Watch A Flying Lincoln Town Car Spectacularly Crash Down San Francisco’s Sanchez Street Stairs

Flying Lincoln San Francisco Crash Topshot
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How many times do humans have to learn that full-size Lincolns don’t fly well? In October 1979, American stuntman Kenny Powers (not the one you’re thinking of) tried to fly a rocket-powered Lincoln Continental across the St. Lawrence River with predictable results. Almost 44 years later, media outlet SFist reports that someone sent a Lincoln Town Car off San Francisco’s Sanchez Street stairs, also with predictable results. Oh, and like the infamous Super Jump, this latest incident was captured on video. Take a look:

Don’t get me wrong, it’s still a shocking crash, but with pedestrians, traffic, parked cars, and several tons of concrete in the area, this is as close as the Town Car driver could’ve come to sticking the landing. The area was clear of people, the car rotated ass-over-face, a tree helped break the fall, and the only vehicle the Lincoln hit was a second-generation BMW X3 that received a love tap on the bumper and a showering of falling tree debris. With the miracles of modern paintless dent repair and the relative inexpensiveness of plastic parts, there’s a good chance that thing isn’t totaled.

The San Francisco Fire Department has confirmed that this was a no-injury crash both on Twitter, which might not be Twitter anymore, and to SFist, a media outlet whose name can be read two ways. Granted, the no-injury status of this crash might be due to how everyone in the Town Car dipped pretty much as soon as they returned to terra firma. Still, everyone involved walked away, so you didn’t just watch someone die on video. Oh, and speaking of video, Twitter user BlueyAnon posted some footage of the run-up to this Town Car’s fateful end.

Man, talk about blowing a braking point. Now look, I like playing Driver: San Francisco as much as the next guy, but those scenarios of leaping through Bay Area streets just aren’t realistic. Stunt jumps don’t typically exist in real life for a reason — it’s incredibly easy to get hurt or killed when launching a vehicle through the air, as the landing’s what typically gets you. Everyone involved here, save for perhaps the owner of that BMW X3, is extraordinarily lucky.

If you ever find yourself in San Francisco with a disposable Lincoln Town Car, don’t try this. This is incredibly dumb. Astonishing to watch, but mostly incredibly dumb. I don’t know how someone surpassed the over-street aerial idiocy we saw back when someone jumped a Tesla Model S in LA, but that’s life. It never fails to surprise you, good or bad.

[Hat Tip to Mike!]

(Photo credits: Julia Brown/YouTube)

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54 thoughts on “Watch A Flying Lincoln Town Car Spectacularly Crash Down San Francisco’s Sanchez Street Stairs

  1. I live in an area of Philadelphia that has lots of staircases like this between streets and neighborhoods and anytime I walk on them I’m always thinking is a car about to barrel of control, either by no parking brake or no brakes in general, down the stairs.

  2. It is not the flying but the landing that will get you. Fortunately Frisco is as barren as the Mohave dessert nowadays.so no injuries.

  3. If you’re going to San Francisco
    Be sure to wear some tree leaves in your hair
    If you’re going to San Francisco
    You’re gonna meet some Lincoln people there

    For those who come to San Francisco
    Cars will be careening down the stairs
    In the streets of San Francisco
    Lincoln Town Cars flying through the air

  4. Damn it who switched grandma’s meds around again?! She’s not willing to give up the Wild Turkey and was specifically told not to take the pain medications before happy hour!

  5. Good on the bystanders that didn’t just stand there and use their phones to film the incident.
    A couple people really rushed in to help.
    If you do jump in I was taught (could be outdated advice, correct me if I’m wrong).
    1. Don’t say “someone call 911” appoint someone directly to call so everyone doesn’t think someone else is doing so.
    2. Don’t start pulling people out of the vehicle unless it’s completely necessary. Try and keep them where they are until EMS arrives (pulling them out could aggravate internal or spinal injuries).

      1. When a person is hanging upside down from a harness in a car, we were taught to let the upside-down person initiate the unbuckling process if they were capable of doing so. This avoids turning them into a lawn dart as they crash down into the roof of the car. Getting out from that situation in a caged car can be very tricky so we make sure the occupant can brace themselves before unbuckling.

        Edit: Words be hard

  6. Many of our cities are located on land that isn’t exactly ideal, and SF is one of them.
    Try driving around that city… sitting at a light pointed straight down, with your seat belt the only thing preventing you from tasting your windshield. Hills so steep that you put the car in park and the pawl snaps. I saw one driver park but couldn’t get out, because they couldn’t open the door against gravity. I saw a car squeal through a downhill red light with all four wheels locked.
    But hey, Palo Alto sure is nice.

    1. I once rode my Ninja – with a passenger on the back – down Lombard Street.

      That was essentially an extended pushup, holding us both up and helping the passenger to stay on the pillion.

  7. ‘SFist, a media outlet whose name can be read two ways.’ Three, I think you’ll find. The intended ‘ess eff ist’, the rude ‘ess fist’, and the self-referential ‘sophist’.

    1. In this day and age? No way I’m touching anyone because you never know how they’ll respond. You could get shot, stabbed and/or sued out of this life.

  8. Man, driver treated those stairs like they were the front door of a Florida supermarket. Let me guess the cause “I was standing on the brake pedal, but the car kept going, I think I was hacked”

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