Christie Brinkley believes ‘magic dirt' may have saved her life in near-fatal 1994 helicopter crash
There is not a day that goes by that Christie Brinkley is not thankful to be alive after a ski adventure nearly killed her 31 years ago.
In 1994, the model, then 40, embarked on a heli-skiing tour in the San Juan Mountain range of Colorado with five other people, People magazine reported. During the flight, the helicopter took an unexpected sharp turn before making an abrupt plunge.
Brinkley wrote about the near-fatal accident in her new memoir, "Uptown Girl."
Christie Brinkley Admits Leaving Billy Joel Wasn't Easy, Says 'Booze Was The Other Woman'
"I think that this world is full of magic and miracles," the now 71-year-old told Fox News Digital.
The star noted that during the flight, she was carrying dirt from Chimayo, New Mexico, which is said to hold healing properties. The area is known as one of the most visited holy sites in America and is described as "the most important Catholic pilgrimage center in the United States."
Read On The Fox News App
Brinkley wrote that she visited Chimayo two weeks before the crash.
"I went to the Santuario de Chimayo, north of Sante Fe, and fell in love with the hope and miracles emanating from that tiny sanctuary tucked into the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, where the Pueblo Indians believe the golden soil inside can protect anyone who touches it," she wrote in an excerpt obtained by Fox News Digital.
Brinkley told Fox News Digital that before she got into the helicopter, she had "a bad feeling that day." Worried, she sprinkled a little bit of dirt from Chimayo on the chopper.
"I said, 'Oh magic dirt, do your stuff, take good care of all of us on this helicopter this day,'" she recalled. "I should have said, 'Also, keep the helicopter in the air.' But I do believe in miracles. Maybe it was a miracle of Chimayo. Maybe it was pure luck. During the crash, there were a lot of sections where it could have ended it. But we kept escaping each step. It was a pretty miraculous survival story."
The helicopter struck the side of a mountain, People magazine reported. Brinkley wrote that the force was so powerful that the cabin was ripped into two.
Click Here To Sign Up For The Entertainment Newsletter
"The crash was sudden and traumatic, coming out of nowhere," she wrote. "We had already taken two runs and were circling to land for a third, on the saddle of a faraway peak, when the helicopter just fell from the sky, plunging into a freefall from three hundred feet overhead, with no autorotation."
"Suddenly, it became crystal clear that the only thing that really mattered in life and at death was the same: love," wrote Brinkley. "I focused on [my daughter] Alexa Ray, holding her pure in my thoughts and hoping to project all my heart and soul to her so she would feel it at the very moment of impact."
"Through all the noise and the sickening smell of engine fuel and grease, I suddenly realized that I was still alive – I hadn't died on impact – and I kept repeating Alex Ray's name like a mantra, praying that I wouldn't feel the helicopter blades when they sliced through my neck."
Brinkley wrote that everyone in the helicopter had "walloped, whacked, twisted, and ricocheted across the saddle of that mountain in that terrible Tilt-A-Whirl of a helicopter cabin." They began rolling and tumbling after they were no longer bouncing around.
"Everything else around me went airborne," she wrote. "I tried to grab onto something — a seat, a railing, anything— but my entire body felt pinned down, restrained by a force I couldn't see or stop. Overwhelmed, I closed my eyes and waited to faint, still hoping I wouldn't feel the blades when they cut into my neck. But then the rolling stopped, the wrecked tips of the rotor blades digging into the mountain as we started to slide."
When Brinkley opened her eyes, she found herself outside the helicopter. She then felt a tug on her leg – her seat belt had wrapped itself around her ski boot. Still attached to the wreckage, Brinkley said she was dragged down a mountain "toward a sheer granite cliff."
Like What You're Reading? Click Here For More Entertainment News
"If the wrecked helicopter tumbled over that cliff, I would be going with it," she wrote. "So, that's what's going to kill me? A seat belt strap tangled around my boot? But then, only feet away from the cliff, the helicopter stopped sliding, immobilized by a white wall of snow that had mythically, magically, and wonderfully piled up underneath it."
No one in the group perished. According to People magazine, rescue helicopters arrived within an hour to help. Everyone was transported to Telluride Medical Center.
While Brinkley was vacationing in Telluride with Alexa Ray Joel, then 8, the child was not in the helicopter, the outlet noted. Brinkley's husband at the time, Billy Joel, was also away in Chicago on tour.
