What ensued was chaos and confusion as Malaysian authorities embarked on what would later become the longest search for an aircraft in aviation history. Nothing seems off until MH370 vanishes from the radar. The three-part series begins on an emotional note, tracing the journey of the flight as grieving relatives reminisce the day their lives came crashing down. But what does the docuseries offer that we don't already know about? Well, theories, and those too, bizarre ones. So much so that Netflix came out with a documentary of the tragic event, despite reams being written about it. Nine years later, its perplexing disappearance continues to intrigue us. Nobody knew where MH 370 or the souls inside went until the debris, believed to be that of the airliner, was recovered from Reunion Island in 2017. The pilot, 53-year-old veteran Zaharie Ahmad Shah, who bade goodbye to the Malaysian ATC after it instructed him to contact the Ho Chi Minh ATC, was never heard from again. There was nothing remarkable about MH 370 until it stopped communicating with the ATC 30 minutes after taking off from Kuala Lumpur on March 8, 2014. Just minutes into Netflix's new docuseries MH 370: The Plane That Disappeared, aviation journalist Jeff Wise says, "Planes go up, planes go down, what planes don't do is just vanish off the surface of the earth." But then, how did Beijing-bound Malaysian airliner MH 370 vanish into thin air?
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