Bali Is Threatening To Deport ‘Influencers’ Who Make Sponsored Posts In New Immigration Crackdown

Jun 06 2026

Bali immigration officials are warning influencers that sponsored posts, comped hotel stays, brand collaborations and content shoots can count as work—not tourism. The island’s new immigration patrol is even using social media posts as evidence, meaning the same Bali reel meant to promote a villa or beach club could become proof of a visa violation.

Continue Reading »

American Airlines Makes Same-Day Flight Changes Miserable — United And Delta Are Far More Generous

Jun 06 2026

American Airlines advertises same-day confirmed changes as a way to move to a better flight, but its rules make the benefit far harder to use than United or Delta. Seats can still be for sale, first class passengers can be blocked, hub customers can lose flexibility, and the app may not even show options that should be available.

Continue Reading »

Philippine Airlines Just Announced It Will Join Oneworld—A Major New Asia Partner For American Airlines Flyers

Jun 06 2026

Philippine Airlines is joining oneworld next year, finally putting one of the better-hidden Asia award opportunities within reach of American Airlines flyers. Its seats have often been unusually available but hard for U.S. travelers to book; once PAL enters oneworld, those awards should become cheaper and easier to access—until everyone else starts chasing them too.

Continue Reading »

Airline Lost Your Bag? Don’t Settle For A $50 Voucher — You Can Claim Up To $4,700

Jun 06 2026

Airlines love handing out tiny “courtesy” vouchers when your bag goes missing, but that is not the end of what they may owe. If your luggage is delayed, lost, or damaged, you can claim reasonable documented expenses, get checked bag fees refunded when delivery is significantly late, and on U.S. domestic flights pursue claims for lost bags up to the $4,700 liability cap — as long as you know which kind of compensation you are actually asking for.

Continue Reading »

American Airlines Flight Attendants Say Their Union Contract Shortchanged Them — Now They’re Suing For Overtime Pay

Jun 06 2026

American Airlines flight attendants are suing for overtime pay under Illinois law, arguing that time at the airport should count as work even though their union contract pays under a very different system. It is part of a growing wave of lawsuits trying to use state wage laws to punch through airline labor contracts.

Continue Reading »

Airline Passenger Blacklists Won’t Stop Bad Behavior — The Real Fix Starts Before Boarding

Jun 06 2026

A shared passenger blacklist sounds like a tough answer to bad behavior in the cabin, but it is the wrong tool for a rare and messy problem. Reported incidents are up, but much of the real fix happens before the aircraft door closes: better gate staffing to keep impaired or unstable passengers from boarding, and better crew de-escalation training so ordinary conflicts do not become onboard flashpoints.

Continue Reading »

When Jewish Guests Checked Into A London Hotel, The In-Room TVs Greeted Them With ‘Free Palestine’

Jun 06 2026

A 24-year old Orthodox Jewish traveler from New York, in London for a friend’s wedding, filmed the TV in his room at the Travelodge London Manor House showing a welcome screen that included “Free Palestine.” A second visibly Jewish guest, staying in another room, reported the same message and that front desk staff was hostile at check-in.

Continue Reading »