A woman who famously stowed away on a Delta flight to Paris—spending hours undetected in lavatories—has struck again, sneaking through TSA and boarding a United flight from Newark to Milan.
Family Orders Domino’s To The Airport To Avoid High Prices—Brings Pizza Through TSA And Onto The Plane
Airport food prices drove one family to order Domino’s Pizza directly to the terminal during a delay—then carry the boxes through TSA and eat the slices onboard. The move has sparked a heated debate over whether it’s a brilliant money‑saving hack or just bad cabin etiquette.
Tampa Airport Wants Passengers To Stop Wearing Pajamas—Their Absurd Dress Code Is Almost Certainly Illegal
Tampa International Airport just sparked controversy by tweeting that it wants passengers to stop wearing pajamas. But can an airport actually enforce a pajama ban? It’s legally dubious, and drawing backlash online.
Top Analyst Warns United: MileagePlus Changes Could Kill Loyalty—’If You Don’t Have Their Credit Card, You Don’t Matter’
United Airlines is aggressively pushing customers toward its credit cards with major MileagePlus changes, but top airline analyst Henry Harteveldt warns this strategy could backfire—alienating loyal flyers who feel that without the card, their business simply doesn’t matter.
Delta Passenger Vomits For 45 Minutes, Barefoot Seatmate Admits He’s Contagious—Flight Attendants Do Nothing
A Delta passenger vomited openly in his seat for nearly an hour while his barefoot companion casually admitted their family had just suffered a contagious virus. Despite health and safety protocols, the Delta crew reportedly let it continue.
Ritz-Carlton Guests Robbed Of $425,000 Seconds After Security Guard Vanishes—Was It An Inside Job? [Roundup]
Guests at the Ritz-Carlton St. Thomas were robbed at gunpoint of $425,000 in luxury goods moments after their security guard mysteriously disappeared—raising suspicions of an inside job. Plus, Denver airport’s $14.5 million sign is malfunctioning, and a single forger caused 60,000 aircraft engine parts to have fake safety certificates.
Passengers Demand Court Undo Alaska’s Hawaiian Airlines Merger—Say Deal Hurts Competition, Raises Prices
Nearly 18 months after Alaska Air Group completed its acquisition of Hawaiian Airlines, a revived passenger lawsuit is now urging a federal court to undo the deal, arguing it has reduced competition, driven up fares and cut routes.
Hyatt Charging $20 For A Coffee Pod, MGM Wants $180 For Two Drinks—You’re Now A Mark, Not A Guest [Roundup]
Hyatt is demanding $20 for a single coffee pod, while MGM wants a staggering $180 for two basic cocktails in Vegas. Washington Post wants to privatize TSA. And is the first year value of Bilt Palladium orders of magnitude higher than any other card?
Frontier Passenger’s Epic Meltdown Goes Viral—This Airline Is Synonymous With Chaos
A Frontier Airlines passenger’s explosive onboard meltdown—complete with screaming, swearing, and dramatic confrontations—has gone viral, spotlighting once again the chaotic passenger culture the airline has become infamous for.
Hyatt Revamping Award Charts—With 78 Price Levels, Free Nights At Top Hotels Get Up To 67% More Expensive
The World of Hyatt program will expand its award charts from three to five price levels per category, creating 78 possible redemption prices across their standard and all-inclusive charts. The most expensive points redemptions can cost up to 67% more points than before. While the lowest tier prices actually fall on some properties, the new structure lets Hyatt charge far more at peak demand, potentially changing how members will value and redeem their points in significant ways.











