Real Survival Stories
Real Survival Stories

Reporter Trapped: Story Catches Fire

15d ago44:386,214 words
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A TV news reporter gets trapped right in the middle of his own incendiary story. Rob Roth is following up on a small wildfire in the forested hills surrounding Oakland, California - a blaze which fire...

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The legendary checkout of Shopify, for just the shop on your website, is the ...

It's late morning, on Sunday, October 20, 1991, in the San Francisco Bay area of California.

Just a couple of hours earlier, the sun shone against a dazzling, cloudless stretch of Azure Sky.

Now, day seems to have morphed into night. The brilliant blue expense subsumed when if a suffocating shroud of harsh dense smoke. Ash and smoldering embers swirled through the darkened air, carried along by erratic gusts of hot dry wind from the nearby Diablo mountain range. In Oakland, just across the Bay from San Francisco, everything seems baked in an airy orange glow.

Wailing sirens fill the city as emergency vehicles race along winding roads, speeding into the surrounding hills.

Here, where the slopes are densely covered in tall ancient trees and luscious vegetation, a wildfire is devastating the landscape. It tears through the foliage and the undergrowth, gorgeing itself on the greenery as it sweeps across the undulating terrain, leaving nothing but charred, skeletal trunks, and scorched earth in its wake.

It's spreading with lethal, terrifying speed.

On one of the forested slopes on the outskirts of the city, blindly unaware of quite how fast the fire is moving. Reporter Rob Roth and cameraman Nick Sores watch as blazing spires shoot up across the hillside in front of them. Thick plumes of smoke drift towards the two men, but they're unconcerned. The conflagration is still a good distance away from them. They don't appear to be in any immediate danger. The news van is parked nearby so they can make a quick getaway if needed. Besides, they're getting some great footage.

The TV journalism side of it was we're getting excited because we're getting good stuff. The beginning of this huge firestorm, which you don't usually get video like that. But then, in an instant, Rob and Nick's sense of excitement melts away. Suddenly, the winds pick up. The currents spiraling and twisting. Clashing and colliding seem to come from everywhere it once.

These winds just kept coming in and they kept swirling from all directions. And suddenly this smoke got more and more and it felt almost instantaneously that the whole hillside was becoming engulfed. Ash and dust blow into the men's faces as fierce gusts propel huge clouds of black smoke towards them, stinging their eyes and scratching their lungs. The frenzied fire advances, acquiring intensity and momentum with every meter of grounded gains.

The smoke closes in around Rob and Nick, swallowing their news van up in seconds and obscuring their exits. Behind is a steep drop. The two men turned to look at each other as realisation, horror and disbelief set in all at once. They are trapped directly in the path of the fire that is thundering towards them. There is no way out.

There was really no place to go and the smoke had been above us as now getting closer and we kind of looked at each other. And I remember thinking that this can't be happening, there was just nowhere to go.

Ever wondered what you would do when disaster strikes?

If your life depended on your next decision, could you make the right choice? Welcome to Real Survival Stories. These are the astonishing tales of ordinary people thrown into extra ordinary situations. People suddenly forced a fight for their lives. In this episode, we meet Rob Roth.

In October 1991, the TV reporter is following up on a small wildfire in the forested hills surrounding Oakland, California, which firefighters got on the control the day before.

With his wife due to give birth to their first baby today, Rob is hoping to be finished at work quickly in order to get home early.

What should be a fairly routine assignment soon takes a hellish turn.

When the winds suddenly change, causing the small blaze to reignite and spread with horrifying speed, Rob and Nick find themselves trapped in the middle of one of the worst firestorms in American history.

There was no obvious exit from where we were because there were smoke in three directions and then the fourth direction which was behind us.

There was no way because it was just a steep drop.

