Danke, do something

Yesterday was a rough day at the office.



From the comments:


superskullmaster 1 month ago


There are several dead giveaways that this is fake. Here’s a few. And to get it out the way I am an aviation expert. First: the ailerons and spoilers are going the wrong way for the roll motions that you see. Second: the wings could not bend down at that angle without snapping. Third: the Airbus A320 and all FBW Airbus aircraft have a roll limiter that prevents rolls beyond about 45 degrees. Fourth: the aircraft is not moving fast enough to stay airborne at those extreme angles and in general is moving to slow. Fifth: Airliners can roll but not that fast and certainly not in landing configuration. Sixth: No pilot that wasn’t trying kill everyone would even attempt an approach that is so unstable. Seventh: nobody would actually stand there and film such an event. I’m done.
 
All 189 on board crashed Indonesian jet feared dead

https://www.breitbart.com/news/all-189-on-board-crashed-indonesian-jet-feared-dead/

29 Oct 2018

Jakarta (AFP) – All 189 passengers and crew aboard a crashed Indonesian Lion Air jet were “likely” killed in the accident, the search and rescue agency said Monday, as it announced it had found human remains.

The Boeing-737 MAX, which went into service just months ago, vanished from radar 13 minutes after taking off from Jakarta, plunging into the Java Sea moments after it had asked to be allowed to return to the Indonesian capital.

Websites that display flight data showed the plane speeding up as it suddenly lost altitude in the minutes before it disappeared.

“My prediction is that nobody survived because the victims that we found, their bodies were no longer intact and it’s been hours so it is likely 189 people have died,” search and rescue agency operational director Bambang Suryo Aji told reporters.

Some 40 divers are part of about 150 personnel at the scene, authorities said, with the plane in water about 30 to 40 metres deep.

Earlier, video footage apparently filmed at the scene of the crash showed a slick of fuel on the surface of the water and pictures showed what appeared to be an emergency slide and bits of wreckage bearing Lion Air’s logo.

The carrier acknowledged that the jet had previously been grounded for unspecified repairs.

The plane had been en route to Pangkal Pinang city, a jumping off point for beach-and-sun seeking tourists on nearby Belitung island, when it dropped out of contact around 6.30 am (2330 GMT).

It was not yet known if there were any foreigners on board.

Images filmed at Pangkal Pinang’s main airport showed families of passengers crying and hugging each other, with some yelling “Oh God”.

“This morning he called asking about our youngest son,” said a sobbing Ermayati, referring to her 45-year-old husband Muhammed Syafii, who was on board.

Indonesia’s National Transportation Safety Committee (NTSC) said there were 178 adult passengers, one child, two infants, two pilots and six cabin crew on board flight JT 610.

The transport ministry had initially said there was a total of 188 people on board.

The finance ministry said around 20 of its employees were on the plane.

Among them were half a dozen colleagues of Sony Setiawan, who was supposed to be on the flight but missed check in due to bad traffic.

“I know my friends were on that flight,” he told AFP.

Setiawan said he was only informed about his lucky escape after he arrived in Pangkal Pinang on another flight at 9:40am.

“My family was in shock and my mother cried, but I told them I was safe, so I just have to be grateful.”

Lion Air said the plane had only gone into service in August.

The pilot and co-pilot had more than 11,000 hours of flying time between them and had recent medical checkups and drug testing, it added.

Lion Air CEO Edward Sirait said the plane had an unspecified technical issue fixed in Bali before it was flown back to Jakarta.

“Engineers in Jakarta received notes and did another repair before it took off” on Monday, Edward Sirait told AFP, calling it “normal procedure”.

– Poor safety record –

US-based Boeing said it was “deeply saddened” by news of the crash.

Boeing, just days out from its first commercial delivery of the 737 MAX in May last year, reportedly suspended its release due to an engine issue, according to airline safety and product review site airlineratings.com.

It said the engines were a product of a joint venture between US-based General Electric and France’s Safran Aircraft Engines.

