That '70s Airshow
Business, babes, and barnstormers. For awhile, Reading, Pennsylvania, had it all.
- By Roger Mola
- Air & Space magazine, September 2001
(Page 5 of 7)
“The Red Arrows didn’t care,” recalls Cianci, who says that the team flew “their most dangerous maneuvers directly towards the thickest part of the crowd. After performing, they did a flyby within 100 feet of the tower, below our eye level—we were 65 feet in the tower cab—right over the chalets and VIP crowd.”
Airshow performer Bobby Bishop, pilot of the world’s smallest jet, the Bede BD-5J, remembers that 1972 appearance. “The Red Arrows were told by the FAA inspector, John Doster, to fly the routine the way they normally flew it,” he says. “I was by my plane watching the airshow, and I didn’t know which way to run. Bomb bursts right at the crowd, multiple solution crosses, and recovering 100 feet over the crowd’s heads.”
Cianci adds that even the Red Arrows’ C-130 transport buzzed 150 feet over a line of 7,000 people. “ ‘You stupid Limey son-of-a-bitch!’ I screamed at the C-130 pilot on my radio. Suddenly I see one of the show managers waving at me frantically from the ground and I realize that [the mike] was hot— live on the public address system to the entire airport. The Red Arrows pilot just came back with that casual tone: ‘Not to worry, Yank.’ They did whatever they wanted. I had to send letters of apology to everyone, from the Mayor to the County commissioners.”
When the military teams started flying, Reading management initiated a number of procedures that became routine at all air shows. Snow fences were added along show center to prevent jet wash from blowing over the light aircraft parked on the grass. Still, there were mishaps. In 1971 a hovering Harrier pilot burned a hole in the tarmac of Runway 13/31 that persisted through years of patches.
“We also had to lay down 30 to 40 white plastic strips for a total 4,000 feet for the military teams,” notes Cianci, in one of the earliest experimental applications of the method used to mark the show centerline for pilots’ visual orientation. “In the old days, they would just tell you to park a school bus or two as markers,” Cianci says.
The military demonstrations brought bigger crowds. Greater Reading has a population of 120,000 and is surrounded by farmland. Show management snagged farm fields each year as temporary lots but provided no paved parking. Local farmers learned to price for what the market would bear.
“Everyone wanted to jump on the bandwagon of the show’s success,” Cianci laments. “A 15-cent cup of coffee suddenly went for 50 cents. The airport authority parked cars and collected trash, so they also wanted a piece of the action. All the restaurants in town escalated their prices during show week and rooms were twice or more the usual.”
Still, he says, “Every motel room was filled, all the way to Pottstown, even at artificial prices.”
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Comments (4)
What memories. As a native son of Reading I fondly remember being on home leave from Taipei, Taiwan. I was staying at the Abe Lincoln hotel and Bill Arner had put my name on the marquee with the message "Welcome home Art Scholl" This was during the week of the Reading Air Show and some of my old friends and classmates thought that "Art Scholl" referred to the pilot rather than me.
Posted by Art Scholl on May 28,2012 | 06:41 AM
My wife, sister-in-law and I attended Airfest 98. We had a grand time! The incident I recall most was that one of the "Blue Angels" F-18s lost an engine during their performance. The pilot stealthily landed his crippled jet, jumped into the spare #7 jet and re-took his place within the formation...all in about 4-5 minutes! An extraordinary feat to cap an amazing day.
Posted by Perry Rotzell on July 4,2012 | 02:04 AM
I have the pleasure of caring for Breity for the last 5 years . He is the most interesting man I have ever met. He is now 95 and full of stories. The history that this Great Man has been part of makes me proud as a young American to have the honor of knowing him. He still live and dreams of flying. If it wasn't for men like him the world wouldn't be the same. Thank You Briety for being you.
Love,
your pretty girl Sherry.
Posted by sherry toner-keith on October 13,2012 | 11:23 AM
My parents were friends of Breity from their high school days and our families grew up together. He took me on my first airplane ride in a Cessna 150 and fueled my lifetime passion for aviation.
He was one of the best story tellers of all time and always had interesting ones to tell. I have some of my own about him.
Fascinating man and of historic significance regarding the contribution he and RAS meant to Reading and Berks County.
Thanks for many memories.
Posted by Tom Forester on December 31,2012 | 08:05 PM