How is survival possible? And there's no escape. They have just minutes left until the insatiable fire reaches them. It seems only in miracle can save them. And I'm thinking, you know, I'm still supposed to put up this wallpaper in the baby's nursery. And all I'm looking at is smoke and flame and we didn't really know what we should do next. I'm John Hopkins. From the noise of podcast network, this is Real Survival Stories.

It's Saturday, October the 19th, 1991, a bright clear day in California.

Though the heat of the summer months has subsided, the weather remains warm and dry, and the patch,

landscape is ready for the winter rains. In the Bustling City of Oakland, just east of San Francisco, Autumn has well and truly begun. With Halloween less than two weeks away, houses and shop fronts are bedecked with gulish decorations. And the forests in the surrounding hills are a wash in a blazing sea of fiery red and orange. Situated between the San Francisco Bay on its west and thousands of acres of canyons, parkland and hills to its east.

Oakland is hunt more than 370,000 people. Today, among the traffic, nosing its way along the suburban tree line streets is a news van loaded with cameras and microphones. Inside it, reporter Rob Roth and cameraman Nick Sora's chat aimably, discussing the football game they're on the way to cover. But Rob has other bigger things on his plate right now.

Tomorrow is the two date for his and his wife's first baby.

My wife was extremely pregnant. Our focus had been a little less on work and more just how we're going to manage and packing our go bags. And the big focus was going to be on having this baby and making sure that everything was ready and that my wife was okay. Originally from a mid-sized town in New Jersey, about 25 miles from New York City, Rob has moved across the country to the west coast and is built alive in San Francisco. Now, in his mid-30s, it's a settled stable existence with the exciting prospect of fatherhood right around the corner.

We were living in a small house at the time. We'd been married a year, but we'd been together for maybe three years by the end. Things were good. She was a nurse. We had good jobs and challenging jobs and a nice life. For the last few years, Rob has been an on-camera reporter for KTVU and Oakland Television Station covering the San Francisco Bay Area. A full-on role that often involves working weekends.

Although he's building a successful career in journalism, it wasn't exactly planned. You know, that wasn't very good in a lot of things. I was sort of okay in a lot of things, but I could write a little bit.

And at some point, probably in my second year or so, in sophomore year, they had a journalism program.

And made that my major thinking that there could be a job in it when it's all set and done. As opposed to, say, being an English lit major, journalism seemed to be practical. More than that, Rob soon discovered that he enjoyed it and that he had a knack for finding stories. Most people are interesting. They have a story in their life where they're going through something or they went through something.

That's what they about my career. I was endlessly fascinated and surprised by what people go through in their life or what they've had to face.

A store clerk isn't just a store clerk. He could be a mom with no husband and three kids trying to just get by when he started hearing those things. You develop a lot of empathy for how people get through life. Rob's covered plenty of harrowing personal stories, as well as natural disasters in this line of work.

In 1989, he reported on the Loma Prieta earthquake, just south of Oakland, wh...

His experiences as a reporter have given him a unique perspective on how one's life can change in the blink of an eye.

It's made him grateful for what he has.

I've realized from it that horrible things happened to really good people.

People who didn't deserve what happened to them or people who had thrown no fault of their own, something out of the blue happened, something that could happen to myself from my family or anybody. This March, on the Neuser Podcast Network, a brand new show is launching. Join host Ian Glenn for Real Vikings, a limited release series, taking you on a deep dive into the Viking world. On short history of, we cross paths with earnest Hemingway and journey back to the European Middle Ages.

On real survival stories, we're in sunny Spain, as a lifeguard on his holidays gets drawn into a terrifying near drowning experience.

And remote Myanmar, as a devastating flood over worms and isolated mountain community. And in Sherlock Holmes' short stories, a woman arrives at Holmes' door, bemused by the sudden disappearance of her fiance in a case of identity. Get all of these shows and more early and ad-free on Neuser Plus.

And if you haven't already, get your hands on a copy of Neuser's book, a short history of ancient Rome.

