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.
American Airlines Just Refreshed Lounge Food Again — Pho Bars, Cocoa Bars, And A New Admirals Club Bagel Play
American just rolled out a November/December lounge food refresh—and it’s already teeing up another one for winter. Flagship lounges are getting new “active stations” like a Pho bar in Philadelphia plus rotating hot dishes (from bulgogi in Dallas to lemongrass salmon in Chicago), while Admirals Clubs are pivoting toward a bagel-based version of the current avocado toast concept—where the whole thing will live or die on whether they can execute a decent bagel.
Biometric Gates Force Face Scans at Boarding — And Turn Muslim Veils Into an Online Spectacle
Airports are replacing agents with biometric e-gates, and boarding increasingly means one thing: an unobstructed face scan matched against your passport photo and the flight manifest. A viral clip of veiled women being told to uncover at the gate got cheered for all the wrong reasons—but the real story is how “biometric exit” normalizes government face-matching as a condition of travel, and how simple accommodations can handle identification without turning it into a spectacle.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy’s Daughter Says TSA Pat Down Nearly Made Her Miss Flight — Calls For Agency To Be Abolished
Delta flyers are discovering the “SkyPesos” reality the hard way: one photo shows the reality hitting the airline’s flyers at the airport – and on board. Also Asiana’s in-flight face mask service, Hyatt paying Texas $1M+ over resort-fee pricing, United’s revived Newark-vs-JFK ads, and more.
American Airlines Warns A321XLR Business Passengers That Suite Doors Cannot Close — Here’s 5,000 Miles
American Airlines is proactively emailing A321XLR business-class passengers to warn that the new suite doors cannot close yet because they aren’t FAA-certified. To make up for the missing privacy feature, the airline is offering 5,000 AAdvantage miles—another early-service wrinkle on an otherwise impressive new transcon and future long-haul workhorse.
inKind Deal Stack: $25 Off $50 For New Or Existing Users — Then Earn Up To 20% Back On What You Pay
inKind is a closed-loop dining payments app where you pay participating restaurants in-app and earn up to 20% back as inKind Cash Back (credit you can reuse inside the network). Right now you can start with a clean $25-off-$50 play (referral or offer), and if you’re a repeat user the real upside is stacking that with 20% back—or even prepaying for up to a 33% bonus—while staying ahead of the fast expiration on earned cash back.
My Back Seat Belt Didnt Work in a Lyft From DCA — Lyft Took the Report And Still Charged Full Price [Roundup]
My back seat belt didn’t work in a Lyft from DCA—and after I reported it, Lyft took the complaint and still charged full price. Also, use the Royal Air Maroc status match loophole to still unlock AA/Alaska lounge access; Alaska’s London award surcharge bug fixed; Park Hyatt DC’s 24-hour room service refuses coffee; and JSX expanding Santa Monica flights while activists sue.
Did Anyone Test This? American Airlines New A321XLR Suite Forces Screens Closed For Meal Service
American’s first Airbus A321XLR entered commercial service, debuting its new Flagship Suite. But early reports from onboard suggest flight attendants can’t set the table or serve meals with the swing-out screens deployed—forcing repeated stow-and-serve cycles that make you wonder whether the service flow was ever tested.
Hotel Cleaners Open Door to 3 Feet of Trash — Toilet Paper Piled Higher Than the Toilet, Room Needs Full Renovation
A long-stay guest checked out of an e-sports hotel room in Changchun, China—and staff say they opened the door to a “garbage mountain,” with trash piled roughly a meter high and toilet paper stacked higher than the toilet. The hotel says it took three days to clear everything out and disinfect, but the damage was bad enough that the room still needs renovation.
United Executive Raised A Safety Alarm About Aircraft Readiness Data — Says He Was Fired And Blacklisted
A former United managing director claims he uncovered an aircraft-readiness data mismatch inside United’s flight-tracking tech and repeatedly escalated other safety-related issues — then was removed, terminated, and later blacklisted after complaining. Even if parts of the case turn on procedural deadlines rather than the merits, the allegations paint an unsettling picture of how safety concerns can be handled when they collide with internal politics.










