Climate advisers in the U.K. have floated restrictions on frequent flyer rewards as an “easy” way to reduce emissions, and commentators are now using that to explain why British Airways Avios keep getting worse. That gets the story backwards: BA is devaluing because loyalty is profitable, while bigger, fixable aviation emissions problems—from Europe’s fractured air traffic control system to contrail avoidance—are treated as an afterthought.
Pilot’s Engine Failed, So He Landed On A Highway—Then Tribal Officials Seized His Plane For Flying Too Low
A private pilot’s engine failed over northern Minnesota, leaving him to choose between a lake, a swamp, or a highway. He picked the safest option and landed on a state road crossing the Red Lake Reservation—only for tribal officials to seize his plane for six months, claiming he had violated an airspace ban they had no authority to enforce.
Europe’s Flight Delay Rules Promise Up To $700—But Some Passengers Need To Hire Bailiffs To Collect
Europe’s flight delay rules sound like the passenger protection Americans wish they had: cash compensation when airlines get you there hours late. But the system is far challenging in practice, with some travelers needing court judgments and bailiffs just to collect.
Man Steals Wallet From Disabled Passenger At TSA Checkpoint — Officer Puts Him In His Place
Bodycam footage was just released from Fort Lauderdale airport where a passenger’s wallet was tolen at TSA. The man had placed his bag, phone, and black Gucci wallet in a binto be screened. By the time he got through, the wallet was gone.
New AI Delay Alerts Expose How Airlines Use Weather Claims To Deny Stranded Passengers Hotels And Meals
United and American are getting better at telling passengers the real reasons their flights are delayed. That transparency is useful, but it also exposes a long-running airline habit: blaming weather or air traffic control when it’s actually something within their control – like mechanical issues or available crew – that caused the delay in the first place.
Teacher’s One-Night Budget Hotel Stay Triggers A $1,002,852.82 Debit Card Hold
This middle school teachers’ account showed a negative balance of more than $1 million when a $1,002,852.82 charge was placed on their debit card at an Americas Best Value Inn in Blytheville, Arkansas. The hotel says their credit card terminal was hacked.
Bali Is Threatening To Deport ‘Influencers’ Who Make Sponsored Posts In New Immigration Crackdown
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.
American Airlines Makes Same-Day Flight Changes Miserable — United And Delta Are Far More Generous
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.
Record Chase Sapphire Reserve 150,000 Point Bonus Offer Is Ending Soon
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.
Philippine Airlines Just Announced It Will Join Oneworld—A Major New Asia Partner For American Airlines Flyers
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.











