I hear you there! I did see several videos showing the actual crash. Entire fuselage back of the wings was broken off. Horrible.
Some notes on the two aircraft, from a fellow aviation enthusiast:
That Kingcobra P-63 " ... was the last F model in existence ( only two were built, in 1944) . It survived the Post-War scrapping by having been bailed / assigned to NACA until the Mid-50's . After it was acquired by the CAF (Commemorative/Confederate Air Force) in the 90's , it was restored to its NACA marking scheme .
"The Boeing B-17G Fortress , s/n 44-83872 was built at Douglas Long Beach and was accepted by the USAAF in late 1944. After the War, she was transferred to the USN in 1945 for conversion to PB-1W configuration (as an airborne Early Warning bird) , as BuNo 77325. She served the Navy for 11 years, until stricken from the USN Inventory in 1956. In 1957, She was sold to an aerial survey company and served there until sold to the then-Confederate Air Force on Sep 22, 1967 , as N7227C. Originally flying in her civilian colors , she received her first coat of camouflage in 1970, and was marked as B-17F 41-24592 , "Texas Raiders" in 1970 , becoming one of the first "Warbirds" in WWII period markings on the display circuit . She flew with the CAF ( later Commemorative Air Force) for over 52 years and was one of the best-known B-17s on the Warbird display circuit. .
"The mid-air collision on the 12th was a lousy way for two aircraft and 6 people to die. "