*A TikTok prankster goes viral for especially disgusting plane cooking video*
The "mile-fry" club isn't actually a thing but a TikToker under the name of @barfly7777 tried to make it happen by cooking a package of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes over two batteries in a Delta (DAL) - Get Free Report plane's bathroom. "Well I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says in the video that garnered over 900,000 views in the four days since it was posted. It also inspired considerable debate over whether such a "prank" would ever set off a trend of people actually trying it.Related: Another questionable and slightly gross 'travel hack' is going viral on TikTok Barfly7777's video pans out from him driving in the car toward the airport, passing through TSA security and then boarding the Delta plane with a bag of frozen shrimp and frozen instant mashed potatoes. @barfly7777 With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly. Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better. #terribleideawhattime #shrimp #garlicshrimp #mashedpotatoes #flying #bathroomchef #howtocookproperly #barfly7777 #innovation #privatechef #newidea #hack #Splice ♬ FUCK IT - xryce Frozen shrimp, instant mashed potatoes and plane sink: done The video then flashes to the man going into the plane's bathroom, filling the sink with water and then plugging two portable batteries into the outlet usually used for low-voltage devices to keep the water boiling. He then puts the shrimp into it, adds some seasoning and then puts it out onto a napkin. After doing the same with mashed potatoes (mashing the powder with the hands after mixing it with water), he places them into a barf bag and carries it out to the plane seat with a grinning face. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane "Success!" a female voice says enthusiastically as the video flashes to a close-up of the man eating the shrimp. "With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly," Barfly7777 explains further in the caption to the video. "Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better."'No fly list coming soon,' commenters say The video predictably went viral through the "disgust factor" — while very few would actually take the TikToker's suggestion seriously and attempt a similar experiment aboard a flight, the shock factor meant many couldn't help but look to see if the traveler would successfully cook his meal and not get stopped by one of the air crew members. The video is also quickly gathering steam and amassing tens of thousands of new views with each passing minute. "HOW DID THAT BATTERY MAKE IT PAST TSA?" a TikToker named Yelvab wrote in the most upvoted comment under the video. "No fly list coming in hot lol," another TikToker named Kevin Miles wrote in reference to Barfly7777 calling his recipe "Mile High Bathroom Garlic Shrimp & Mash" and also encouraging his 157,000-plus followers to join the "mile-fry club." But even a five-minute scroll through the TikToker's account shows that his entire brand is based off of making shock-factor videos around food — he cooks a rack of baby racks in one viral video and an approximation of French Onion Soup in another video with over seven million views. Without commenting on whether the TikToker broke any of the airline's policies by attempting this, Delta has been telling media outlets that its teams "are aware of the video and are further looking into it."
[Read more...](https://www.thestreet.com/travel/tiktok-plane-shrimp-cooking-video)
The "mile-fry" club isn't actually a thing but a TikToker under the name of @barfly7777 tried to make it happen by cooking a package of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes over two batteries in a Delta (DAL) - Get Free Report plane's bathroom. "Well I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says in the video that garnered over 900,000 views in the four days since it was posted. It also inspired considerable debate over whether such a "prank" would ever set off a trend of people actually trying it.Related: Another questionable and slightly gross 'travel hack' is going viral on TikTok Barfly7777's video pans out from him driving in the car toward the airport, passing through TSA security and then boarding the Delta plane with a bag of frozen shrimp and frozen instant mashed potatoes. @barfly7777 With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly. Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better. #terribleideawhattime #shrimp #garlicshrimp #mashedpotatoes #flying #bathroomchef #howtocookproperly #barfly7777 #innovation #privatechef #newidea #hack #Splice ♬ FUCK IT - xryce Frozen shrimp, instant mashed potatoes and plane sink: done The video then flashes to the man going into the plane's bathroom, filling the sink with water and then plugging two portable batteries into the outlet usually used for low-voltage devices to keep the water boiling. He then puts the shrimp into it, adds some seasoning and then puts it out onto a napkin. After doing the same with mashed potatoes (mashing the powder with the hands after mixing it with water), he places them into a barf bag and carries it out to the plane seat with a grinning face. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane "Success!" a female voice says enthusiastically as the video flashes to a close-up of the man eating the shrimp. "With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly," Barfly7777 explains further in the caption to the video. "Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better."'No fly list coming soon,' commenters say The video predictably went viral through the "disgust factor" — while very few would actually take the TikToker's suggestion seriously and attempt a similar experiment aboard a flight, the shock factor meant many couldn't help but look to see if the traveler would successfully cook his meal and not get stopped by one of the air crew members. The video is also quickly gathering steam and amassing tens of thousands of new views with each passing minute. "HOW DID THAT BATTERY MAKE IT PAST TSA?" a TikToker named Yelvab wrote in the most upvoted comment under the video. "No fly list coming in hot lol," another TikToker named Kevin Miles wrote in reference to Barfly7777 calling his recipe "Mile High Bathroom Garlic Shrimp & Mash" and also encouraging his 157,000-plus followers to join the "mile-fry club." But even a five-minute scroll through the TikToker's account shows that his entire brand is based off of making shock-factor videos around food — he cooks a rack of baby racks in one viral video and an approximation of French Onion Soup in another video with over seven million views. Without commenting on whether the TikToker broke any of the airline's policies by attempting this, Delta has been telling media outlets that its teams "are aware of the video and are further looking into it."
