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The Deadly Lure of Subway Surfing
The Deadly Lure of Subway Surfing
Natalie Keyssar for The New York Times
For more than a century, people have climbed on top of moving trains in search of a thrill. Now social media has attracted a new generation of daredevils.
By Andrew Keh and Ana Ley
Dec. 16, 2024
On a late spring afternoon, two boys celebrating the last day of sixth grade set out through their New York City neighborhood in search of an adventure.
It arrived in the form of a subway train screeching into the Church Avenue station in Brooklyn. The boys, Donald Munoz and William Layden, hoisted themselves onto the roof of one of the cars and were soon careening north, the warm air whipping across their faces.
But their escapade was brief. Near the next station, they clipped an overpass and were flung onto the tracks. The impact fractured both boys skulls, and Donald died that day. He was 11 years old. William, 12, was taken to Kings County Hospital, unconscious.
The year was 1938. But it could have been any year. Recent news reports typically trace the reckless act of riding atop a train car in New York City known as subway surfing back to the 1980s and blame sensational videos on social media, taken by bystanders and the surfers themselves, for a recent rise in popularity.
{snip}
Susan C. Beachy contributed research.
Andrew Keh covers New York City and the surrounding region for The Times. More about Andrew Keh
Ana Ley is a Times reporter covering New York Citys mass transit system and the millions of passengers who use it. More about Ana Ley
A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 22, 2024, Section MB, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: The Deadly Lure of Subway Surfing. Order Reprints | Todays Paper | Subscribe
Natalie Keyssar for The New York Times
For more than a century, people have climbed on top of moving trains in search of a thrill. Now social media has attracted a new generation of daredevils.
By Andrew Keh and Ana Ley
Dec. 16, 2024
On a late spring afternoon, two boys celebrating the last day of sixth grade set out through their New York City neighborhood in search of an adventure.
It arrived in the form of a subway train screeching into the Church Avenue station in Brooklyn. The boys, Donald Munoz and William Layden, hoisted themselves onto the roof of one of the cars and were soon careening north, the warm air whipping across their faces.
But their escapade was brief. Near the next station, they clipped an overpass and were flung onto the tracks. The impact fractured both boys skulls, and Donald died that day. He was 11 years old. William, 12, was taken to Kings County Hospital, unconscious.
The year was 1938. But it could have been any year. Recent news reports typically trace the reckless act of riding atop a train car in New York City known as subway surfing back to the 1980s and blame sensational videos on social media, taken by bystanders and the surfers themselves, for a recent rise in popularity.
{snip}
Susan C. Beachy contributed research.
Andrew Keh covers New York City and the surrounding region for The Times. More about Andrew Keh
Ana Ley is a Times reporter covering New York Citys mass transit system and the millions of passengers who use it. More about Ana Ley
A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 22, 2024, Section MB, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: The Deadly Lure of Subway Surfing. Order Reprints | Todays Paper | Subscribe
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The Deadly Lure of Subway Surfing (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Dec 28
OP
bottomofthehill
(8,943 posts)1. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes
Years of Darwin Award winners.
SheltieLover
(60,829 posts)2. Yup
XanaDUer2
(14,841 posts)3. I mean, what can be done?
Are ppl not supposed to have rapid transit bc kids are doing something so dumb. Ridden the subway in nyc many times as a kid and wouldn't have done this as a thrill. Wtf? Sad stories of unnecessary deaths, but what can the public do? Maybe run nyc psa why doing this is dangerous?