Available in all good bookshops and wherever you get your audiobooks. As Robin is the football stadium with his cameraman Nick, it seems today's assignment will almost certainly prove to be much less dramatic than some of the stories he's covered. But just as they approach the cold-a-cut tunnel, northeast of Oakland, they see something that makes them pause.

Fire engines are racing into the hills around the city.

Their sirens piercing the autumnal stillness of the day. Glancing in the direction of their heading, Rob Antnick see puffs of smoke drifting up from the trees. Intrigued by the possibility of having stumbled on a new story, the two men decide to investigate. They follow the path of the fire engines up the narrow winding roads that lead into the lush, verdant hills to the east of the city. But when they catch up with the firefighters, they find there isn't much to report.

It was a fire in a canyon.

It wasn't tremendously large at this point and it looked like the fire department had gotten on top of it.

They put a lot of resources into it. There were no houses that were burned. It was dried brush. And at the point we left, we thought that was the end of it and that it was a little scare for the neighbors. But one of those things where it just dies down and it was barely worth mentioning by the end of the day.

Because it looked like it was no damage, nobody heard, no homes burned, no property destroyed. It was just a fire in a canyon and everything was fine. They leave the firefighters to their work. Later, Rob returned home to his wife, but rather than relaxing he spends his evening tackling final jobs before the baby arrives. Among these is decorating the nursery with teddy bear wallpaper.

Rob works as the light fades outside, but he doesn't quite manage to complete it before going to bed. I had almost finished. I still had another part of a wall to do and I'd be done. I figured well, I'll just sort of get to it the next day. And that was the number one I might to do is more than any assignment that I thought I was going to get.

The next morning is a bright warm Sunday. While most of his neighbors are enjoying a lion and looking forward to a day of leisure, Rob has to head to the office. Every dollar is helpful right now. With the baby at any moment, it ensures his wife that he'll try to get out of work early. He kisses her goodbye and leaves the house.

I had hoped to be able to do a story that day that I could do fairly quickly so that if my wife went into labor, I could finish it up pretty quick and be able to go back to San Francisco where we lived into the hospital if necessary. At work, Rob and his assignment editor throw potential stories back and forth. Trying to land on something that won't take him too long to complete. Whilst chatting, they discussed the fact that it's coming towards the end of the area.

It was the end of the area's wildfire season. And there haven't been any serious places this year. This could be just the story Rob is looking for.

I said, well, you know, we have the brush fire that happened yesterday and we...

Just kind of mopping up still.

And I said, what am I doing a story about how our area dodged a bullet, but not having any serious wildfires this year.

And we all agreed that would be a good story and it was also a story I thought I could do fairly simply to be able to get away if I needed to. With the assignment agreed, Rob and Nick grabbed their equipment and jumped into their van. They head up into the hills, retracing their route from the day before. They wind their whale on the narrow roads surrounded by trees, garlanded with leaves of red and burnished gold. The views around here are spectacular. Overlooking the San Francisco Bay with the city itself visible in the distance.

When the two men arrive at the scene of the previous days blaze, they find the firefighters mopping up. In other words, extinguishing any lingering heat sources, such as smoldering embers or hotspots. In theory, this should prevent the fire from re-agniting.

Rob starts to interview the firefighters as Nick captures footage of the operation.

Everything seems under control and work is progressing smoothly. At this rate, Rob should be back to his wife in no time. There was absolutely no concern on the faces of the firefighters. There was no sense of immediacy or greed. They were just kind of digging and sort of plowing the earth and not much really going on.

But then out of nowhere, something changes. A slight shift in the air. The wind started to pick up and they were getting reports of other brush fires.

It seems the increased wind has caused the brush fire from the day before to reignite in places.

Ockets of flames have begun shooting up across the hills, and it's imperative to get them under control quickly before they can spread. With the area around Rob and Nick appearing to be safe, the firefighters jump into their trucks and race off to investigate the reports coming in. Leaving the two men alone. Unperturbed, they carry on getting what they need for their assignment, intending to head back to the office shortly so they can put it all together.

