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Oceanic Airlines, and less frequently, Oceanic Airways, is the name of a fictional airline used in several films, television programs, and comic books—typically works that feature plane crashes and other aviation disasters, with which a real airline would prefer not to be associated.

The Oceanic Airlines logo, from the ABC television series Lost.

The brand is used prominently in the TV series Lost, where Oceanic Airlines is featured branded with a highly stylized logo depicting an Australian Aboriginal dot painting that resembles a nazar, a bullseye, an island, or an "O". The show's fictional storyline begins with the crash of an airline flight called Oceanic Flight 815.

Airlines with this name have also been featured in other media, starting as early as the mid-1960s.[citation needed] Before Lost, the most prominent use of Oceanic Airlines was in the 1996 film Executive Decision. The film's producers shot extensive footage of two actual Boeing 747s with Oceanic Airlines logo and livery, though not the same logo used later on Lost. This stock footage has been reused in several films and television programs, spreading the Oceanic Airlines brand across various otherwise unrelated fictional universes.

Appearances

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The following sources feature an airline called Oceanic Airlines.

Lost

Oceanic Airlines is a central plot element in the TV series Lost. The show explores the aftermath of the crash of Oceanic Flight 815 (a Lockheed L-1011 was used to create the crash, but the plane in-universe is stated as a Boeing 777) traveling from Sydney to Los Angeles. The producers of Lost also created a now-defunct website for the fictional airline, including clues and references to the show's plot. In flashforwards, a group of characters who survive the crash (Hurley, Kate, Jack, Sayid, Sun, and Aaron) are nicknamed the "Oceanic Six." In January 2008, viral marketing billboards for Oceanic Airlines were placed by ABC in various large cities around the world as part of the Find 815 alternate reality game. Fictitious TV advertisements for the company also aired on ABC and the internet, including one advertisement that apparently airs in an alternate universe where Flight 815 did not crash and Oceanic has a "perfect safety record". The flight number 815 is a nod to Disney's Peter Pan animation[citation needed]: while flying into the Big Ben clock dial, Peter Pan sets the time to 8:15. This reference later shows up in Once Upon a Time.

Other media

Apps and Internet

Comics

Film

Radio

Television

Video games

Reused footage

In Executive Decision (1996 film), Oceanic Flight 343 from Athens to Washington, D.C. was hijacked by an Islamic terrorist. Stock footage from Executive Decision was reused in the following:

List of fictional Oceanic Airlines flights

Flight number Incident description Occurrence Aircraft used
1097 Carrying money for the Federal Reserve Bank. White Collar: 06.05 "Whack-A-Mole"
1012 Crashed onto the island of Banoi during a localized zombie apocalypse. Dead Island Airbus A310
2703 The flight missed by Jackson Avery Grey's Anatomy (season 12 episode 11)
816 Serial killer pursued by FBI agent on Boeing 747SP. Code 11-14 Boeing 747SP
815 Explosive decompression caused by electromagnetic pulse. Lost Boeing 777-200ER, Lockheed L-1011 used as prop wreckage.[9]
815 Shot down by surface-to-air missile. Chuck: 01.02 "Chuck versus the Helicopter" around 06:55
762 Forced landing caused by lightning strike. Category 6: Day of Destruction Boeing 747-400
762 Nerve agent attack threatened by mental illness sufferer. Nowhere to Land Boeing 747-200
456 First officer murdered in-flight and aircrew members afflicted by illness. Diagnosis: Murder: 04.23 "Murder in the Air" (24 April 1997)
408 Brought down by a magical storm over Canada. Champions Online
343 Skyjacking by Islamic terrorists; both pilots murdered; aircraft retaken in-flight by special forces. Executive Decision Two aircraft used: Boeing 747-200 and Boeing 747-100
105 Skyjacking by North Korean extremists; aircraft retaken in-flight by JAG personnel. JAG: 05.18 "The Bridge at Kang So Ri"
017 Aircraft ditched in the Atlantic Ocean, 80 miles south of Miami, Florida. Flipper: 02.07 "The Ditching" Douglas DC-3
009 Out to Sea
22 Was an example reminder for Inbox by Gmail users, from SFO-JFK on 4 December, at 8:00 AM. Inbox by Gmail
57 The crew must solve an air marshal's murder on a NYC-London flight with the help of a mystery writer and his daughter. Castle: 07.21 "In Plane Sight" Boeing 747, possibly the -200 variant
unk Forced to turn around after Adam Goldberg begged them to. "The Goldbergs": 03.14 "Lainey Loves Lionel" unk
317 Adam's dad buys Adam a ticket on Oceanic Airlines to go to space camp in Huntsville, Alabama "The Goldbergs": 03.22 "Smother's Day"
784 A flight from Heathrow, London to New York carrying a terrorist. "Survivor"
209 Flight crash caused by aging aircraft frame. NationStates

Further reading

See also

References

  1. ^ "IPhone Software 3.0 - Copy & Paste Demonstration". YouTube. March 2009.
  2. ^ "Oceanic Airlines mentioned on new Google Inbox tutorial". 24 October 2014. Archived from the original on 21 May 2019. Retrieved 21 May 2019.
  3. ^ "Propabilia.com - A to Z Auction". iCollector.com. 2022.
  4. ^ "After The Sunset". trailers.apple.com. Retrieved 21 June 2017.
  5. ^ "Murder in the Air". TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  6. ^ "Vanished". TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  7. ^ "The Bridge at Kang So Ri". TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  8. ^ "The West Palm Beach Story". TV.com. Retrieved 1 May 2008.
  9. ^ "Lockheed L-1011 TriStar". www.widebodyaircraft.nl. Widebody Aircraft Parade. Retrieved 27 February 2020.