[Read more...](https://www.thestreet.com/travel/tiktok-plane-shrimp-cooking-video)
TheStreet
A TikTok prankster goes viral for especially disgusting plane cooking video
"I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says while holding two bags of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes.
A TikTok prankster goes viral for especially disgusting plane cooking video
The "mile-fry" club isn't actually a thing but a TikToker under the name of @barfly7777 tried to make it happen by cooking a package of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes over two batteries in a Delta (DAL) - Get Free Report plane's bathroom. "Well I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says in the video that garnered over 900,000 views in the four days since it was posted. It also inspired considerable debate over whether such a "prank" would ever set off a trend of people actually trying it.Related: Another questionable and slightly gross 'travel hack' is going viral on TikTok Barfly7777's video pans out from him driving in the car toward the airport, passing through TSA security and then boarding the Delta plane with a bag of frozen shrimp and frozen instant mashed potatoes. @barfly7777 With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly. Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better. #terribleideawhattime #shrimp #garlicshrimp #mashedpotatoes #flying #bathroomchef #howtocookproperly #barfly7777 #innovation #privatechef #newidea #hack #Splice ♬ FUCK IT - xryce Frozen shrimp, instant mashed potatoes and plane sink: done The video then flashes to the man going into the plane's bathroom, filling the sink with water and then plugging two portable batteries into the outlet usually used for low-voltage devices to keep the water boiling. He then puts the shrimp into it, adds some seasoning and then puts it out onto a napkin. After doing the same with mashed potatoes (mashing the powder with the hands after mixing it with water), he places them into a barf bag and carries it out to the plane seat with a grinning face. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane "Success!" a female voice says enthusiastically as the video flashes to a close-up of the man eating the shrimp. "With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly," Barfly7777 explains further in the caption to the video. "Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better."'No fly list coming soon,' commenters say The video predictably went viral through the "disgust factor" — while very few would actually take the TikToker's suggestion seriously and attempt a similar experiment aboard a flight, the shock factor meant many couldn't help but look to see if the traveler would successfully cook his meal and not get stopped by one of the air crew members. The video is also quickly gathering steam and amassing tens of thousands of new views with each passing minute. "HOW DID THAT BATTERY MAKE IT PAST TSA?" a TikToker named Yelvab wrote in the most upvoted comment under the video. "No fly list coming in hot lol," another TikToker named Kevin Miles wrote in reference to Barfly7777 calling his recipe "Mile High Bathroom Garlic Shrimp & Mash" and also encouraging his 157,000-plus followers to join the "mile-fry club." But even a five-minute scroll through the TikToker's account shows that his entire brand is based off of making shock-factor videos around food — he cooks a rack of baby racks in one viral video and an approximation of French Onion Soup in another video with over seven million views. Without commenting on whether the TikToker broke any of the airline's policies by attempting this, Delta has been telling media outlets that its teams "are aware of the video and are further looking into it."
Read more...
