@serenapaiege: Read with me💌 #bookish #reading #Vlog #tiktokcontest

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Thursday 02 July 2026 18:01:40 GMT
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keikoreads
𝓚𝓮𝓲 🦆 :
One of my five stars read this year!! 💖💖
2026-07-03 09:45:06
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mydigitalbookdiary
beatrix ও | booktok :
You still read it👀👀
2026-07-02 19:39:10
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The 2018 Horizon Air Q400 incident — often called the Seattle-Tacoma Airport plane theft or simply the story of “Sky King” — is one of the most surreal and tragic events in modern aviation history. On August 10, 2018, Richard “Beebo” Russell, a 28-year-old (or 29, depending on sources) ground service agent for Horizon Air (a regional subsidiary of Alaska Airlines), used his employee access badge to board an empty Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 turboprop aircraft (registration N449QX) parked in a maintenance area at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport (Sea-Tac). The plane had recently arrived from Victoria, British Columbia, and wasn’t scheduled to fly again that day. Despite having no formal pilot training (he later joked about learning from video games and flight simulators), Russell managed to start the engines, taxi the aircraft to a runway, and take off without clearance around 7:32 PM local time. He performed the takeoff roll with the wheels reportedly smoking from the brakes, then lifted off from runway 16C/16L. The event exposed significant gaps in airport security for ground employees with airside access, leading to reviews and some procedural changes at Sea-Tac and similar facilities. It also sparked broader discussions about mental health in high-stress jobs like aviation support roles. Russell’s calm demeanor, humor amid despair, and the raw honesty in his ATC exchanges struck a chord with many people online. He gained the affectionate nickname “Sky King” in internet communities, where some viewed his flight as a poignant, almost poetic act of rebellion or escape — though it was undeniably a tragic loss of life. Do you think he lived his life the way he wanted?#bekind #fyp #Love #bekind
The 2018 Horizon Air Q400 incident — often called the Seattle-Tacoma Airport plane theft or simply the story of “Sky King” — is one of the most surreal and tragic events in modern aviation history. On August 10, 2018, Richard “Beebo” Russell, a 28-year-old (or 29, depending on sources) ground service agent for Horizon Air (a regional subsidiary of Alaska Airlines), used his employee access badge to board an empty Bombardier Dash 8 Q400 turboprop aircraft (registration N449QX) parked in a maintenance area at Seattle–Tacoma International Airport (Sea-Tac). The plane had recently arrived from Victoria, British Columbia, and wasn’t scheduled to fly again that day. Despite having no formal pilot training (he later joked about learning from video games and flight simulators), Russell managed to start the engines, taxi the aircraft to a runway, and take off without clearance around 7:32 PM local time. He performed the takeoff roll with the wheels reportedly smoking from the brakes, then lifted off from runway 16C/16L. The event exposed significant gaps in airport security for ground employees with airside access, leading to reviews and some procedural changes at Sea-Tac and similar facilities. It also sparked broader discussions about mental health in high-stress jobs like aviation support roles. Russell’s calm demeanor, humor amid despair, and the raw honesty in his ATC exchanges struck a chord with many people online. He gained the affectionate nickname “Sky King” in internet communities, where some viewed his flight as a poignant, almost poetic act of rebellion or escape — though it was undeniably a tragic loss of life. Do you think he lived his life the way he wanted?#bekind #fyp #Love #bekind

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