Earlier this year, Lion Air announced it was buying 50 Boeing 737 MAX 10 jets for $6.24 billion.

Indonesia’s air travel industry is booming, with the number of domestic passengers growing significantly over the past decade, but it has acquired a reputation for poor regulation and its airlines had once been banned from US and European airspace.

In August 2015, a commercial passenger aircraft operated by Indonesian carrier Trigana crashed in Papua due to bad weather, killing all 54 people on board. In 2014, poor maintenance and the pilots’ inadequate response was blamed for the crash of an AirAsia plane crashed with the loss of 162 lives.

Lion, a low-cost airline which has engaged in a huge expansion in recent years, has been involved in a number of incidents including a fatal 2004 crash and a collision between two Lion Air planes at Jakarta’s Soekarno-Hatta airport
 
A Japan Airlines co-pilot arrested after failing a breath test shortly before a London to Tokyo flight pleaded guilty Thursday to being almost 10 times over the legal limit for alcohol.London's Metropolitan Police force said Katsutoshi Jitsukawa appeared at Uxbridge Magistrates' Court in west London and admitted exceeding the alcohol limit.
The airline said the co-pilot was arrested Sunday at Heathrow Airport for violating British aviation law. The driver of a crew bus at Heathrow smelled alcohol on Jitsukawa and reported it to police, Japan's NHK public television said.
Tests found the 42-year-old first officer had 189 milligrams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood in his system, almost 10 times the 20 milligrams limit for a pilot. The limit for drivers in Britain is 80 milligrams.
Jitsukawa acknowledged he had drunk about two bottles of wine and a pitcher of beer the previous night, NHK said.
He was ordered detained until he is sentenced on Nov. 29.
JAL said the flight was delayed more than an hour and had to be operated by the remaining two pilots. It apologized Thursday for the incident.
The apology came a day after another major Japanese airline, All Nippon Airways, apologized for causing delays to five domestic flights after a pilot became unwell due to heavy drinking the night before.


https://www.yahoo.com/news/jal-apologizes-arrest-pilot-failed-alcohol-test-121302852.html
 
Keepin it classy...

Twitter-1-640x480.jpg
 
Why they chose the shorter (7700') runway (with a tailwind and strong crosswinds) over the longer (10,500') is anyones guess.




TSB hopes to interview 747 crew in Halifax runway overrun


Officials say cargo plane was trying to land at Halifax Stanfield International Airport in strong crosswind

CBC News · Posted: Nov 08, 2018 11:08 AM AT | Last Updated: November 8


747-plane-runway-halifax-cargo.jpg

The Sky Lease Cargo plane went off the end of a Halifax Stanfield International Airport runway early Wednesday morning. (Robert Short/CBC)Transportation investigators say it's too soon to know what roles weather and human decision-making played in a 747 cargo aircraft skidding 210 metres off the end of a Halifax runway early Wednesday morning, stopping not far from a public two-lane road.
The Sky Lease Cargo aircraft was arriving at Halifax Stanfield International Airport from Chicago when it overran the runway. It was to be loaded with live lobster in Halifax before heading to China, with a stop along the way in Alaska.

The plane was substantially damaged as it attempted to land shortly after 5 a.m. in wet and windy weather, the Transportation Safety Board said Thursday. Two engines separated, there was a small post-impact fire in one of the engines and the landing gear collapsed.
Austin Adams, a senior operations investigator with the TSB, told a news conference that his team was hoping to interview the crew of four later today. Until that happens, he would not speculate about the factors involved in the incident.
"We're still gathering that information at this point," he said. "We want to see some decision-making and what they were thinking."

