
Netflix's Astroworld Documentary Exposes Fatal Safety Failures
Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy examines the 2021 crowd crush that killed 10 people at Travis Scott's Houston festival
Quick Facts
Directors Yemi Bamiro and Hannah Poulter's documentary Trainwreck: The Astroworld Tragedy premiered on Netflix on June 10, 2025, as part of the Trainwreck film series, offering a forensic examination of the 2021 crowd surge that killed 10 people and injured hundreds at Travis Scott's Houston festival.
Through survivor testimonies, emergency recordings, and expert commentary, the film reconstructs the catastrophic events of that night and identifies the systemic failures that made the tragedy inevitable rather than accidental. The documentary draws on footage and photographs analyzed by Scott Davidson, a crowd safety expert, who provides crucial insight into how basic safety protocols were abandoned.
One of the film's most striking moments captures the headlining artist's response during the performance. Security and medical staff were actively pulling fans from the mosh pit for resuscitation, yet the show continued. Scott briefly paused upon witnessing one fan being extracted for emergency care but resumed performing while paramedics worked in the crowd. This decision to continue amid an active medical crisis becomes a focal point of the investigation.
When confronted about the deaths afterward, Scott stated: "Nah, man … I just didn't hear that … there was no other communication." The documentary contrasts this claim against evidence of visible paramedics and emergency personnel responding to multiple medical emergencies throughout the performance.
Emergency staff interviewed in the film provide harrowing accounts of the scale of the crisis unfolding on the ground. One responder recounted witnessing at least half a dozen CPR resuscitations—a staggering number that underscores the severity of the crowd crush conditions that night.


