AA3023 Incident. DEN - MIA, July 26 2025

Just walking through the lobby casinos annoys me
I know there’s a handful of good restaurants there but none really work for to the “I’m alone and have to wake up at 4am to go to work” experience. Even then I’d expect they’re more expensive and have gone downhill since the last time I had them.
 
I know there’s a handful of good restaurants there but none really work for to the “I’m alone and have to wake up at 4am to go to work” experience. Even then I’d expect they’re more expensive and have gone downhill since the last time I had them.
Some of it’s probably personality, and some of its probably living in a small town for 15 years, but the casinos and big shopping malls just make me stressed out/overstimulated. Which is weird because I love the chaos that is walking around any big city downtown…NYC, Boston, Chicago… love it. The mall of America? Big fat NOPE
 
Some of it’s probably personality, and some of its probably living in a small town for 15 years, but the casinos and big shopping malls just make me stressed out/overstimulated. Which is weird because I love the chaos that is walking around any big city downtown…NYC, Boston, Chicago… love it. The mall of America? Big fat NOPE
I hate Vegas. But in the off season it can be an easy get away. Rooms can be cheap, and tons of flights. Vegas in the busy season? Hell no.
 
US carriers absolutely have been including that instruction for years.

Current United safety video (about a year old) starting at the relevant section

View: https://youtu.be/Jep3RR2yEXA?feature=shared&t=118

A current AA video

View: https://youtu.be/pj6wJiJuNds?feature=shared&t=92

Delta (2 years ago)

View: https://youtu.be/gM2_sSHML3w?feature=shared&t=112


And a version for united from 17 years ago, again relevant section linked

View: https://youtu.be/sqS70iblfSQ?feature=shared&t=194

AA (15 years ago)

View: https://youtu.be/lMJAD7984PU?feature=shared&t=153

I watched a few of these, and I stand corrected: You are technically correct. But my point is still somewhat on key: these videos only mention the topic for a second or 2, with little or no visual provided. Addressing leaving carry-on bags onboard is almost an afterthought.

In contrast, this Japan Airlines video, which spends about 20 seconds telling you not to take your bags with you and why, does so with impressive visuals. That stood out to me. I noticed. This could be part of the reason this problem is more common on American carriers. Nobody is noticing. The point isn't driven home.


ANA, driving the point home:

 
Nobody is noticing.

Have you been on a US based airline lately? No one, and I mean no one, is watching the safety demo. When it comes on and interrupts the movie/sports/faux news people just grab their phone and scroll away like robots until the end. There could be a code to win $500 cash in every video and still no one would watch it.
 
Have you been on a US based airline lately? No one, and I mean no one, is watching the safety demo. When it comes on and interrupts the movie/sports/faux news people just grab their phone and scroll away like robots until the end. There could be a code to win $500 cash in every video and still no one would watch it.
Fair point.
 
Have you been on a US based airline lately? No one, and I mean no one, is watching the safety demo. When it comes on and interrupts the movie/sports/faux news people just grab their phone and scroll away like robots until the end. There could be a code to win $500 cash in every video and still no one would watch it.

Which is why I make a point to have my phone in my pocket and watch the demo. They're professionals that are going to save your life, the least anyone can do is give them 90 seconds of undivided attention and respect.

I feel it is twice as important if you're in the business and wearing any kind of uniform, otherwise the people of Reddit will tell everyone "I was on this flight, and a pilot in uniform - I think for ____, and they didn't even watch the demo. It must not be that important."
 
Which is why I make a point to have my phone in my pocket and watch the demo. They're professionals that are going to save your life, the least anyone can do is give them 90 seconds of undivided attention and respect.

I feel it is twice as important if you're in the business and wearing any kind of uniform, otherwise the people of Reddit will tell everyone "I was on this flight, and a pilot in uniform - I think for ____, and they didn't even watch the demo. It must not be that important."

I wish our safety demo video was only 90 seconds... even I might pay attention then.

And I agree to your point about watching it intently in uniform, and 9/10 times I manage to do so as well. But I'm not gonna lie, my squirrel brain struggles with it sometimes since it's just under 5 minutes long.
 
I wish our safety demo video was only 90 seconds... even I might pay attention then.

And I agree to your point about watching it intently in uniform, and 9/10 times I manage to do so as well. But I'm not gonna lie, my squirrel brain struggles with it sometimes since it's just under 5 minutes long.

True, some of them are longer - but still important. It is still hard for me to stop thinking about the five to ten things that I'm mentally juggling, but still feels important to give them respect.
 
True, some of them are longer - but still important. It is still hard for me to stop thinking about the five to ten things that I'm mentally juggling, but still feels important to give them respect.
Giving them respect is different than the information is worth paying attention to. The whole 5 minutes ought to be focused on the dos and don’ts of ground evacs. Where it really could mean the difference between life or death. The rest of that info is superfluous. And ignored for that matter. Seatbelt operation, O2 masks and life jackets? No one is paying attention. Do this or you might burn to death? That might, MIGHT, get some attention.
 
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