According to Brinkley's book, investigators later told the press they were stunned that anyone made it out alive. They called the group's survival "nothing short of a miracle."
While Brinkley survived, she later struggled with PTSD "from the shock of the crash."
"Every time I held Alexa in my arms, I felt like sobbing," she told Fox News Digital. "I felt so grateful to be able to continue being her mom… But there was also some bad decision-making… At that point in my life, I felt like I was letting somebody else write the script. I was letting fate take my pen and write the pages."
However, Brinkley also looked at life through a different lens.
"When I woke up in the morning, I'd look out the window and see a stream of sunlight," she said. "It was the most beautiful stream of sunlight I've ever seen. When I looked at the mountains and I saw the sun hit the snowy peak, it took my breath away. If I was in the ocean, I would see diamonds dancing on top of the water. It was mesmerizing, beautiful. I was just so grateful because I might not have ever seen them again."
The crash also meant the end of Brinkley's marriage to Joel. At the time, the couple were separated due to the star's drinking. However, Brinkley was still hopeful that "my prince had finally come to rescue me."
WATCH: SUPERMODEL CHRISTIE BRINKLEY SHARES BEAUTY SECRETS
"I waited for Billy to say the words I so badly wanted to hear: 'I almost lost you, I can't live without you, I love you,'" she wrote. "I think Billy must have thought I was asleep when he made a phone call… but I was very much awake when I heard him say the words I didn't ever want to hear: 'No, don't worry. I'm not going back to her. I just need to see her through this.'"
"And just like that, the dream broke apart like debris," she wrote. "I knew then that our separation was real and that while I had wanted to believe he couldn't live without me, apparently, he could. And I was going to have to learn to live without him."
Brinkley and Joel divorced in 1994.
In 2021, Brinkley announced on Instagram that she had undergone hip replacement surgery to fix an injury related to the crash. Today, Brinkley continues to prioritize her health.
"If it's somebody's birthday, you have to have a piece of cake because it's not good luck to not take a bite," she told Fox News Digital. "I'll just watch my sugar intake the rest of the day. But I just want to treat my body right. It's no longer called a diet. There's no denying myself anything."
"I've been a lifelong vegetarian," she shared. "But about a year ago, I became a vegan, and I'm thrilled that I did it because I have never felt better. I eat lots of grains, beans and all kinds of colorful food.
Christie Brinkley's 'National Lampoon' Co-star Beverly D'angelo Saved Her From Going Topless In Film
"I have a rainbow diet because I will eat a lot of brightly colored foods. It's going to give me a rainbow of vitamins and minerals to fortify the body. And you really, truly are what you eat… I treat myself to good nutrition. There's no diet because there's no denying myself of anything."Original article source: Christie Brinkley believes 'magic dirt' may have saved her life in near-fatal 1994 helicopter crash
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
10 hours ago
- New York Post
Why Dave Portnoy thinks Americans are abandoning traditional news outlets
Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy said that there is 'obviously big time distrust of legacy media' during an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. Portnoy's comments come in response to a Fox Digital report that CNN staffers are worried about the future of the former most-watched cable network. 'It is obviously big-time distrust of legacy media,' Portnoy explained. 'And there's so many different ways to consume media. Whether that's online podcasts, some of it good, some of it bad, to be honest, you just have to be really careful where you're getting your information from. There's so many different people speaking now, and people can access it in so many ways.' CNN dominated the airwaves in the '90s, leading coverage on Baghdad and the O.J. Simpson trial. Since then, prime-time viewership has plummeted from the Ted Turner-founded network to third in ratings. On Monday, Variety reported that one of the network's most notable stars, Anderson Cooper, hired high-powered Hollywood agent Bryan Lourd of Creative Artists Agency, which may indicate Cooper is either looking to bolster his contract with CNN or potentially leave the network altogether. Cooper has been at CNN for more than 23 years. 5 Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy said that there is 'obviously big time distrust of legacy media' during an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital. Getty Images One Cable News Network staffer also told Fox, 'the mood remains really grim' and that 'people are uncertain' about what may come after an expected corporate restructuring by their parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery. Portnoy explained his thinking behind the shift in media, saying the internet has played a large role in where people get their information. 'The internet has given a way for people to fact-check and come to their own conclusions,' Portnoy added. 'You just don't have a couple of network TV anchors or chairs telling you what to think.' 