suffered significant damage to its roof following high winds caused by Storm Eunice. Winds caused by the adverse weather shredded parts of the white-domed roof of the venue, which is located near Greenwich, South East London.
18.02.2022 - 18:05 / ok.co.uk
Thousands across the UK have been 'glued' to a nail-biting plane-spotting channel streaming live from London's Heathrow Airport. Big Jet TV fans tuned into the YouTube channel, which has garnered 174,00 subscribers, to watch the moment jets attempted to land on the runway at Heathrow Airport during Storm Eunice which has recorded gusts of 122mph.
But it was presenter Jerry Dyer, who has been a producer and editor at the plane-spotting channel since 2016, who has captured the hearts of the nation with his enthusiastic commentary as anxious viewers could not peel themselves away from the dramatic scenes. Twitter fans likened Jerry to EastEnders actor Danny Dyer as he applauded the landings by commenting, 'go on son', 'fair play mate', 'bosh', 'get it down' along with 'nicely done' as as Emirates A380 eventually touched down.
Get exclusive celebrity stories and fabulous photoshoots straight to your inbox with OK!'s daily newsletter Meanwhile social media fans also thought Jerry could be the next commentator at the Olympic Games as he hilariously referred to planes by their country of origin by shouting 'here come the Russians' as an Aeroflot plane appeared and 'go on the Brits' as a British Airways Boeing 777 swayed in the wind. One penned: "Big Jet TV man is about to have his Jackie Weaver moment.
If he plays his cards right, there is a book deal in this for him." "Looking forward to watching the Big Jet TV man on Strictly," another added. A third tweeted: "It’s like Danny Dyer took up plane spotting.
I’m loving it!" "Everyone in the uk glued to Big Jet TV to see the planes trying to land at Heathrow Airport in the midst of Storm Eunice is the most British thing ever," a fourth wrote. Jerry also made an appearance on
.suffered significant damage to its roof following high winds caused by Storm Eunice. Winds caused by the adverse weather shredded parts of the white-domed roof of the venue, which is located near Greenwich, South East London.
Dave has been forced to postpone his upcoming London shows at The O2 due to the damage the venue suffered this week at the hands of Storm Eunice.The rapper was due to perform at the venue on Monday (February 21) and Tuesday (22) as part of his ‘We’re All Alone In This Together’ UK tour.However, winds caused by the adverse weather conditions shredded parts of the white-domed roof of The O2, which is located near Greenwich in South East London.Posting on Twitter, Dave wrote: “Bad news, The O2 have told us Monday and Tuesday’s shows can’t happen. (Storm/roof) we’re doing everything we can to reschedule the shows to play as soon as possible.“Have been told it won’t be too long I’ll know more on Monday and will return with a tweet then..
The spectacle of the UK’s Storm Eunice created a brand new British broadcasting star on Friday, in the form of an ebullient planespotter perched near the perimeter of Heathrow Airport.
Storm Eunice has blown down a large street at Stacey Solomon and Joe Swash’s £1.2 million Essex home. A red weather warning was issued across the UK on Friday 18 February as Storm Eunice threatened to bring winds of up to 90mph.
A shopping centre in Salford has been closed due to Storm Eunice.
Big Jet TV today – including those from the world of entertainment.The YouTube channel has built a steady following over the last few years by live-streaming moving aircraft, captured on cameras set up on the perimeter of airports; its biggest audiences usually come during storms and other bad weather conditions.Today (February 18), the channel went viral, hitting a record 200,000 concurrent live viewers – more than many British rolling news television channels receive – for its stream of planes struggling to land in strong winds caused by Storm Eunice at Heathrow airport.A big part of Big Jet TV‘s appeal is the commentary of founder and host, Jerry Dyer, whose unfiltered and excitable delivery often hears him praise pilots and ground teams for their hard work and expertise in landing the aircraft safely in difficult conditions, and screech with delight when a pilot pulls off a challenging landing.As one wobbling Air Algiers flight approached the Heathrow runway this morning, Dyer shouted over the wind: “I think this guy’s gonna struggle. He’s all over the place.
K.J. Yossman When it rains, it pours.
This is what it's like at the Manchester Airport as skilled pilots land planes without a hitch during Storm Eunice.