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US-Bangla Airlines Flight 211 was a scheduled international passenger flight from Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport in Dhaka, Bangladesh, to Tribhuvan International Airport in Kathmandu, Nepal, that crashed on 12 March 2018 while landing, killing 51 of the 71 people aboard.
In July 2013, KTVU in San Francisco aired fake names of the Asiana Airlines Flight 214 pilots: "Captain Sum Ting Wong" ("Captain, something wrong"), "Wi Tu Lo" ("we too low"), "Ho Lee Fuk" ("holy fuck"), and "Bang Ding Ow" (onomatopoeia possibly involved with a crash), a false report which had been incorrectly confirmed by an NTSB intern acting ...
Sum Ting Wong, a double entendre for "something wrong", may refer to: A gag name used in the Asiana Airlines Flight 214 KTVU prank Sum Ting Wong (drag queen) , a British drag queen
US-Bangla Airlines' headquarters are in the Baridhara Diplomatic Zone in Dhaka. Though the airline is the flagship company of the parent US-Bangla Group, the group owns numerous businesses in other industries such as real estate, education, media, electronics, and consumer foods.
A comedian’s joke about the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 has sparked furore in Malaysia and Singapore.. The foreign ministers of both countries condemned comedian Jocelyn Chia ...
With a total death toll of 49 people, it is the deadliest aviation disaster to occur on Bangladeshi soil and also the airline's worst accident. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] It was also the deadliest accident involving a Bangladeshi airline until the crash of US-Bangla Airlines Flight 211 in 2018.
Actress Ali Wong is opening up about her normally private relationship with boyfriend Bill Hader. In her recent Netflix comedy special, Ali Wong: Single Lady, the Always Be My Maybe star, 42 ...
Sum Ting Wong's name comes from an incident in 2013, when KTVU in San Francisco aired stereotypical Chinese-sounding gag names of the Asiana Airlines Flight 214 pilots including "Sum Ting Wong" (something wrong), "Wi Tu Lo" (we [are] too low), "Ho Lee Fuk" (holy fuck), and "Bang Ding Ow" (onomatopoeias of sounds made when crash landing).