5 Portnoy's comments come in response to a Fox Digital report that CNN staffers are worried about the future of the former most-watched cable network. Getty Images 5 'The internet has given a way for people to fact-check and come to their own conclusions,' Portnoy added. 'You just don't have a couple of network TV anchors or chairs telling you what to think.' FOX The Barstool Sports empire is a leading example of the change in how people interact with the media. The mostly podcast and social media-driven strategy has propelled the sports outlet into a giant, with Dave manning at the helm. Portnoy's infamous 'one bite' pizza reviews are one of the many bits that put Barstool on the map, which feature Dave testing slices of pizza and rating them accordingly. Many of his reviews have gone viral, and his scores can make or break pizzerias in New York City and across the country. Following the success of the pizza reviews, Dave launched the 'One Bite Pizza Festival' in 2023 in Brooklyn, and now plans to host the event for a third year in Randall's Island Park this September for thousands to try his top-rated pizza choices. The event has sold out each time the festival has been held. 5 On Monday, Variety reported that one of the network's most notable stars, Anderson Cooper, who has been at CNN for 23 years, is either looking to bolster his contract with CNN or potentially leave the network altogether. Getty Images 5 The Barstool Sports empire is an example of the change in how people interact with the media, according to reports. Bloomberg via Getty Images 'Like if you like pizza, obviously if you don't like pizza, forget about it, but everybody loves pizza,' Dave told Fox. 'We have the best pizzerias, 40 plus. We're always adding new ones. Like I just did this spectacular place series that went super-viral in New York City.' 'Tickets go on sale Friday, and then September 13th is the actual day, and if you like pizza you can't miss it,' Dave added. Creative Artists Agency did not respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.


New York Post
10 hours ago
- New York Post
Ralph Fiennes reacts to Pope Leo XIV watching ‘Conclave': Is it ‘rubbish'?
Ralph Fiennes has many questions for Pope Leo XIV. In a new interview with Entertainment Weekly, the Oscar nominee, 62, was asked about Leo, 69, watching his 2024 film 'Conclave' before he was elected the head of the Catholic Church last month. 'My thoughts are questions,' Fiennes told the outlet. 'Did he enjoy it? Did he just shrug his shoulders and say halfway through, 'This is rubbish'? Or did he get something from it?' Advertisement 9 Ralph Fiennes in 'Conclave.' í©Focus Features/Courtesy Everett Collection 9 Pope Leo attends Pope Francis' funeral in Vatican City on April 26. Getty Images 'I'd like to know what he thought,' the '28 Years Later' star continued. 'I'm sure there are many people in the church and many cardinals who've looked at it and thought it was nothing like reality.' Advertisement While the Edward Berger-directed film was fictional, Fiennes said he thinks they were accurate enough in portraying the process of electing the next pope. 9 Director Edward Berger and Ralph Fiennes on the set of 'Conclave.' AP 'I think we did get the rituals right,' he stated. 'I'm sure the power politics was amped up for entertainment purposes, but I hope that he saw something of value in it. I just don't know.' 9 The Seventh Novemdiale mass at St Peter's Basilica after Pope Francis' funeral on May 2. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement 'I guess if the next pope watched 'Conclave,' of course, at a simplistic level, I'm delighted,' Fiennes added. 'But I mean, I want him to like it. If he didn't like it, what can I do? I've done it!' In 'Conclave,' which is based on a 2016 Robert Harris novel, Fiennes plays a cardinal tasked with selecting a new pope and finds himself investigating secrets and scandals about the major candidates, which include Stanley Tucci's progressive Cardinal Bellini and Sergio Castellitto's conservative Cardinal Tedesco. 9 Pope Leo XIV seen for the first time after he was elected on May 8. Getty Images 9 Ralph Fiennes in 'Conclave.' AP Advertisement 9 Ralph Fiennes at the '28 Years Later' premiere in London on June 18. Getty Images In May, Leo's brother, John Prevost, confirmed that the Catholic leader watched 'Conclave' before the election. 'I said, 'Are you ready for this? Did you watch the movie 'Conclave' so you know how to behave?' He had just finished watching the movie 'Conclave,' so he knew how to behave,' Prevost told NBC News. 9 Pope Leo XIV overlooking St. Peter's Square after being named the new pope. Getty Images 'So it's that kind of stuff, because I wanted to take his mind off of it,' he added. 'You know, laugh about something, because this is now an awesome responsibility.' Leo was selected as the new pope on May 8 after Pope Francis died in April at age 88. 9 Pope Leo on the balcony of St Peter's Basilica in The Vatican on May 8. AFP via Getty Images Born Robert Francis Prevost, the Chicago-born missionary is the first US pope. Advertisement 'Peace be with you all,' were Leo's first words as he greeted crowds in the packed St. Peter's Square from the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica on his election day. Leo also repeated the word 'peace' nine times, and vowed, 'God loves us, all of us. Evil will not prevail.'


