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Las personas todavía recuerdan en dónde estaban cuando esto sucedió. Bienvenido a WatchMojo Español, hoy veremos 20 de las cosas más impactantes que han ocurrido en televisión en directo.

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00:00I heard them say major malfunction, and then the person beside me said it's exploded.
00:14But this time, one fan went too far, and for it he paid the ultimate price.
00:31Unfortunately, he was also a very unhealthy man, as he smoked and drank a lot.
00:36On April 15, 1984, he acted in front of 12 million viewers in a variety show called Live From Her Majesty's.
00:47In the middle of the act, Cooper stopped reacting and collapsed.
00:50As he was known for his humor, the audience thought he was part of the show and laughed, not knowing that he had suffered a fatal heart attack.
01:01Cooper was urgently transferred to the hospital, but when he arrived, they announced his death.
01:11The tragedy of Hillsborough.
01:15Sports events live can end in disaster and cause millions of viewers to die.
01:22On April 15, 1989, Liverpool and Nottingham Forest faced each other in the semi-final of the FA Cup.
01:30Liverpool fans only had one access point to the stadium, which caused a dangerous jamming.
01:37The crowd ended up causing a fatal crush, as thousands of spectators were trapped in the fences.
01:44The influx of fans caused severe crushing in the two pens.
01:47More than 90 people died and almost 800 were injured.
01:52Three other victims died over the years due to the injuries, with the number of deaths rising to 97.
01:59At first, the tragedy was attributed to vandalism, but later investigations determined that the design of the stadium and the negligence of the police had been responsible.
02:09The extent to which tragedy has touched the game throughout the whole country and beyond these shores is apparent.
02:15The San Esteban Day Tsunami.
02:17World news channels tuned in to Southeast Asia on December 26, 2004, to cover what is now known as the San Esteban Day Tsunami.
02:27The most powerful earthquake recorded in the history of Asia shook the Sumatra coast, causing huge tsunamis up to 30 meters high.
02:36Over the next few hours, the tsunami would crash over coastlines from Southeast Asia to East Africa.
02:42These tsunamis broke against the surrounding coastal areas and claimed the lives of more than 220,000 people.
02:49Spectators saw devastating images of the tragedy from their homes, as whole villages destroyed and flooded in the water.
02:57It was a big biblical, almost like a CGI event from a film.
03:03The images also helped to attract humanitarian response, as countries around the world raised $14 billion to help with the restoration.
03:17Arlington's Ballpark Stadium opened in April 1994 and there was immediately a tragedy.
03:24During the game at the stadium, a fan fell from a railing on the right field and broke several bones.
03:31It was a ominous sign of what was to come.
03:34On July 7, 2011, the Rangers played against the Athletics.
03:40A ball entered the left garden and Josh Hamilton threw himself at fan Shannon Stone, who was with his 6-year-old son.
03:48He caught her, fell 6 meters from the railing and landed head-on on the concrete.
04:01Although he was conscious after the fall, he died of a traumatic event by force on his way to the hospital.
04:12The collision of the Phoenix News helicopter.
04:14The tragedy can attack at any time, even while an apparently harmless police chase is covered.
04:21The Phoenix Chains, KNXV-TV and KTVK were covering the chase in the helicopter and broadcasting it live on their respective channels.
04:31During the chase, a reporter screams surprised while the camera goes static and a metallic screech is heard.
04:40The presenter of the station looks surprised at the camera and simply says,
04:44We don't know what just happened.
04:46What happened was that both news helicopters crashed in mid-flight.
04:50They fell and the four people on board died.
04:53Today all the Phoenix News Chains share a single helicopter to avoid more tragedies of this type.
05:03The death of Dale Earhart.
05:05When someone is in his best condition, he seems to be invincible.
05:09I'm even stronger this year, I'm working out and staying in shape.
05:12Dale Earhart is a NASCAR legend with seven World Cup championships,
05:17but his life came to an end on February 18, 2001, when he was running in the 500 miles of Daytona.
05:23Dale Earhart has died from a crash suffered in Sunday's Daytona 500.
05:28In the last curve of the last lap, he came into contact with two other cars
05:32and collided head-on against the wall of contention at 257 km per hour.
05:37One of the runners with whom he had crashed ran towards his car
05:41and called the paramedics frenetically after seeing inside.
05:45He immediately learned that Dale had left,
05:48but his death was not officially announced until two hours later.
05:53The shooting of Alison Parker and Adam Gard.
05:55In the early morning of August 26, 2015,
05:58reporter Alison Parker was interviewing Vicky Gardner,
06:02director of the local trade chamber, about the next activities in Smith Mountain Lake.
06:07Photographer Adam Gard was also present, recording the segment for WDBJ by Roanoke.
