Posted on 04/17/2014 8:28:50 AM PDT by logi_cal869
Sound farfetched that an entire missing airliner could be part of a huge viral marketing campaign for a "Lost" movie?
Really? Or perhaps you underestimate Bad Robot.
Updates here:
Unless they get lucky this search area will take a year and a half.
Meanwhile back at home:
(CNN) Families of some of the missing Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 passengers released a list of questions Wednesday that they said authorities have so far not answered.
Many of the 26 questions focus on technical issues involving emergency locator transmitters, or ELTs, and black boxes. With an apparent in-depth understanding of how these work, the families ask about the specific technology on the missing plane....
The families final seven questions involve protocol, including this: What did Malaysia Airlines do when the flight went missing?
The families also ask whether search and rescue teams have final results from searched areas, and whether the Malaysian government could specify the rights of family members to know the facts of cases or the details of an incident.
The questions were posted on the social media site Weibo by a committee in Beijing representing some of the passengers families. Some of the questions are requests that evidence be shared with them, including the flights logbook and air traffic control audio.
http://kplr11.com/2014/04/16/mh370-passengers-families-release-unanswered-questions/
It’s nonsense because even if a movie studio was able to pull such a stunt off, they would be immediately sued into bankruptcy and they would be the targets of world outrage. Think about the millions of dollars already expended by international search teams alone.
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