tsb.jpg

Isabelle Langevin and Austin Adams of the Transportation Safety Board speak to reporters Thursday. (CBC)
The plane was attempting to land on Runway 14, the shorter of the airport's two runways. Ideally, a plane would land into the wind, said Adams. Conditions Wednesday saw strong westerly winds of about 33 kilometres per hour, which Adams described as a crosswind with a tailwind component.
Investigators say it was the pilot's request to use Runway 14. They cautioned against making assumptions about why or what role that might have played, noting all aircraft have certain limitations. Investigators will review what the certification was for the Sky Lease Cargo aircraft for landing with tailwind.
Reports Wednesday said the crew was taken to hospital with minor injuries, but Adams would not provide an update, citing privacy regulations.
Along with interviewing the crew, investigators will also review flight recorder data, weather information, speak to witnesses, analyze runway conditions, review history of the crew and speak with the operator and aircraft manufacturer.

cargo-jet-off-halifax-runway.JPG

This cargo jet was to be loaded with live lobster and head for China, but it went off the runway upon landing.(Steve Lawrence/CBC)

747-plane-halifax-stanfield-runway.jpg

The plane stopped less than 50 metres from a fence separating the airfield from a public road. (Robert Short/CBC)
Another thing investigators are examining is the available runway-safety area at the airport, a prepared surface beyond the end of a runway.
Isabelle Langevin, a senior investigator with TSB, said the airport in Halifax has a safety area of about 140 metres, which falls just short of the Transport Canada recommendation of 150 metres. The international recommendation is 300 metres, she said.


"Right now what the Transportation Safety Board would like is for the airports to do their own risk assessment … to define, with the type of operation that they support, what area they should have," said Langevin.
"[For] bigger airplanes, 300 metres would improve safety significantly. So we would like for Transport Canada to work with the operators to work towards meeting the [international recommendation.]"
More space allows for an aircraft to stop while minimizing damage, she said.
Airport spokesperson Theresa Rath Spicer said the runway safety area for the runway in question is slated to be extended next year.

Fuel leak

The plane will remain at the scene until the Transportation Safety Board finishes its investigation, Rath Spicer said, and the runway will not be operational until an engineering assessment of it is completed.
The plane is believed to have leaked fuel onto the ground, but Rath Spicer said it isn't yet known how fuel escaped.
"We actually smelled a very strong smell of jet fuel yesterday and saw evidence of a leak, but hadn't been able to pinpoint exactly where that's coming from based on how the aircraft is resting," Rath Spicer said.
She said the leak is believed to be contained within the site, and affected soil will be removed once it is safe to do so.


Rumor has it was the same Captain in this overrun:
https://aviation-safety.net/wikibase/wiki.php?id=214704



 
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Listen here: http://archive-server.liveatc.net/k...7wBG2mEAPzwqUSv9AjYWRQmSEUNL8vr2B3sl6O-qkcjsk

Might have been a medical problem, but sounds like she has been drinking...


LAS VEGAS — Federal and airport authorities said Friday they are investigating why an air traffic controller became incapacitated and went silent while working a night shift alone in the tower at busy McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas.

“No safety events occurred during this incident,” the Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement about what officials said amounted to a 40-minute span during which the female controller slurred words and then apparently lost consciousness shortly before midnight Wednesday.

“An air traffic controller at the Las Vegas tower became incapacitated while on duty,” the agency said. It did not identify the controller or the cause of her incapacitation.

Airport director Rosemary Vassiliadis issued a statement saying that initial findings echoed the FAA assessment.
Five inbound aircraft remained airborne during the incident, and aircraft on the ground held positions or communicated between themselves to maintain safety while moving, the FAA said.

Air traffic recordings available on the internet show commercial airline pilots having trouble understanding the controller during radio communications about approaches to land, clearances to take off and directions for taxiing. Some begin talking between themselves about something being amiss.

At one point, the controller sounds sleepy and apologizes over the radio, saying she is “choking a little bit.” Minutes later, she misstates an aircraft’s call numbers. Finally, her microphone opens to the sound of coughing and grunting.

