American Airlines Chief Commercial Officer Nat Pieper told employees that rivals backfilled hub traffic in Philadelphia, Phoenix and Miami that “should be ours” — and that American is going back to take it. The strategy is not just more seats: it is more premium revenue, better customer experience, faster AAdvantage growth, and a renewed fight in markets where Delta, United and Southwest moved in while American pulled back.
Delta Passenger Declares “You Know Who Matters? Me!” — Then Cracks Open Plane Door During Delay
A Delta passenger stuck for hours on an Atlanta tarmac delay declared, “You know who matters? Me!” — then cracked open the aircraft door when he demanded to be taken back to the gate. The flight did return, police removed him, and everyone else still got to Chicago more than eight hours late.
22 Buddhist Monks Arrested At Airport With 242 Pounds Of Weed [Roundup]
Twenty-two Buddhist monks were arrested at the airport in Sri Lanka after customs officials say they found 242 pounds of weed hidden in false luggage walls. Also: Fiji Airways drops Dallas, British Airways bans filming crew without consent, United offers delayed passengers a snack bin instead of meal vouchers, and Amex has a Hilton transfer bonus that is still not especially good.
Trans Pilot Blamed For Deadly American Airlines Crash Was 100 Miles Away — Her Defamation Suit Can Move Forward
After American Eagle Flight 5342 collided with an Army Black Hawk over the Potomac, the internet rushed to blame Jo Ellis, a transgender Black Hawk pilot who had nothing to do with the crash. She was alive, 100 miles away, and now her defamation lawsuit against an influencer who amplified the false claim has survived an early attempt to throw it out.
Scott Kirby Says United Is Premium — Then A Passenger Gets Soaked By Cabin Condensation [Roundup]
United says there’s room for only two premium airlines, but one passenger says he spent a flight getting soaked by cabin condensation and handed paper towels. Also: an American Airlines jet had lavatory liquid running down the aisle, JFK Terminal 8 gets a refresh with broken outlets, and a sniffer dog finds 100 Thai 7-Eleven sandwiches in a passenger’s bag.
American Airlines Celebrates America’s 250th — With A Brazilian Regional Jet
American Airlines unveiled its America250 commemorative aircraft to honor the nation’s spirit, innovation, and independence. The only catch: the first plane it chose is a Brazilian-built Embraer regional jet, which is either a subtle celebration of global aviation supply chains or the funniest possible aircraft selection meeting where nobody raised their hand.
Southwest Fired Flight Attendant After Union Pushed For It — Now She Has Her Job Back And Nearly $1 Million
A flight attendant has her job back, and nearly $1 million, after Southwest Airlines and her union worked together to fire her over her union and religious politics.
More Airline Bankruptcies May Be Coming — JetBlue And Frontier Face The Highest Risk
JetBlue and Frontier are now being flagged as the airlines most exposed if the industry’s financial pressure turns into more Chapter 11 filings. The warning makes sense as a ranking exercise — both carriers face high fuel costs, weak margins, and difficult competitive positions — but the precise bankruptcy odds look too confident, and a ‘by 2027’ timeline may be too aggressive.
United 737 Hit A “Red, Shiny” Drone At 3,000 Feet As It Landed In San Diego
United Flight 1980 was landing in San Diego when the crew reported striking a “red, shiny” drone around 3,000 feet — far above where recreational drones are normally allowed to operate near airports. There is no reported damage yet, but a drone in the arrival path at that altitude is exactly the kind of thing aviation safety rules are supposed to prevent.
American Airlines Says It Has Too Many Broken Seats, Bad Screens, And Duct Tape — A Fix Is Coming This Summer
American Airlines customer chief Heather Garboden told employees the airline has “too many broken seats,” bad inflight entertainment screens, and duct tape where duct tape should not be. She says a dedicated Tech Ops team is now being built to fix aircraft interiors, with visible improvements expected by the end of summer.











