An Emirates A380 was about 9 miles ahead of a smaller Airbus A320 at cruising altitude when the smaller jet hit the invisible turbulence the superjumbo left behind, injuring six people and throwing a flight attendant into the cabin ceiling. It sounds impossible because the planes were miles apart, but every wing leaves powerful trailing vortices — and behind an A380, those invisible “horizontal tornadoes” can still matter long after the aircraft has passed.
Tragic: Delta Regional Pilot Killed On Wedding Day In Helicopter Crash On Way To Honeymoon [Roundup]
A Delta regional pilot was killed on his wedding day after the helicopter carrying him and his new wife toward their honeymoon crashed in bad weather. Also: American gives a passenger a taped-shut tray table on a 10-hour flight, boarding times that don’t match aircraft reality, Bilt credit limits jump as high as $250,000, El Al returns to San Francisco, and Amex offers a Marriott transfer bonus you can probably ignore.
[ENDING SOON] Biggest-Ever Chase Sapphire Reserve 150,000 Point Bonus
Chase Sapphire Reserve now has a record 150,000-point bonus, but the bigger story is that this is still a premium travel card built for actual spending. With strong earning on direct travel and dining, useful protections, valuable transfer partners, and better-than-usual lounge access, the $795 card is not just another coupon book with a big intro offer.
I’ve Redeemed Billions Of Miles — 7 Rules For Finding Award Flights Everyone Else Misses
Award seats are not gone, but the way most people search for them is broken. After redeeming billions of miles over more than 25 years, the rules that still work are the same ones most travelers resist: be flexible on dates, routes, gateways, programs, and prices; book the workable trip first; and keep improving it as better space opens.
New American Airlines Policy Says It Can Sell You First Class, Give You Coach — And Keep Most Of Your Money
American Airlines now says that if it downgrades you from first class to coach, it may owe you just 40% of the affected segment’s fare — even when the coach seat it gives you sold for far less. A new DOT complaint argues that American’s policy lets the airline sell a premium cabin, fail to deliver it, and keep money that federal refund rules say should go back to passengers.
Aspen Airport Will Close For 7.5 Months — No Commercial Flights, No Private Jets [Roundup]
Aspen Airport will close for roughly seven and a half months in 2027, with no commercial flights, no private jets, and no terminal access while the runway is rebuilt and shifted west. Also: a NetJets runway incursion at SFO, Bilt’s non-card business heading toward $1 billion in revenue, a 50% Rove transfer bonus to Turkish, and why parents should think about upgrade lists before naming children.
Citi Points Get A 30% Qatar Bonus — You Can Also Move Then To BA Or Finnair
Citi points now transfer to Qatar Airways Privilege Club with a 30% bonus through June 30, and that can be more useful than it looks. Qatar Avios can be moved 1:1 into British Airways, Finnair and other Avios programs, while Qatar itself often gives its own members better award availability than partners like American or Alaska — just don’t count on the bonus posting instantly.
Flight Attendants Are Right: Stop Touching Them — But That Rule Must Go Both Ways
Flight attendants are right that passengers should stop touching them to get attention, make a point, or treat them like part of the cabin furniture. But that rule has to run both ways: if a galley cart bumps my arm, apologizing by touching my arm again is not fixing the problem — it is repeating it.
Memphis Lets Hotels Add A 5% Tourism Tax — Then Spend The Money On Themselves
Memphis lets certain hotels add a 5% “tourism” tax to guest bills — but unlike ordinary hotel taxes, much of the money goes back to the same hotel to fund renovations, expansion, or redevelopment. It looks like a mandatory government charge, but economically it’s a hidden room-rate increase with city approval.
United Flight Map ‘Glitch’ Replaces The Plane With A Devil Wears Prada Stiletto [Roundup]
United passengers are seeing a flight map ‘glitch’ where the airplane icon is replaced by the spiked stiletto from *The Devil Wears Prada*. Also: Bilt cardholders report surprise $50,000 credit limits, Chase Sapphire Lounge DFW appears closer to opening, American basic economy bag fees get worse, and oneworld Ruby members get new Iberia seat-selection benefits.











