Supersonic Planes are Coming Back (And This Time, They Might Work)

EducationWendover Productions1.1M Views

Why This Video Went Viral

This video achieved high visibility primarily due to strong early engagement signals. Content in the "Education" category typically performs well when it triggers immediate viewer interaction within the first 24–48 hours.

Audience & Engagement Insights

Based on historical trends, videos like this resonate strongly with viewers interested in education content, particularly audiences who engage through likes and repeat watches rather than comments alone.

With 36.3K likes relative to 1.1M views, this video demonstrates above-average engagement efficiency for its category.

Editorial Analysis

Sign up for a CuriosityStream subscription and also get a free Nebula subscription (the streaming platform built by creators) here: http://CuriosityStream.com/wendoverWatch the Nebula Plus companion video to this here: https://nebula.app/videos/wendover-productions-supersonic-planes-are-coming-back-and-this-time-they-might-workListen to Extremities at http://ExtremitiesPodcast.comBuy a Wendover Productions t-shirt: https://standard.tv/collections/wendover-productions/products/wendover-productions-shirtSubscribe to Half as Interesting (The other channel from Wendover Productions): https://www.youtube.com/halfasinterestingYoutube: http://www.YouTube.com/WendoverProductionsInstagram: http://Instagram.com/sam.from.wendoverTwitter: http://www.Twitter.com/WendoverProSponsorship Enquiries: wendover@standard.tvOther emails: sam@wendover.productionsReddit: http://Reddit.com/r/WendoverProductionsWriting by Sam DenbyResearch by Sam Denby and Tristan PurdyEditing by Alexander WilliardAnimation by Josh SherringtonSound by Graham Haerther Thumbnail by Simon BuckmasterSelect footage courtesy the AP ArchiveReferences[1] https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/11150642.pdfMusicbed SyncID:MB01GAPDXFMQD5N