She does not respond to a pilot’s inquiry before the sound of a male voice is heard in the room asking if the woman is all right.
Officials said a male controller who had been on break was summoned to return to the tower. Paramedics responded.
The FAA said the woman was put on administrative leave, and the agency ordered two controllers to be in the tower during busy hours.

“The FAA is deeply concerned by the incident, is thoroughly investigating what occurred, and is taking immediate steps to modify its overnight shift staffing policies,” the agency statement said.

McCarran is among the 10 busiest airports in the U.S. in passenger volume. The unidentified controller worked for a little more than an hour before trouble began and communicated with pilots of 29 aircraft before she was replaced, the FAA said.

National Air Traffic Controllers Association chief Paul Rinaldi issued a statement praising the work of thousands of union members around the country and promising cooperation in the FAA investigation “so that all of the facts are known.”

Copyright 2018 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
 
Passengers are forced to chip in to pay for REPAIRS to their Boeing 787 before it takes off from Beijing to Poland

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6406255/Passengers-forced-chip-pay-REPAIRS-Boeing-787.html

There were around 250 passengers on the LOT Polish Airlines flight from Beijing
They were asked to foot the bill after the mechanic demanded cash as payment
One member of staff managed to collect around £280 from passengers
Disciplinary measures will be taken against the employee who collected cash

By CHARLOTTE DEAN FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 10:18 EST, 19 November 2018 | UPDATED: 10:30 EST, 19 November 2018

Passengers on board a flight from Beijing to Poland were asked to fund the repairs on a fault so that the plane could take off.

There were around 250 passengers on the LOT Polish Airlines flight when the Boeing 787 Dreamliner suffered a hydraulic pump fault, according to local media.

They were asked to foot the bill after the mechanic who had been employed to fix the pump demanded that he would only take cash as payment.

The leak was first noticed by crew members during after after-flight checks when it landed at Beijing Capital International Airport on November 11.

It was due to fly back to Warsaw Chopin Airport the next day, however passengers were reportedly asked to pay for a replacement pump before it could get off the ground.

LOT Polish Airlines spokesman Adrian Kubicki said: 'An employee at the Boeing warehouse in Beijing refused to accept a bank transfer and insisted on cash.'

He claimed that crew from the flight managed to scrape together around 2,500 RMB (280 GBP) from passengers on the plane for repairs, which are believed to have taken around 10 hours.

Kubicki added: 'There are no circumstances that justify asking money from passengers.'

There were around 250 passengers on the LOT Polish Airlines flight when the Boeing 787 Dreamliner suffered a hydraulic pump fault

Daniel Golebiowski, who was one of the passengers on the flight, said: 'He asked several people, he took 400 RMB (45 GBP) from just us.'

The outraged passenger added: 'We are at the international airport. I cannot believe that transactions take place here in cash under the table with the mechanic standing next to the plane. Incredible!'

After the plane landed in Warsaw, Kubicki told outraged passengers: 'I know that you encountered an unusual situation today, for which I would like to apologise for from the bottom of my heart.

'Believe it nor not, but there was a situation with a warehouse employee in Beijing who refused all methods of payment other than cash which led to the confusion.

'Nevertheless, I am grateful to him and that the flight returned safely to Warsaw.'

According to local media, the borrowed money was immediately returned to the passengers once they landed in Warsaw along with flight vouchers.

Passengers are able to claim 600 EUR (534 GBP) in compensation for the lengthy delay.

According to the LOT spokesman, disciplinary measures will be taken against the employee who collected the cash from passengers.
 
More than 24,000 United Airlines flight attendants want management at the Chicago-based carrier to know the fight isn’t over yet to reverse a controversial move announced earlier this month to cut one flight attendant from staffing assigned to United's high-margin Polaris international business class cabin.
United flight attendants who belong to the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA) are planning a system-wide “day of action” on Dec. 13 to protest the staffing cuts and other issues that have rankled rank-and-file flight attendants in recent months.
The protest is expected to include informational picket lines at United’s key hubs across the nation, including Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, San Francisco International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport, and Newark Liberty International Airport, among others.
In a memo to AFA's United Airlines membership, union leaders said “we are taking our fight public because our fight affects the traveling public too, and management should not only be answering to Wall Street. The people on planes are the ones who matter.”
United management has insisted the cut of one flight attendant in the Polaris cabin, to take effect Feb. 1, will not materially affect the level of service to Polaris customers because the carrier plans to pre-plate entrees served in the business cabin.


