United flight attendants voted down a union-endorsed contract by 71% after five years without a raise—and now the union is demanding pay increases immediately, before a new deal is negotiated. United is pushing back, arguing that any added pay or “quality of life” improvements have to come as part of a full contract package with tradeoffs on work rules.
Hilton Brings Back Status Matches With Reduced Requirements—and 90 Days of Gold Up Front
Hilton has brought back status matches—and the fast track is easier than the last time around. You get Gold for 90 days upon approval, then only 6 paid nights keeps Gold through March 2028 (12 nights earns Diamond through March 2028).
United Served a “Bowl of Sadness” in First Class—And It Launched a Wave of Parody Posts [Roundup]
United served a first class dinner that one passenger dubbed a “bowl of sadness,” and the complaints quickly turned into something else: a wave of copycat posts riffing on the same lines. Plus in today’s roundup: a Southwest mechanic’s payroll, a passenger who slept on a stranger for an entire flight while her boyfriend took a photo, Delta’s CIO retirement, and more.
Bilt 2.0 Details Are Leaking Ahead of Next Week’s Launch—Three Cards, New Fees, New Rules
Bilt will unveil a refreshed card lineup next week, but details are already leaking—including a three-card structure and new annual fees. The biggest change may be how “fee-free” rent and mortgage payments work: the perk appears to become conditional on enough non-rent spending (or offset with Bilt Cash), which radically changes the math for how you use the card.
Debunking The 2-Hour Airport Arrival Myth: How Early Do You Really Need To Show Up?
Airlines and airports tell you to arrive at the airport 2 hours in advance for a domestic flight and 3 hours in advance for an international flight. And then during peak times they warn you to show up even earlier than that. This is insane.
McDonald’s Isn’t Much Of A Food Strategy — But It’s The Most Reliable Restroom Stop When You’re Abroad
Most travelers don’t seek out McDonald’s abroad for the food. The real value is that it’s a predictable place to stop, walk in unnoticed, and use a clean restroom—something you can’t always count on in parts of Asia, Africa, or even busy tourist districts. Menus change country to country, but the bathrooms are consistent, free, and easy to find, which makes McDonald’s a more useful travel tool than a meal plan.
Hilton Kicks Minnesota Hotel Out of the Brand After Video Shows It Still Turning Away DHS Bookings
Hilton says it is removing a Minneapolis-area hotel from the brand after a follow-up video suggested the property was still refusing to honor Department of Homeland Security bookings even after an apology and assurances that agents would be welcome.
40-Year Murder Mystery Solved: A Passenger Saw an SOS From a Plane Window — The Rescue Exposed a Killer
A passenger spotted SOS flashes from a plane. The man they helped that night had just killed two women — a 40-year Colorado mystery finally solved.
American Starts Free WiFi Today, But Not On Every Plane Yet
Starting today, WiFi is free on most American Airlines flights for AAdvantage members, putting American alongside Delta and JetBlue while United and Alaska head toward free Starlink service. The catch is rollout: not every aircraft is enabled yet, widebodies come later, and customers paying for monthly or annual WiFi plans should watch for billing until American clarifies cancellations and refunds.
Conrad Maldives Spa Massage Put Guest In Surgery—He Says He’s Out $50,000 And Hilton Has Gone Silent
A guest says a spa massage at the Conrad Maldives left him needing neck surgery, costing more than $50,000 out of pocket, and that after submitting medical records and bills Hilton has gone silent for months—even as he describes the injury as life-altering and raises questions about what went wrong in the treatment.











