CNBC host Andrew Ross Sorkin casually admitted on Squawk Box that he just skiplagged a ticket and saved about $1,500, blaming the trick on a travel agent and openly wondering whether he was supposed to cancel the extra legs. Throwaway ticketing is a commercial dispute over pricing, not a moral failing by consumers, even if it is something most people probably should not do often.
Airlines
Category Archives for Airlines.
American Airlines Talks Up Its AI Strategy — Says This Won’t Reduce Headcount (Even Though They Need To)
American’s COO told the Skift Aviation Forum that the airline’s artificial intelligence initiatives won’t be used to reduce headcount — even as Delta and United are already leaning on AI to automate whole categories of work. His primary example of AA’s “AI strategy” was the HEAT tool the airline has been promoting for more than three years, underscoring just how far behind American has fallen.
United MileagePlus Cards Now Earn 2 Miles Per Dollar On Rent Through Bilt — But At A Cost
United MileagePlus cardmembers can now earn 2 miles per dollar on rent when paying through Bilt, with earnings split between the card issuer and a bonus mile from United. The catch: you’ll pay a 3% fee for the privilege, making the math far less compelling than Bilt’s earlier 3x Alaska offer unless you’re using it to generate elite qualifying miles as well.
American Airlines Launches AAdvantage Pass Bundle Of Miles And Status — But The $5,000 Price Tag Makes No Sense
American Airlines has introduced a new AAdvantage Pass bundle that packages 100,000 miles, Gold status, and 15,000 Loyalty Points — and then slaps a $5,000 price tag on it. The idea of selling bundled status and miles makes sense, but this execution doesn’t:
JetBlue Founder Says Spirit And Frontier Will Merge In 2026 — ‘There’s Room For One, But Not Two’
JetBlue founder and Breeze CEO David Neeleman says Spirit and Frontier will merge in 2026, arguing the U.S. market can only sustain a single ultra-low-cost carrier. He pointed to Spirit’s restructuring and the need for scale and synergies, echoing his view that U.S. ULCCs have struggled because they compete too directly with major airlines instead of following Europe’s model.
Bilt Now Shows When Airfare Is Truly Booked Direct — So You Can Earn Extra Points And Still Call The Airline For Changes
Bilt has upgraded its travel portal to clearly show when an airfare booking is truly made directly with the airline. That means you can earn an extra Bilt point per dollar on the ticket, still put the charge on any card you choose, and—crucially—handle changes or rebooking with the airline instead of a third-party site. For anyone who values both rewards and control over their reservation, this is a real advantage.
Turkish Airlines Devalues Miles Again — Killing The United Sweet Spots That Made The Program Worth Using
Turkish Airlines just wiped out the last meaningful value in its Miles & Smiles program. After raising United domestic awards last year, Turkish has hit them again: mainland–Hawaii business class jumps to 40,000 miles each way when two years ago it was 12,500.
British Airways Confirms A December 15 Avios Devaluation — Expect Both Higher Points And Bigger Surcharge
British Airways will raise the cost of award travel on December 15, increasing both the Avios required and the surcharges you’ll pay — but the airline won’t publish the new prices in advance. The limited examples they’ve shared point to roughly 10% higher points and surcharges rising anywhere from a few percent to potentially doubling on some routes. The full extent of the devaluation won’t be known until it’s already live.
From “My Third Wife” to “Prime Beef”: Flight Attendants Reveal Pickup Lines Passengers Actually Use — Some Even Worked
Flight attendants are sharing the funniest, cringiest, and most inappropriate pickup lines passengers actually try on them. A few of the lines surprisingly worked — but many crossed the line into awkward, gross, or outright harassment.
Southwest Agent Printed $2 Million In Fake LUV Vouchers — And A Chicago Teacher Is Headed To Federal Prison
A Southwest Airlines customer service agent at Chicago Midway discovered he could print LUV vouchers even when no passenger was owed compensation — and teamed up with a Chicago teacher to sell them for cash. Now the teacher has been sentenced to federal prison for buying them.