Other concerns United flight attendants hope to bring to the public’s attention are what FAs insist are insufficient hotel accommodations during irregular operations and severe weather, plus the need to fix payroll issues and resolve discrepancies expeditiously.
AFA also want United to eliminate so-called “long sits” that require some flight attendants to work grueling schedules such as an overnight red-eye transcon flight followed by another morning flight the same day.

More at: https://www.bizjournals.com/chicago...nts-plan-systemwide.html?ana=yahoo&yptr=yahoo
 
More than 24,000 United Airlines flight attendants want management at the Chicago-based carrier to know the fight isn’t over yet to reverse a controversial move announced earlier this month to cut one flight attendant from staffing assigned to United's high-margin Polaris international business class cabin.
United flight attendants who belong to the Association of Flight Attendants (AFA) are planning a system-wide “day of action” on Dec. 13 to protest the staffing cuts and other issues that have rankled rank-and-file flight attendants in recent months.
The protest is expected to include informational picket lines at United’s key hubs across the nation, including Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport, San Francisco International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport, and Newark Liberty International Airport, among others.
In a memo to AFA's United Airlines membership, union leaders said “we are taking our fight public because our fight affects the traveling public too, and management should not only be answering to Wall Street. The people on planes are the ones who matter.”
United management has insisted the cut of one flight attendant in the Polaris cabin, to take effect Feb. 1, will not materially affect the level of service to Polaris customers because the carrier plans to pre-plate entrees served in the business cabin.


Other concerns United flight attendants hope to bring to the public’s attention are what FAs insist are insufficient hotel accommodations during irregular operations and severe weather, plus the need to fix payroll issues and resolve discrepancies expeditiously.
AFA also want United to eliminate so-called “long sits” that require some flight attendants to work grueling schedules such as an overnight red-eye transcon flight followed by another morning flight the same day.

More at: https://www.bizjournals.com/chicago...nts-plan-systemwide.html?ana=yahoo&yptr=yahoo

Well, I guess I can understand that.

On United, the average age of the straight, non trans queeer FA staff has got to be about 70.
 
The American skies have gone from an open market with many competing airlines to a cozy oligopoly with four major airlines. To say that there are four major airlines overstates the true level of competition. Most U.S. airlines dominate a local hub, unironically known as “fortress hubs,” where they face little competition and have a near monopoly. They have the landing slots, and they are willing to engage in predatory pricing to keep out any new entrants. At 40 of the 100 largest U.S. airports, a single airline controls a majority of the market.
United, for example, dominates many of the country’s largest airports. In Houston, United has around a 60 percent market share, in Newark 51 percent, in Washington Dulles 43 percent, in San Francisco 38 percent and in Chicago 31 percent. This situation is even more skewed for other airlines. For example, Delta has an 80 percent market share in Atlanta and 77 percent in Philadelphia, while in Dallas-Fort Worth it has 77 percent. For many routes, you simply have no choice.

More at: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-11-26/tepper-competition-dying-taking-capitalism-it
 
[MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION]



Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

https://nypost.com/2018/11/28/passenger-says-delta-pilot-used-grindr-to-hit-on-him-during-flight/

By Christian Gollayan November 28, 2018 | 2:56pm | Updated

Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

A college student said that a Delta pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight. Getty Images

A passenger onboard a Delta plane was creeped out after a pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight.

JP Thorn, a 27-year-old college student, told The Post that the strange interaction happened while he was flying from Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Chicago in August. When his flight landed, his cellular service returned and he noticed a new notification on the gay dating app.