We were just kind of finishing up taking pictures of what we had been doing. We just kind of continued on with no real concern. And then suddenly we saw going to smoke above us in the hillside. Thin whispers of sinister dark grey smoke begin curling up into the air above the hills. The tendrils merge and twine together, like shadowy ethereal snakes slinking across the blue sky.

But as the winds pick up, the whispers thicken into columns, black towers of smoke reaching up and fanning out across their horizon. And there's no smoke without fire.

It first of smoke didn't look like that much and then these winds just kept coming in and they kept swirling from all directions.

And suddenly this smoke got more and more and more and it was probably a couple minutes. But it felt almost instantaneously that the whole hillside was becoming in golf. It's around 11 a.m. on Sunday, October 20th, 1991. On the forested hills around the city of Oakland, California, strong winds have reignited the smoldering remains of a wildfire. Fed by the dry vegetation that covers the rolling landscape, small blazes are springing up across the hillside.

As embers carried by the breeze land in the brush before bursting into flames. With every new fire that comes to life, the inferno grows bigger, hungrier and more difficult to subdue. Birds scatter into the ash-swirled sky, screeching, piercing alarm calls in their flight, as billowing columns of smoke swallow the sunshine, casting a sickly grey paw over the world. And filming it all as it unfolds, a reporter, Rob Roth and cameraman Nick Sores. The speed with which the fire has spread is shocking.

But the two men aren't far from their news van. If the flames get too close, they can jump into it and grace out of the hills away from danger. After all, they're simply here to do their jobs and they have no intention of putting themselves at risk. Rob may have covered natural disasters before, but he's not a thrill-seeker by any means.

I never sought out dangerous situations, and I don't believe I ever put myself in one prior to that.

On the other hand, I rub kind of in the shadow of the previous generation of ...

And I said, "But wouldn't it be something to have some sort of swash-buckling story to be able to tell the grandchildren from my days?"

But I never really expected to sort of be in the situation that I was in ever.

Plus, with his first child due to be born today, Rob has even less reason to put himself in danger.

He and Nick focus on moving fast, gathering the information and footage they need to complete their assignment. But as they do so, the winds continue to increase. The fierce gusts fan the flames on the hillside, breathing new life and energy into the blazes. But despite the advancing flames, Rob can't deny it as an element of excitement to this experience. They are getting some rare and unique footage, and from a professional standpoint, that's great news.

As this campfire was building into something more, we're getting pictures of it, so you're actually seeing this grow. So the TV journalism side of it was we're getting excited because we're getting good stuff.

You don't usually get video like that.

Now obviously we didn't know how big it was going to be, or we didn't really want it to be big at all, to be honest.

But the winds keep blowing, and the fires keep growing. The winds keep feeding it and making it bigger, and the combination of the winds and all the brush burning. It became extremely loud, almost like a freight train kind of loud, where it drowns out all of their sound. I was standing no more than a foot or two from my photographer, and we would have to shout as loud as we could to be heard, even though we were standing close. You could just hear like trees breaking that sound, and the wind just feeding this thing.

These hot dry winds are blowing towards the coast from the Diablo mountain range in the east.

In time it will come to be known as the Diablo winds, the Devil winds.

At times reaching over 100 kilometers an hour, they have an incendiary effect on the blaze, as if it will be doused in light of fuel. The gusts are strong enough to send ash all the way to San Francisco across the bay.

The flames howl around Rob and Nick pounding and screeching in there is.

And as the configuration grows, it begins to create its own peat-griven winds, but defined in characteristic of a firestorm. They have their own weather system. They create their own weather system, and there could be 20-25 miles an hour winds coming at it. But they're swirling so that they actually are 50 mile an hour winds within the vortex of the fire. Rob glances at a nearby storage hut. Then back at the seaving firestorm.

