That's all very well, but all the people in the cheap seats know is that there is something "WRONG!, we have to put these masks on (presumably to breath, else we can't breath?) and we are a long way up in the air and going down faster than we ever had before. Is the pilot in control, or fighting it? - don't know - never been in this situation before. Somethings wrong!" and so on.
I used to work underground. If I took you and a bunch of others down to my work place, I reckon you'd be pooping yourself when the explosions went off nearby and you weren't ready for it, - its still
very loud, and you can feel it and then smell the gas. Taking the school teachers down was the best bit. It wasn't just the girls who screamed.
Down there, once you'd changed underwear, you'd be wondering if you needed to put on your 'self rescuer' mask when you smelled the gas, scared about walking under all those big loose rocks and dodging 50 tonne trucks as they back up in the dark. All while the noise is akin to standing next to two jackhammers going full tilt. I wouldn't be telling you its all OK, because I'm not with you, and because I know there isn't a problem. OK, that bits not true - we keep underground visitors on a tight leash, but first timers still end up somewhere between worried to terrified. Please forgive those in their first time 'air incident' if they have similar reactions.
Don't get me wrong, I'm as contemptuous of the media as anyone else. I've never been in an occurrence which was reported and then seen anything like what happened in the reports. Its just that I think that, absent making it up (which is not out of the question), you can't blame them for reporting the juicy bits of what people have told them. Otherwise they are 'in the company's pocket concealing what happened'.