181128-delta-pilot-grindr-embed.jpg


“I see you’re on my flight,” the message read. “Enjoy the ride to Chicago.”

“My reaction was I knew I needed to get off this plane as fast as I can,” Thorn, who’s studying communications at Hamline University, told The Post. “I’ve had some weird experiences with proximity stuff on Grindr.”

Turns out, Thorn told The Post that the message was sent 30 minutes prior to the plane’s landing, which meant he received the message during their 90-minute trip. Thorn said that according to the gay dating app, the man was 90 feet away from him, and the man’s profile features a photo of the sky taken from the cockpit.

“My deductive reasoning led me to believe that he was the pilot,” Thorn told The Post. “I messaged him back and he told me that he was one of the pilots.”

Though Thorn was weirded out by the online exchange, his anxieties were alleviated after he left the plane and walked to his connecting flight. He continued to chat with the pilot on Grindr, whom Thorn ultimately described as a “nice guy.”

“He asked me about our flight, how it was on the way, and [the conversation] was really standard,” Thorn said. “I said there was no turbulence, then he made a joke about turbulence.”

Thorn deleted his app when he landed in Nashville and has lost touch with the aviator ever since. Though Thorn said that if he didn’t have to catch his connecting flight, he would’ve met the captain.

“I meet up with people all the time from Grindr,” Thorn said. “I think I totally would have met him for coffee.”

On Sunday, Thorn uploaded a screenshot of their conversation on Twitter, which quickly turned into a social media sensation and now has more than 218 thousand likes.

remember when my pilot messaged me on grindr at 30,000 feet in the air pic.twitter.com/0q7QNDX7MV

— JP (@emobandtshirt) November 25, 2018

“I got a lot of people saying I should’ve met up with pilots because they make a lot of money,” he said. “That was pretty funny.”

And Thorn said that he would fly with Delta again.

“It’s the only airline I tend to use,” he said. “I don’t think they get into too much controversy.”

Delta didn’t immediately return a request for comment.
 
[MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION]



Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

https://nypost.com/2018/11/28/passenger-says-delta-pilot-used-grindr-to-hit-on-him-during-flight/

By Christian Gollayan November 28, 2018 | 2:56pm | Updated

Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

A college student said that a Delta pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight. Getty Images

A passenger onboard a Delta plane was creeped out after a pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight.

JP Thorn, a 27-year-old college student, told The Post that the strange interaction happened while he was flying from Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Chicago in August. When his flight landed, his cellular service returned and he noticed a new notification on the gay dating app.

181128-delta-pilot-grindr-embed.jpg


“I see you’re on my flight,” the message read. “Enjoy the ride to Chicago.”

“My reaction was I knew I needed to get off this plane as fast as I can,” Thorn, who’s studying communications at Hamline University, told The Post. “I’ve had some weird experiences with proximity stuff on Grindr.”

Turns out, Thorn told The Post that the message was sent 30 minutes prior to the plane’s landing, which meant he received the message during their 90-minute trip. Thorn said that according to the gay dating app, the man was 90 feet away from him, and the man’s profile features a photo of the sky taken from the cockpit.

“My deductive reasoning led me to believe that he was the pilot,” Thorn told The Post. “I messaged him back and he told me that he was one of the pilots.”

Though Thorn was weirded out by the online exchange, his anxieties were alleviated after he left the plane and walked to his connecting flight. He continued to chat with the pilot on Grindr, whom Thorn ultimately described as a “nice guy.”

“He asked me about our flight, how it was on the way, and [the conversation] was really standard,” Thorn said. “I said there was no turbulence, then he made a joke about turbulence.”

Thorn deleted his app when he landed in Nashville and has lost touch with the aviator ever since. Though Thorn said that if he didn’t have to catch his connecting flight, he would’ve met the captain.

“I meet up with people all the time from Grindr,” Thorn said. “I think I totally would have met him for coffee.”