And I kept thinking in my head, boy, I hope this smoke doesn't make it to this storage facility. And sure enough, all of a sudden that's now engulfed. And it's been this sort of little smoky little, almost campfire looking thing just became this huge thing that was all sort of an above us and in front of us. And it was getting louder and louder. Their eyes start to water.

Raspin, as the fumes fill his lungs, Rob swipes the sweat so tanned across his forehead and looks up at the sky. The sun is hidden behind a steel grey cloud of smoke, transforming day into night. They've had no time to react. It's all happened so fast. But now, they have to move. He turns in the direction of their news van. There is a problem.

We had parked our news van to our right, but it was around a slight bend. Up until this point without them, we were just going to head back to the car and drive off. But there was so much smoke that we couldn't see our car anymore. And we couldn't see even the whole area where our car would be. So that was just out of the question, you could see nothing.

Rob and the next exit strategy has crumbled. They scan their murky surroundings for other escape routes by foot. It isn't promising. There was no obvious exit from where we were. Because there were smoke in three directions and then the fourth direction, which was behind us,

there was no way because it was just a steep drop. There was just nowhere to go. That was an inaccessible way to escape. As the facts begin to sink in, the pair turned towards each other, the same realization dawning on both of their faces. There was really no place to go and the smoke that had been above us is now getting closer.

We kind of looked at each other and I remember thinking that this can't be ha...

I'm supposed to be with my wife at the hospital and what am I doing here?

And we really weren't sure what to do.

Nick tells me that I took one step in all four directions at the same time.

Rob frantically spins around, searching for anything that might offer salvation as the fire continues. It's merciless much towards them. There is nothing, nowhere to go. The flames are mere feet away now. The moisture in the air has gone, the sun has vanished.

The two men are enveloped by dry scorching blackness. It seems they cannot escape the inescapable. I'm thinking I'm still supposed to put up this wallpaper in the baby's nursery. We were still in the stage of there must be some way out of this. We just haven't figured it out yet.

But it was getting close in the fact that no one was around. So there was really nowhere to go. My mind was, what do we do? We're not sure what we can do. And how sad is this?

You know, that I'm here and she's going to have this baby.

And it wasn't paralyzed with fear or my god or anything. It was more thinking about this chore that I hadn't finished than on the wallpaper. And just sadness that my wife is going to go through this. And I'm going to have to get out of it. Rob braces himself as the river of fire spills down the slope towards him and Nick.

How long do they have before it reaches them? One minute, two. But just then, with burning tendrils looking at their feet, the men spot something.

Lights cut through the dense dark smoke and a second data, something emerges from the blue.

At this point, this fire truck came out of this area where you couldn't see anything in hindsight. When that fire truck was revealed to us coming out of the smoke, seemed like the last scene in Casablanca with Bogart coming to the rescue. With red and blue lights reflecting through the haze, the truck inches towards Rob and Nick.

The cavalry has arrived. Inside the small vehicle of four firefighters, led by Battalion Chief James Riley, a veteran with more than 25 years of experience. Hardly, Chief Riley tells them to get on board. They need everyone out of the area as soon as possible.

Rob goes to do as he's told. Incredibly, Nick has a taste. Nick at first was reluctant to hop on because he didn't want to leave the car. The photographers are responsible for their equipment and vehicles. And he didn't want to get in trouble and all that.

But the firefighters were adamant that we get on. With truly no time left to spare, Rob and Nick clamber up onto the truck. The firefighters gun the engine and they shoot off down the narrow twisting roads, surrounded by smoke and fire. But they haven't escaped yet.

Even with experts helping them,

never getting their way out of this smoldering labyrinth will not be straightforward.

The truck pulls away and Rob looks back at the spot where he and Nick were just standing. Within moments, it is devoured by flames. The fact that minutes later, where we were standing was overrun with fire. So as we were just minutes away from real trouble, it was getting hotter and hotter.

