Talk:Stan Rogers
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[edit] Plane crash
I am currently reading ... i guess its a biography on Stan Rogers, called "An Unfinished Conversation" by Chris Gudgeon. It talks in detail about the fire aboard flight 797, but it says nothing about him helping other passengers out of the plane. I removed the sentence saying he did, unless someone can prove from a reliable source that it's true. SECProto 03:03, 5 Dec 2004 (UTC)
Response about plane crash:
I agree that the focus should be on Stan Rogers music, not on the manner of his death. I'm the one who added in the part that some "reports at the time" said that he stayed on to help others, the reason I did it was that a previous writer put in information that he died of smoke inhalation, so it seemed relevant. Note that I did not outright state that he helped, only that reports at the time said that he helped. My basis for putting it in was (1) I remember it being a common belief around the time of his death and (2) in the cited obituary that I added to the article earlier, his mother is reported as saying that she was told that he helped others off the plane. Double hearsay, and maybe someone was trying to comfort her, but that's what I have.
Based on a story from the June 4, 1983 issue of the Boston Globe, "Fire may have begun in rear lavatory," this is what I can reliably report: The fire started in the back of the plane about fifteen minutes before the pilot was able to land, and the cabin started to fill up with smoke. According to passenger Roy Grubbs of Waxahachie, Texas, after the plane landed flames shot through the cabin "like lighting a fuse on a firecracker." All those who died were dead within 60 seconds of the landing: apparently when they opened the doors to get out the oxygen rushing in caused the fire to flare up as Grubbs described. Airport staff credited the crew with saving the the 18 passengers who survived(all 5 crew members also survived), but the airport staff weren't on the plane, and it doesn't say that people on the plane didn't also try to help each other. Given the speed of the fire, it is quite believable that Rogers could have died as a result of something as simple as hanging toward the back of the line to keep an eye on a frail person when he normally would have been toward the front of the line due to where he was sitting-- that would count as staying to help in my book.
In NPR's "Weekend Edition," August 5, 2000, Rogers' producer Paul Mills says that there is a "persistant rumor" that Rogers got out and then went back in to save people, but that he doesn't know if that is true. That story seems less likely to me, given the report in the Boston Globe. I say, leave the reference in if you are going to have more than the most basic mention of the accident, and go with what his mother reportedly said, that he could have gotten off but stayed to help other people get out. Ideally, where to put all this exposition could be solved through the magic of hyperlinks by having a separate article on the crash of Flight 797, leaving this article for discussion of Rogers' work. Crypticfirefly 04:17, 13 September 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Rewrite
Editors to this page will notice that the recent diffs have a lot of red. This is NOT because information has been deleted, but because it has been reorganized quite a bit, and some new things added. This is in preparation for a major expansion and rewrite of the article that I am preparing to undertake. Please bear with me and help out if you can. Right now it still reads fairly roughly, mostly because there are major gaps that need to be filled. However, despite the fact that it may take some time, the eventual goal is to get the article up to featured article status. Let's go for it. You may have noticed some recent edits by an anon user 24.226.10.99 - this is Ariel Rogers, who should be an invaluable resource for fact-checking as we go, and who has kindly agreed to help find a suitable image... Regards, Fawcett5 18:57, 12 October 2005 (UTC)