06:14Exactly at 6.46 in the morning, shots were fired
06:17and Gard's camera fell to the ground before the images returned to the studio.
06:24The culprit was a former employee of WDBJ who had been fired for volatile behavior.
06:30He murdered both Parker and Gard and hurt Gardner.
06:39Then there was a chase and the author ended up taking his own life.
06:47Daniel V. Jones.
06:48After discovering that he had cancer and HIV,
06:51Daniel Jones decided to take his own life and protest against the American health system.
06:56He did it live on television.
07:01He sent news helicopters to the scene and broke in with live coverage of the event.
07:05He called the police and acted erratically on the Los Angeles highway,
07:09throwing things from a bridge, making obscene gestures to the helicopters
07:13and deploying a protest banner about the greedy HMO.
07:18Then things got violent.
07:20Jones set his truck on fire.
07:23And after walking stunned and disoriented, he took his own life with a shotgun.
07:31All this was shown live on television with graphic details,
07:34which caused widespread criticism for the Los Angeles news channels.
07:43The Los Angeles riots of 1992.
07:46For almost a week of the spring of 1992, Los Angeles was on fire
07:51and the different news channels were there to catch it.
07:55This thing is swaying as the minutes go by.
07:57The riots began after the absolution of the four police officers accused of beating Rodney King
08:02and continued uninterruptedly for six days,
08:05with the result of 63 deaths, thousands of injuries and more than $1 billion in material damage.
08:12The riot was widely covered by the main media,
08:16which collected widespread acts of vandalism, destruction and intentional damage.
08:21We are hearing loud noises, I don't know what they are.
08:24This includes the attack on truck driver Reginald Denny,
08:27who was pulled out of his vehicle and almost killed in front of the news helicopters live.
08:33I remember the events of that day like it was yesterday.
08:38It just does not go away.
08:41WACO.
08:42On February 28, 1993, agents from the Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives Agency
08:48tried to deliver an arrest warrant against the Davidianos de la Rama,
08:52a sect that operated from the center of Mount Carmel, in a rural area of Texas.
08:57There was a shooting that caused 10 deaths.
09:07This shooting triggered WACO's siege,
09:10in which the FBI remained outside Mount Carmel for almost two months,
09:15while the members of the Davidianos de la Rama remained inside.
09:19The siege ended in a tragedy on April 19,
09:22when a massive fire burned down the complex and killed more than 70 people.
09:32WACO events are still fiercely debated,
09:34and the fire is blamed on both sides.
09:37In any case, it was a media sensation that generated a huge controversy for the US government.
09:46The Manila hostage crisis.
09:48The agent of the Philippine National Police, Rolando Mendoza, was fired in 2009.
09:53A year later, on August 23, 2010,
09:56he embarked on a tragically failed attempt to regain his job.
10:05He planned to kidnap the bus and keep it as a hostage
10:08until he was given the opportunity to defend himself in court.
10:12The crisis lasted two hours,
10:14and the negotiations between Mendoza and the police were broadcast live on television.
10:19Then his brother, Gregorio, illegally crossed the exclusion zone to talk to him,
10:24which caused his arrest.
10:26Enraged by this situation, which he saw through the news live on the bus,
10:30Mendoza began to execute the hostages.
10:33Nine people died, including Mendoza, who was finally shot down by a sniper.
10:43The Munich massacre.
10:45According to the CBC, the Munich massacre was the first time
10:48that a terrorist act was broadcast live on television,
10:52with approximately 900 million people tuning in
10:56to see how the events were unfolding.
10:59It began on September 5, 1972,
11:02when a militant organization called September Negro
11:05raided the Olympic Games in the summer and attacked the Israeli team.
11:09Two people died immediately, and another nine were taken as hostages,
11:13while September Negro demanded the release of Palestinian prisoners.
11:17Like the Manila crisis, this also ended in a disaster.
11:26After a failed attempt to rescue by the West German police,
11:30the nine hostages were executed without mercy.
11:33Five terrorists and an agent of the German police also died in the attack.
11:37As a result, the number of casualties rose to 17.
11:45Ayrton Senna's accident.
11:51Like Dale Earnhardt, Ayrton Senna is a very decorated driver,
11:55winner of the Formula 1 World Championship on three different occasions.
12:00Senna, who was driving for Williams-Renault,
12:03won the first three Poles of the 1994 World Championship,
12:07including the San Marino one, which is where he lost his life.
12:11When he was in the famous Tamburello curve on the seventh lap,
12:15he got off the track and collided with the wall at 233 km per hour.
12:19In the accident, his temporal artery was broken,
12:22so he had to be treated immediately at the hospital.