So yeah, I think there was a point when, you know,

perhaps just the smoke would have just overrun us. As the fire engine speeds through the hills, tearing around half in bends, Rob and Nick started to become aware of the sheer extent of the blaze. It has spread with frightening speed,

sweeping across the hillside and consuming vegetation and houses alike. It's moved so fast that the emergency responders haven't been able to keep up with it. Now the priority is to clear the area and try to limit casualties. They weren't there to fight the fire. It was too big by then for them to be able to fight.

Their mission was to sort of to get to neighborhoods and evacuate people. So I was relieved to be with them with somebody who knew what they were doing in a situation like this. Rob and Nick watched their smoke choked surrounding the speeding past as chief Riley and his crew race to warn residents to evacuate. They would stop, they would get out fan out,

yelling at people to get out, get out, get out and people are sort of negotiating, you know, can I go back in and bring out this piece of equipment

Or some sort of personal item that they had and they're yelling,

no, get out, get out and sort of this chaos going on.

The firefighters moved through different neighborhoods, repeating the procedure

and trying to get people to safety. But at one point after chief Riley gets off the fire engine, he doesn't get back on. Since his personal car is parked somewhere in this area, his crew assumed that he spotted it and gone to move it.

Unconcerned, they continued their work of evacuating the area. We got to see different neighborhoods because we were on this vehicle.

I had never covered anything that big and the interesting point of it being a journalist

was usually these fires happen.

You hear about them and then you travel and as a journalist you're trying to get in

or as close to the fire as you can to cover it. In this case I was inside the fire trying to get out as fast as we could. So that was interesting to see how these fires behave. But there's also an obvious poignancy and tragedy to what they're witnessing. These are neighborhoods Rob knows well and they're being destroyed before he's very eyes.

As we're traveling through I realized I was on a street where a fellow reporter lived who was married to another photographer at the station and they had just a week before held a baby shower for my wife at that house and her neighborhood was gone. After reaching a place of relative safety, far enough away from the blaze, Rob and Nick break away from the firefighters and meet up with another news crew from the TV station.

They begin live reporting from the sea. The fire still burning all around them. With suits and ash, coating Rob's sandy hair, he delivers updates to the frightened people of Oakland and the surrounding area against a background cacophony of roaring flames, wind and sirens.

I remember seeing an amber, the wind blowing an amber just kind of almost in slow motion.

It was floating almost like a feather.

It landed on the roof of a house maybe six or seven houses down from where I first saw it.

I turned away and in maybe five or ten seconds later I looked back at this house and it was completely engulfed. And just in a period of ten or fifteen seconds from an amber landing on a roof, the whole house was gone. In this case because of the winds and to the heat and all of it it just went in a flash. So that's a very vivid memory that I have of that day. While he's working Rob suddenly starts to feel off, dizzy, queasy, Nick feels it too.

They're suffering the effects of smoke inhalation. Paramedics suggests they should both go to the hospital, but Rob has other plans. I breathe a lot of smoke and didn't feel great, but I mean I had a lot of adrenaline and I'm in the middle of this big story and I didn't want to go to the hospital. As a compromise Rob leaves the scene of the fire and returns to the newsroom to continue wall to wall coverage of the blaze. It's all anyone can talk about it.

They were glad to see me because I had this eyewitness perspective on it and so we just stayed on the air. We had the video that we had shot earlier so we had a pretty good handle and then I was in just full journalist mode. Despite the chaos Rob has to find time to call his wife. It goes to voicemail. Safe in San Francisco and unaware of the extent of the fire she's gone to get her hair and nails done,

anticipating that she won't have any time to do so with the newborn in the coming weeks. Rob leaves her a message, explaining what's happened and what he's been through, but that he's okay. Luckily for everyone she doesn't go into labor that day.

The Diablo Wins finally died down that evening and firefighters continue tackling the blaze throughout the night.

