur and never landed at its planned destination of Beijing. What occurred after the aircraft last communicated with air traffic control 38 minutes after take-off has been the subject of innumerable theories in the years since – some plausible, some risible – many of which are explored in this three-parter. “It’s important that people still talk about MH370 and don’t just forget about it,” director Louise Malkinson tells me over Zoom. “It’s a mystery that hasn’t been solved and I think it’s...
- 3/8/2023
- by Tom Murray
- The Independent - TV
Planes go up. Planes go down. What planes don’t do is just vanish off the face of the Earth.” These are the words of aviation journalist Jeff Wise, who features in Netflix’s chilling new docuseries, MH370: The Plane that Disappeared. But on 8 March 2014, that’s precisely what happened. A Malaysia Airlines flight with 227 passengers and 12 crew on board departed its home capital of Kuala Lumpur and never landed at its planned destination of Beijing. What occurred after the aircraft last communicated with air traffic control 38 minutes after take-off has been the subject of innumerable theories in the years since – some plausible, some risible – many of which are explored in this three-parter. “It’s important that people still talk about MH370 and don’t just forget about it,” director Louise Malkinson tells me over Zoom. “It’s a mystery that hasn’t been solved and I think it’s...
- 3/8/2023
- by Tom Murray
- The Independent - TV
Belize is a wonderful country, and a great place to enjoy a vacation. Personally, I admire John McAfee for his sense of adventure and his enthusiasm at identifying and taking on challenges. And I found aerotrekking to be a hoot. But let's not lose sight of the central issue: Did McAfee invent, market, and implement a sport that was fundamentally dangerous, and which caused the death of one of his customers? If so, and a court orders him to pay damages, should he honor that obligation?
It seems commenters on the pro and con side are doing a fine job debating the merits of my story themselves. But a few facts are worth clearing up, if only to show that some of the semantics at play are a diversion from the central question.
McAfee says I didn't talk to his lawyer about another suit. I saw paper on that suit and was aware of it.
It seems commenters on the pro and con side are doing a fine job debating the merits of my story themselves. But a few facts are worth clearing up, if only to show that some of the semantics at play are a diversion from the central question.
McAfee says I didn't talk to his lawyer about another suit. I saw paper on that suit and was aware of it.
- 4/23/2010
- by Jeff Wise
- Fast Company
Swamp King: McAfee (and his airboat pilot Ruben) near Lamanai, in the Belizean interior | Photograph by Rob Howard
Dr. Feelgood: McAfee and Allison Adonizio (at their lab in Belize) have moved from developing natural antibiotics to searching for a female Viagra. | Photograph by Rob Howard
John McAfee, the antivirus-software pioneer, says he's lost most of his fortune -- but doesn't care. To the contrary, he now hopes to give something back by deriving antibiotics from jungle plants in Belize. Really?
A Pauper's Retreat: Two views of McAfee's Belize redoubt (the double lot alone is worth about $1.5 million). At right, one of McAfee's "trikes," similar to the one his nephew and a client died on in New Mexico back in 2006. | Photograph by Rob Howard
No road runs the length of Ambergris Caye, a 25-mile-long island off the Belizean coast, so to get to John McAfee's house, I climb aboard a boat...
Dr. Feelgood: McAfee and Allison Adonizio (at their lab in Belize) have moved from developing natural antibiotics to searching for a female Viagra. | Photograph by Rob Howard
John McAfee, the antivirus-software pioneer, says he's lost most of his fortune -- but doesn't care. To the contrary, he now hopes to give something back by deriving antibiotics from jungle plants in Belize. Really?
A Pauper's Retreat: Two views of McAfee's Belize redoubt (the double lot alone is worth about $1.5 million). At right, one of McAfee's "trikes," similar to the one his nephew and a client died on in New Mexico back in 2006. | Photograph by Rob Howard
No road runs the length of Ambergris Caye, a 25-mile-long island off the Belizean coast, so to get to John McAfee's house, I climb aboard a boat...
- 4/21/2010
- by Jeff Wise
- Fast Company
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