Local News
Front Page News

School News

Arts & Events

Sports

Special Sections

Sports Gallery

Photo Gallery
Opinion
Editorials

Letters

Columnists
Records
Obituaries

Police/Court News

Community
Lifestyles
Weddings

Engagements

Anniversaries
AP Wire
State News

National News

World News

Entertainment
Classifieds
Classifieds

Place An Ad
Other Info
Rack Locations

Links
About Us
Contact Us

Staff

Subscribe

Classified Ad Info

Display Ad Info

Deadline Info


Travis Barker: 'I'm just thankful to be alive!'

NEW YORK (AP) -- Former Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, who always has been afraid of flying, says he's glad to be alive after suffering severe burns in a fiery plane crash last month.

"I hate planes," Barker said in an interview with Us Weekly magazine. "My biggest fear ever is to be involved in a plane crash, so when that happened ... well, I'm just thankful to be alive! I'm just grateful to be here at all."

The 32-year-old musician and celebrity disc jockey DJ AM were the only survivors of the crash just before midnight Sept. 19 at the main airport in Columbia, S.C. Two pilots and two other passengers were killed, including Barker's assistant Chris Baker.

Barker was released from a Georgia hospital last week and is now being treated at a burn center in Los Angeles. He said he was too afraid to fly cross-country, so he arranged to travel by bus with his father and ex-wife Shanna Moakler to keep him company.

"I am doing the best I can possibly be," he said in the magazine's latest issue. "I'm so anxious to get out of here. ... I've just been in surgery after surgery. I have third-degree burns basically from my feet up to my waist and both hands. One of my hands has second-degree burns and one has third-degree burns."

"I'm trying to have a quick recovery and play the drums again and be able to hold my kids again," said Barker, who has two children, Landon, 5, and Alabama, 2, with Moakler.

If all goes well, Barker expects to leave the hospital within two weeks.

DJ AM (real name: Adam Goldstein) was recently released from the hospital, too. Doctors have said they expect both men to fully recover.

Officials with the National Transportation Safety Board have said a cockpit voice recorder revealed that crew members thought a tire blew out and tried to abort the takeoff.

--------

On the Net:

Us Weekly magazine:

http://www.usmagazine.com/









Copyright © 2008 www.OurTownsNews.com.
Brown Publishing Company. All rights reserved.