On Sunday, Thorn uploaded a screenshot of their conversation on Twitter, which quickly turned into a social media sensation and now has more than 218 thousand likes.

remember when my pilot messaged me on grindr at 30,000 feet in the air pic.twitter.com/0q7QNDX7MV

— JP (@emobandtshirt) November 25, 2018

“I got a lot of people saying I should’ve met up with pilots because they make a lot of money,” he said. “That was pretty funny.”

And Thorn said that he would fly with Delta again.

“It’s the only airline I tend to use,” he said. “I don’t think they get into too much controversy.”

Delta didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

Coming out of Dankes hometown you will notice . Changed the name of the airline certainly .
 
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@Danke



Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

https://nypost.com/2018/11/28/passenger-says-delta-pilot-used-grindr-to-hit-on-him-during-flight/

By Christian Gollayan November 28, 2018 | 2:56pm | Updated

Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

A college student said that a Delta pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight. Getty Images

A passenger onboard a Delta plane was creeped out after a pilot messaged him on Grindr during their flight.

JP Thorn, a 27-year-old college student, told The Post that the strange interaction happened while he was flying from Saint Paul, Minnesota, to Chicago in August. When his flight landed, his cellular service returned and he noticed a new notification on the gay dating app.

181128-delta-pilot-grindr-embed.jpg


“I see you’re on my flight,” the message read. “Enjoy the ride to Chicago.”

“My reaction was I knew I needed to get off this plane as fast as I can,” Thorn, who’s studying communications at Hamline University, told The Post. “I’ve had some weird experiences with proximity stuff on Grindr.”

Turns out, Thorn told The Post that the message was sent 30 minutes prior to the plane’s landing, which meant he received the message during their 90-minute trip. Thorn said that according to the gay dating app, the man was 90 feet away from him, and the man’s profile features a photo of the sky taken from the cockpit.

“My deductive reasoning led me to believe that he was the pilot,” Thorn told The Post. “I messaged him back and he told me that he was one of the pilots.”

Though Thorn was weirded out by the online exchange, his anxieties were alleviated after he left the plane and walked to his connecting flight. He continued to chat with the pilot on Grindr, whom Thorn ultimately described as a “nice guy.”

“He asked me about our flight, how it was on the way, and [the conversation] was really standard,” Thorn said. “I said there was no turbulence, then he made a joke about turbulence.”

Thorn deleted his app when he landed in Nashville and has lost touch with the aviator ever since. Though Thorn said that if he didn’t have to catch his connecting flight, he would’ve met the captain.

“I meet up with people all the time from Grindr,” Thorn said. “I think I totally would have met him for coffee.”

On Sunday, Thorn uploaded a screenshot of their conversation on Twitter, which quickly turned into a social media sensation and now has more than 218 thousand likes.

remember when my pilot messaged me on grindr at 30,000 feet in the air pic.twitter.com/0q7QNDX7MV

— JP (@emobandtshirt) November 25, 2018

“I got a lot of people saying I should’ve met up with pilots because they make a lot of money,” he said. “That was pretty funny.”

And Thorn said that he would fly with Delta again.

“It’s the only airline I tend to use,” he said. “I don’t think they get into too much controversy.”

Delta didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

Where do you find these stories...nvm, don't answer that.

Probably fake anyways (never trust a pole smoker, even when they Captain your boat), and if not, probably a Delta Connection airline, not Delta Mainline.
 
[MENTION=6186]Danke[/MENTION]

Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight

https://nypost.com/2018/11/28/passenger-says-delta-pilot-used-grindr-to-hit-on-him-during-flight/

By Christian Gollayan November 28, 2018 | 2:56pm | Updated

Passenger says Delta pilot used Grindr to hit on him during flight
...
Delta didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

This has to rank right up there with the most ridiculous story ever published.

Is Delta supposed to care about this? “Some random gay guy got a message on a gay dating app! Fire up the presses, this is big! Get Delta on the phone now, they have some explaining to do!”. :rolleyes:
 
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