Bad luck: live implosion broadcast is hampered by buses

The Georgia Dome Stadium opened in 1992 in Atlanta, USA, and remained the world's largest dome-shaped structure for seven years, losing its position to The O2 Arena in the United Kingdom. It was the scene of two Super Bowls, the final of the United States football, had a capacity of about 70 thousand people, but was imploded on Monday (20). Instead, the $ 1.6 billion Mercedes-Benz stadium will be built and will be one of the state-of-the-art sports complexes in the state of Georgia.

As implosions often attract the public's attention, The Weather Channel decided to send a cameraman to the scene and show live the building going below. James Crugnale arrived early on the outskirts of the George Dome, looked for the best possible angle and could find a little spot across the street that would frame the entire stadium.

For 40 minutes Crugnale waited for the implosion to happen. The explosives would last 12 seconds and instantly everything would be reduced to a pile of rubble. Everything went well until the cameraman heard the countdown. The first explosion was heard, but what Crugnale filmed in the sequence is priceless. Check out:

An Atlanta shuttle bus stopped right in front of the camera, completely blocking the cameraman's view. Crugnale tried to scream, swore, barked, but gave no time: the stadium had already been imploded!

Quickly, the images viralized in the United States. The Weather Channel people took the sports fiasco and even published the video, covering up a curse word, on YouTube. Already Crugnale posted a tweet of the moment along with the emoji crying with laughter. After all, at these times it's better to laugh, isn't it?

Now, if you were curious to see the implosion, other cameramen had better luck. Check out: