She told her family she’d landed a flight attendant job—then showed up at the airport in a uniform, flashed a bogus crew ID, and even used crew fast track before boarding a flight as a normal ticketed passenger. Real cabin crew noticed the details didn’t match and exposed the impersonation midflight.
Airlines
Category Archives for Airlines.
United Airlines Puts the Union Contract Tradeoff in Writing for Flight Attendants — Ground Pay Tied to “Algorithm Scheduling” and Reserve Pay Cuts
United Airlines’ latest update to flight attendants makes the trade explicit: the union’s new pay proposal is “too expensive,” and anything better than the rejected deal will require offsets. United hints it can move on ground-time pay and shorter reserve windows—but only if flight attendants accept “algorithm scheduling” and reserve pay changes.
American Brings Texas Barbecue to First Class on Dallas to New York — Exactly How Delta Started Its Catering Upgrade
American is testing route-specific First Class catering: starting February 11, Dallas–New York flights will offer Texas barbecue as a preorder option, It’s the same move Delta used to kick off what became its own catering upgrade—so this could be the start of something bigger.
Judge Laughs at TSA as Southwest Fights $48 Million Fine for Keeping Passenger Fees
A Fifth Circuit judge openly laughed when the TSA argued it isn’t set up to refund millions of passengers—while defending a $48 million penalty against Southwest for allegedly failing to return the same security fees. The case tests whether an airline has to cut cash refunds for government fees when travel credits expire unused.
Passenger Handed a Flight Attendant an Airsickness Bag—”This Is For You”—It Was Stuffed With Cash
A passenger handed a flight attendant a sealed airsickness bag mid-flight and said, “This is for you”—so she assumed it was trash and set it aside. Later she opened it and found it was packed with cash: $208 that passengers had quietly pooled as a collective tip.
American’s 2026 AAdvantage Changes Are Live—Partner Bonuses Capped as Strategy Shifts
American’s 2026 AAdvantage changes are now live, and the most meaningful shift isn’t elite qualification—it’s the quiet devaluation of partner earning bonuses, now reduced and capped. Combined with basic economy earning zero miles, it points to a broader strategy change: AAdvantage is no longer being treated as the primary reason to choose American, as the airline pours money into premium seats, clubs, and service instead.
On a 5 A.M. Spirit Flight, a Passenger Ordered Ghirardelli Hot Chocolate—Minutes Later She Was Vomiting
On a 5 a.m. Spirit flight, a passenger ordered the Ghirardelli hot chocolate—and says she was sweating, nauseous, and vomiting within minutes, with severe diarrhea for the rest of the flight. The timing makes classic food poisoning unlikely, which raises a more interesting question: was it something she consumed earlier, the stress of an all-nighter, or the reality of making “hot chocolate” with airline tank water?
63 Ole Miss Fans Risked Missing the Fiesta Bowl in Phoenix—American Switched Gates and Saved the Connection
Sixty-three Ole Miss fans were on the same tight connection through DFW, with a delay threatening to strand them short of the Fiesta Bowl in Phoenix. Instead of holding the flight, American simply moved gates—turning what would have been a terminal sprint into a short walk, and the Phoenix flight still pushed back early.
71% Of United Flight Attendants Rejected a Deal—Now They’re Demanding Immediate Pay Increases Anyway
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.
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.










