Jets from both the US Air Force's Thunderbirds and Navy's Blue Angels aerobatics demonstration teams have crashed in the same day. The Blue Angels were practicing ahead of performances in Smyrna, Tennessee this weekend; the Thunderbirds had just finished flying at the Air Force Academy's commencement ceremony in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

#BREAKING Photo of crashed Thunderbird in Colorado Springs; pilot ejected, is OK https://t.co/btxLsHISLA pic.twitter.com/Q08ffCZKXh — Barrett Tryon KKTV (@btryn) June 2, 2016

WEAR reports that the pilot of the Blue Angels F/A-18 was killed, the only fatality in the incident. The pilot of the Thunderbirds aircraft — an F-16 — was able to eject and parachute to safety, reportedly unharmed, according to KKTV. The Denver Post says that President Obama, who was attending the Air Force Academy ceremony, shook hands with the pilot before departing aboard Air Force One.

PHOTOS: Reports of Blue Angels jet crashes in Smyrna. pic.twitter.com/77iUz9WBPc — NewsChannel 5 (@NC5) June 2, 2016

Though pilots for both teams are selected through a rigorous process and are considered some of the most elite airmen and women in the military, flying aerobatics in ultra-high-performance fighter jets is still an incredibly risky job. Some 27 Blue Angels pilots have been killed in the team's 70-year history.