Rob eventually leaves the station and returns home around midnight exhausted and still smelling of smoke. The following morning reveals a grey wasteland of charred ruins. It isn't until Wednesday that the fire is officially declared to be under control. For Rob the week passes in a blur of reporting and covering the aftermath of the blaze. It's so busy there's not really any time for him to fully process the experience he's just been through.

One piece of news that's hit him hard.

The day after his escape from the flames he finds out what happened to fire chief James Riley.

I talked to one of the other three firefighters that I was well on the phone and he was the one who told me what had happened and I just felt awful. He was killed and overhead power line had come down. He was trying to help a resident and one of those overhead power lines had snapped off and hit him and killed him and the woman that he was talking to.

Chief Riley's funeral takes place on October 28th just over a week later.

Rob plans on going to pay his respects to the man who saved his life but on the day in question his wife goes into labor. Instead he writes a letter that Chief Riley's widow. Remember crying and writing the snow at the same time and that was the first time I think that the whole adrenaline in the shock and having a baby and all that can kind of crashing down in that moment that I was writing the letter up until then I felt like I was holding up quite well. The past eight days of Rob's life have been extraordinarily eventful, a draining sequence of ups and downs.

But the joyous birth of his daughter is a symbol of renewal. The beginning of his attempt to move on and heal after the trauma of the fire.

When our daughter was born, where I think most people would go from normal to a high, I was sort of down and gotten horrible and then the high you know thereafter.

But at least I was back. I felt like I was finally myself when she was born. The Oakland Firestorm was one of the worst in the US history. It caused 25 deaths and 150 injuries.

It destroyed more than 1,500 acres of land and 3,000 homes causing over $3 billion worth of damage in today's money.

At the time of the fire, this was the second biggest urban fire in US history. Number one was the famous Chicago fire in the early 1900s and then there was this. So it wasn't like anybody had seen anything like this in generations. No cause is ever found to explain how the fire started that fateful Saturday. Nearly everyone in Oakland and the surrounding region is affected by the blaze in some way. It highlights the vulnerabilities of the area and various measures are put in place to try to prevent a similar incident recurring in the future, including making hydrant outlets universally accessible to all fire hoses and intensifying vegetation management plans.

As for Rob, the Oakland Firestorm becomes an important moment in his journalistic career.

My reporting at the time, it got a fair amount of attention. I was pleased about that personally, but I didn't want to suspend just for that in my career because I just happened to be in that situation. It was nothing that I did or story that I dug up or anything like that. It was more reactive, I guess. So I tried to put it aside for a long time and just try to go on with my career. I didn't want to be the fire guy. I covered many wildfires after that, but I didn't want that to be my thing. Rob goes on to have a long and varied career as a TV reporter, eventually retiring up to 38 years with KTVU.

And although the Firestorm remains one of the standout stories he covered, more importantly, it will forever be the day he escaped a hideous fate and was instead reunited with his growing family. And every year on his daughter's birthday, Rob says he thinks about the Firestorm and James Riley, remembering the four brave men who saved his life.

When I tried to just put it aside, but now I accept it. I accept that it's just something that happened that I experienced and I'm grateful for the experience. I learned a lot from it, I think.

In the next episode, we meet Morgan Segway. In 2019, the former acrobat from northern France is living in the Southeast Asian country of East Timor. One sunny Sunday, he decides to trek to the top of Mount Manukoko, a 3,000-foot jungle-clad peak.

After reaching the summit, Morgan's thrill-seeking backfires, and soon he fin...

With no clear way to reach help, Morgan will accept his fate, until an unexpected arrival appears through the trees and offers a tiny flash of hope.

That's next time on Real Survival Stories. Listen right now without waiting and without adverts by joining Noiser Plus.

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No, not yet. This edge is my safe space.

Do you think everything is safe?

Yes, exactly. This edge is the edge of the edge of the edge of the edge.

It's the edge of the edge of the edge of the edge of the edge of the edge.

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