12:25Unfortunately, the injuries were too serious and he died.
12:29A doctor later declared that he had probably died immediately
12:33after colliding with the wall, as his brain had stopped working.
12:45Columbine.
12:46The United States stopped on April 20, 1999.
12:50when Eric Harris and Dylan Clavel killed more than 10 people
12:54and injured more than 20 at the Columbine School in Colorado.
13:03At that time, it was the deadliest shooting in a school in the history of the United States,
13:08and its consequences were shockingly shown on live television.
13:12Reporters were out of the facilities,
13:15and interviewed the survivors after escaping and being safe.
13:24Perhaps the most famous live image of the shooting
13:27was that of Patrick Ireland, seriously injured,
13:30coming out of a window of the library and falling on a nearby vehicle.
13:34He survived and became known as the boy from the window.
13:37So representative and viral was the image in all media.
13:41Hurricane Katrina.
13:42Natural disasters are the food of live television,
13:46as the news channels try to keep viewers up to date
13:50with each and every event.
13:58This happened with the San Esteban day tsunami,
14:01as well as the Katrina hurricane at the end of August 2012.
14:05It is well known for having hit New Orleans,
14:08where the situation worsened due to failures in the city's dikes.
14:17Most of the city was destroyed and underwater,
14:20and the images spread widely in the media.
14:24In the end, Katrina caused damage for a value of 190 billion dollars.
14:30In the end, Katrina caused damage for a value of 190 billion dollars.
14:35And thousands of deaths.
14:43Christine Chabock.
14:44The first person who took her life live on television was Christine Chabock,
14:48a news reporter who worked for WXLT in Florida.
14:58Chabock suffered from depression.
14:59She was mainly fed by her loneliness and inability to find a partner.
15:04As her 30th birthday approached quickly,
15:07she fell into despair, so she perceived it as a failed social life.
15:11She organized what many colleagues consider a farewell party
15:15and took her life on July 15, 1974.
15:25After reading a series of news,
15:27he pulled out a .38 revolver and shot himself in the right ear.
15:31The director immediately cut to black,
15:33but it was too late for the spectators,
15:37who had witnessed Chabock's last moments live.
15:43The 2011 Tohoku tsunami.
15:45Another natural disaster.
15:47More destruction live.
15:49This happened on March 11, 2011,
15:51when a strong earthquake shook the eastern coast of Japan.
15:55It was the most powerful in the history of the country
15:57and caused waves that measured up to 40 meters
16:00and traveled at almost 692 kilometers per hour.
16:09The destruction killed almost 20,000 people
16:11and hundreds of thousands more were injured and displaced.
16:15It also directly caused the Fukushima nuclear accident,
16:18which was widely covered in the news and displaced thousands of people.
16:22The tsunami is still the most expensive natural disaster in human history,
16:26as it caused damage worth more than $300 billion.
16:41On January 20, 1981,
16:43Arbat Wire became Pennsylvania's seventeenth treasurer
16:47and would remain so for the next six years.
16:51Unfortunately, he was involved in a scandal
16:54when it was discovered that he had accepted a bribe from Computer Technology Associates
16:58to facilitate a contract related to a state tax issue.
17:06He was found guilty and his sentence was set for January 23, 1987.
17:11He could have faced up to 50 years in prison.
17:15Right up until the end, Wire maintained his innocence.
17:29The incident caught viewers off guard.
17:46The project was quite popular,
17:48generated widespread interest by the launch of the Challenger
17:52and started a cultural fascination for space exploration.
17:56As a result, schools throughout the country tuned in
17:59and allowed students to watch the launch live on television.
18:03But on January 28, 1986,
18:06everyone saw how the space vehicle exploded in real time,
18:09killing everyone.
18:12It was a national disaster of epic proportions that will never be forgotten.
18:21Hey, we're not done yet, but almost.
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18:29They will surely help you.
18:31Hey, we're not done yet, but almost.
18:33Don't forget to subscribe to our channel
18:35and activate the bell to receive notifications of our latest videos.
18:39They will surely help you.
18:41Now, let's go to the end.
18:43September 11.
18:45September 11, 2001 is a day that will live in infamy.
18:53It is one of those days that people will never forget,
18:56in which they remember exactly where they were
18:58and what they were doing when they found out.
19:00Virtually everything related to the 11S was broadcast live on television,
19:05immediately after the first air crash
19:08and during the following days and weeks.
19:14The programs were interrupted to cover the news
19:17and the spectators who were at home witnessed things
19:20like the impact of the second plane against the South Tower
19:23and the collapse of the two towers in real time.
19:26They are impressive images that will be recorded forever
19:29in the collective memory.
19:36Did you see any of them live?
19:43Tell us in the comments
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