New York Post
10 hours ago
- New York Post
Iranian dissidents slam Whoopi Goldberg for ‘offensive' comparison about the brutal regime
Iranian dissidents are speaking out over Whoopi Goldberg's 'offensive' claim that life for Black Americans is equivalent to living under Iran's brutal autocracy. 'Whoopi Goldberg's comparison between being Black in America and living under Iran's authoritarian regime is deeply misguided and dismisses the brutal realities faced by millions of Iranians,' Dr. Sheila Nazarian told Fox News Digital. Advertisement Goldberg sparked backlash during a heated argument with her fellow 'The View' co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin on Wednesday. Griffin elaborated on the many human rights violations perpetrated by the Ayatollah's regime in Iran was guilty of, including executions of gay people and imprisonment of women who go outside with their hair uncovered. 'Let's not do that, because if we start with that, we have been known in this country to tie gay folks to the car. Listen, I'm sorry, they used to just keep hanging Black people,' Goldberg insisted as Griffin pushed back and said the situations weren't comparable. 'In the year 2025 in the United States, is nothing like if I step foot wearing this outfit into Iran right now,' Griffin said. 'It is the same,' Goldberg responded. Advertisement When Griffin tried to explain that life in modern-day America was night and day with the theocratic regime in Iran, Goldberg countered, 'Not if you're Black.' 5 Iranian dissidents criticized Whoopi Goldberg for her 'offensive' claim on 'The View' that life for Black Americans is equivalent to living under Iran's autocracy. ABC 5 Goldberg sparked backlash during a heated argument with fellow co-host Alyssa Farah Griffin. ABC Nazarian, a renowned plastic surgeon whose family fled Iran in 1985 when she was six after her father was put on a government list to be killed, told Fox News Digital that Goldberg's comparison was not only inaccurate but deeply offensive. Advertisement 'While racism is a serious and ongoing challenge in the U.S., comparing this to life under a totalitarian theocracy like Iran is not only inaccurate – it's offensive to those who suffer daily under that regime. In Iran, the government controls nearly every aspect of life. People can be imprisoned, tortured, raped or even executed for peaceful protests, for criticizing the regime, or simply expressing their opinions online,' Nazarian said. Iran's theocratic regime is deeply unpopular with its public, and widespread anti-government protests frequently break out in the Islamic Republic. The country was gripped by widespread unrest after Iran's morality police were accused of murdering Mahsa Amini, a Kurdish woman, for not wearing a hijab in public. 5 Mourners attend the funeral of victims of an Iranian missile attack which destroyed a three-storey building in the northern Arab-Israeli city of Tamra on the weekend killing four women on Tuesday. AFP via Getty Images 'It's astonishing that Whoopi Goldberg would even suggest that life for Black Americans is somehow equivalent to living under the rule of the Ayatollah in Iran. The very fact that she, as a woman — and a woman of color — has a platform where she can speak freely, express dissenting views, and appear uncovered on national television is proof of the immense freedoms she enjoys,' Iranian-American journalist Lisa Daftari told Fox News Digital. Advertisement Catch up on the latest news of Iran's attack on Israel This is not the first time Goldberg has faced controversy for comments she made. In 2022, Goldberg was suspended from 'The View' following remarks about the Holocaust that many found offensive. Goldberg claimed that The Holocaust wasn't 'about race' instead saying the genocide of six million Jews from 1933 to 1945 was the result of 'man's inhumanity to other man.' The daytime talk show co-host swiftly apologized for her comments, saying she 'misspoke.' 5 Israeli security and rescue forces work at the scene of an Iranian missile attack in Holon, central Israel. Xinhua/Shutterstock 5 Protesters on the streets in the West Azerbaijan province, Iran. Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images Fox News Digital reached out to 'The View' for comment.