Passenger Ankit Dewan says an Air India Express captain confronted him in the staff security line at Delhi Terminal 1 after he objected to crew cutting ahead, insulted him as “anpadh,” and then struck him near the frisking area, leaving him bloodied. Dewan also claims he was pressured to sign a letter agreeing not to pursue the incident so his family wouldn’t miss their flight.
Pilot Of Cancun Flight Locks Himself In Cockpit Over 5 Months Of Unpaid Wages—Triggers Hijacking Response
Passengers boarded a Cancún-bound flight expecting a routine departure, but the captain instead barricaded himself in the cockpit and refused to operate the flight. He told those onboard the airline owed him more than five months of unpaid wages and per diems, turning a labor dispute into a 60–90 minute standoff.
Marriott App Now Prompts You To Tip Staff — So Hotels Can Cut Wage Costs
Marriott has added in-app tipping, routing payments through a third-party processor—an escalation beyond the QR-code tip prompts that have spread through hotels since the pandemic. This isn’t really about guest convenience; it’s about shifting more of employee compensation onto customers so hotels can staff up while keeping wage costs (and owner expenses) down.
Marriott Adds a “Destination Marketing Fee” at Kansas City Airport Fairfield — Pay $1.50 Extra So the Hotel Can Advertise to You
A Fairfield Inn near Kansas City Airport is listing a city-required $3 arena fee—and then, starting with January bookings, adding a separate $1.50 “Destination Marketing Fee.” Kansas City doesn’t list any such charge as a government fee, and nearby hotels don’t show it, making this look like a new, mandatory junk fee designed to split the true price off the room rate.
Weekend at Bernie’s at the Gate — Family Accused of Wheeling Dead Grandmother Onto London Flight, Telling Crew She Was ‘Just Tired’
Passengers on a London-bound flight out of Málaga say they watched a family wheel an elderly woman onboard and insist she was already dead—after relatives told staff she was “just tired.” The airline disputes that, saying she boarded alive with a fit-to-fly certificate but died onboard before takeoff, forcing the aircraft back to stand and triggering an all-day delay.
Rome Will Charge Tourists $2.30 To Step Up To The Trevi Fountain — Starting February 1 [Roundup]
Rome will begin charging tourists €2 (about $2.30) starting February 1 to step up onto the stone steps at the Trevi Fountain, while the surrounding square remains free and residents won’t pay. Also in today’s roundup: an empty Excalibur check-in even with rock-bottom rates, a United first-class “fresh silverware” photo that’s anything but, the first A321XLR inaugural trip report, and Sean Duffy’s latest airport-attire commentary.
Students Waited At Florida Airport For Travel Agent Accused Of Europe Trip Scam — Then Yell “Scumbag” As He Comes Down The Escalator
A group of students and parents showed up at a Florida airport to confront a travel agent accused of scamming families out of a long-planned Europe trip. As he arrived under escort, the students yelled “Scumbag” while he came down the arrivals escalator—an encounter families described as cathartic, even as many are still out significant money.
Stuck On The Plane For Hours With No Stairs After Landing — Passengers Jump Off A Boeing 737 To Get Out
Passengers on an Air Congo Boeing 737-800 reportedly sat onboard for hours after landing at Kindu Airport because ground staff couldn’t produce stairs to deplane the aircraft. Eventually, frustrated travelers began exiting on their own—jumping from the forward door down to the tarmac in a non-emergency situation, a stark breakdown in basic ground handling and onboard control.
Chase Made Sapphire Reserve Credits Easier To Use — New $250 Hotel Credit, More Dining Cities, No More Split-Year Timing
Chase is making Sapphire Reserve’s credits a lot easier to actually use in 2026. The Edit’s $500 hotel credit stops forcing you to time bookings into two half-year windows, a new $250 two-night hotel credit adds more chains (including IHG), and the Exclusive Tables dining credit is expanding into more cities with 100+ new restaurants.
American Flight Diverted After Bathroom Clash — Judge Found Passenger Wasn’t Drunk, But He’s Still Banned
American Flight 1124 from Barranquilla to Miami diverted back after a lavatory dispute escalated into a crew confrontation, and the passenger later blew 0.00 on a breathalyzer at the gate. The FAA judge found he wasn’t intoxicated and rejected the threat allegation, but the passenger is still banned – and suing trying to get flying privileges back.