The "mile-fry" club isn't actually a thing but a TikToker under the name of @barfly7777 tried to make it happen by cooking a package of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes over two batteries in a Delta (DAL) - Get Free Report plane's bathroom. "Well I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says in the video that garnered over 900,000 views in the four days since it was posted. It also inspired considerable debate over whether such a "prank" would ever set off a trend of people actually trying it.Related: Another questionable and slightly gross 'travel hack' is going viral on TikTok Barfly7777's video pans out from him driving in the car toward the airport, passing through TSA security and then boarding the Delta plane with a bag of frozen shrimp and frozen instant mashed potatoes. @barfly7777 With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly. Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better. #terribleideawhattime #shrimp #garlicshrimp #mashedpotatoes #flying #bathroomchef #howtocookproperly #barfly7777 #innovation #privatechef #newidea #hack #Splice ♬ FUCK IT - xryce Frozen shrimp, instant mashed potatoes and plane sink: done The video then flashes to the man going into the plane's bathroom, filling the sink with water and then plugging two portable batteries into the outlet usually used for low-voltage devices to keep the water boiling. He then puts the shrimp into it, adds some seasoning and then puts it out onto a napkin. After doing the same with mashed potatoes (mashing the powder with the hands after mixing it with water), he places them into a barf bag and carries it out to the plane seat with a grinning face. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane "Success!" a female voice says enthusiastically as the video flashes to a close-up of the man eating the shrimp. "With 2 6v batteries wired in series to an immersion beverage heater, one is able to get water scalding hot quickly," Barfly7777 explains further in the caption to the video. "Raw shrimp will only need a few minutes. Adding instant mash to the shrimp water adds some extra flavor. Garlic butter makes everything go better."'No fly list coming soon,' commenters say The video predictably went viral through the "disgust factor" — while very few would actually take the TikToker's suggestion seriously and attempt a similar experiment aboard a flight, the shock factor meant many couldn't help but look to see if the traveler would successfully cook his meal and not get stopped by one of the air crew members. The video is also quickly gathering steam and amassing tens of thousands of new views with each passing minute. "HOW DID THAT BATTERY MAKE IT PAST TSA?" a TikToker named Yelvab wrote in the most upvoted comment under the video. "No fly list coming in hot lol," another TikToker named Kevin Miles wrote in reference to Barfly7777 calling his recipe "Mile High Bathroom Garlic Shrimp & Mash" and also encouraging his 157,000-plus followers to join the "mile-fry club." But even a five-minute scroll through the TikToker's account shows that his entire brand is based off of making shock-factor videos around food — he cooks a rack of baby racks in one viral video and an approximation of French Onion Soup in another video with over seven million views. Without commenting on whether the TikToker broke any of the airline's policies by attempting this, Delta has been telling media outlets that its teams "are aware of the video and are further looking into it."
Read more...
TheStreet
A TikTok prankster goes viral for especially disgusting plane cooking video
"I've got a terrible idea," the TikToker says while holding two bags of shrimp and instant mashed potatoes.
*A tech founder is calling out Southwest for disgusting in-flight situation*
While many disgusting moments on different airlines have gone viral over the years, new ones never fail to tap into the internet's salacious and can't-look-away instincts. The latest travel post to gather over four million views on TikTok occurred when an artificial intelligence startup founder posted an eight-second video of "unidentified liquid drips" over her seat in the back of a Southwest (LUV) - Get Free Report plane.Related: Delta flight forced to make emergency turnaround for a very smelly reason "POV: unidentified liquid drips from someone else's bag on you the entire flight because the flight attendant said she can't move you or the bag," 24-year-old Sophie Shaw wrote overtop the footage of water dripping from the overhead compartment above her flight. @pocketmouse35 Im filing a claim dw #southwest #flightattendant #flighthorrorstories #flying #travel #traveltiktok #plane ♬ Lifehack - Itsyourboymrkebs 'Filing a claim, don't worry,' traveler tells TikTok followers of experience The entrepreneur, founder of AI company Azuryne, was using the airline to travel between San Jose, Calif. and Santa Ana, Calif. In the caption to the video, Shaw also told her followers that she was "filing a claim dw [don't worry]." The eight-second footage is also accompanied by dramatic Halloween-style music culminating in a honking tun-tun-tun. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane The video had initially only been seen by Shaw's friends but started gathering steam on the internet in January a few weeks after the incident. It has now been viewed nearly 4.5 million times and received over 136,000 upvotes. In an interview with news outlet Kennedy News, Shaw explained that she was not able to move the bag herself due to being 5'2 and too short to reach it in the back of the overhead compartment while a Southwest flight attendant reportedly told her that she could neither move the bag nor put her in a different seat. "It was the worst experience on a plane I've ever had," Shaw described to the news outlet while also comparing it to "Chinese water torture" in reference to a fifteenth-century torture method in which water is dripped onto someone's forehead slowly but consistently over a long period of time.Commenters weigh in: 'The flight attendant couldn't just make an announcement?' The San Francisco native also said that she had gone to sleep while waiting for the flight to take off but woke up when she felt her legs and seat "completely soaked" and discovered a "big drip coming from the ceiling." While Southwest has not been reaching out with responses to questions on how it handled Shaw's situation, TikTok users quickly jumped in to express outrage on her behalf and criticize the airline's actions even though the drip was most likely caused by a fellow passenger. "I would’ve said so loudly 'WHOSE BAG IS THIS!!!!'" one commenter wrote in a post that was upvoted more than 56,000 times. "The flight attendant couldn't just make the announcement asking who's [sic] bag that was," wrote another. Shaw, in turn, later clarified that the flight attendants tried to fix it by putting some paper towels into the overhead compartment. "They put some paper towels in the locker so I guess they had tried to fix something but couldn't," Shaw told Kennedy News. Southwest has not been reaching out to talk about its clean-up efforts or what caused the leakage.
[Read more...](https://www.thestreet.com/travel/southwest-passenger-leak-on-flight)
While many disgusting moments on different airlines have gone viral over the years, new ones never fail to tap into the internet's salacious and can't-look-away instincts. The latest travel post to gather over four million views on TikTok occurred when an artificial intelligence startup founder posted an eight-second video of "unidentified liquid drips" over her seat in the back of a Southwest (LUV) - Get Free Report plane.Related: Delta flight forced to make emergency turnaround for a very smelly reason "POV: unidentified liquid drips from someone else's bag on you the entire flight because the flight attendant said she can't move you or the bag," 24-year-old Sophie Shaw wrote overtop the footage of water dripping from the overhead compartment above her flight. @pocketmouse35 Im filing a claim dw #southwest #flightattendant #flighthorrorstories #flying #travel #traveltiktok #plane ♬ Lifehack - Itsyourboymrkebs 'Filing a claim, don't worry,' traveler tells TikTok followers of experience The entrepreneur, founder of AI company Azuryne, was using the airline to travel between San Jose, Calif. and Santa Ana, Calif. In the caption to the video, Shaw also told her followers that she was "filing a claim dw [don't worry]." The eight-second footage is also accompanied by dramatic Halloween-style music culminating in a honking tun-tun-tun. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane The video had initially only been seen by Shaw's friends but started gathering steam on the internet in January a few weeks after the incident. It has now been viewed nearly 4.5 million times and received over 136,000 upvotes. In an interview with news outlet Kennedy News, Shaw explained that she was not able to move the bag herself due to being 5'2 and too short to reach it in the back of the overhead compartment while a Southwest flight attendant reportedly told her that she could neither move the bag nor put her in a different seat. "It was the worst experience on a plane I've ever had," Shaw described to the news outlet while also comparing it to "Chinese water torture" in reference to a fifteenth-century torture method in which water is dripped onto someone's forehead slowly but consistently over a long period of time.Commenters weigh in: 'The flight attendant couldn't just make an announcement?' The San Francisco native also said that she had gone to sleep while waiting for the flight to take off but woke up when she felt her legs and seat "completely soaked" and discovered a "big drip coming from the ceiling." While Southwest has not been reaching out with responses to questions on how it handled Shaw's situation, TikTok users quickly jumped in to express outrage on her behalf and criticize the airline's actions even though the drip was most likely caused by a fellow passenger. "I would’ve said so loudly 'WHOSE BAG IS THIS!!!!'" one commenter wrote in a post that was upvoted more than 56,000 times. "The flight attendant couldn't just make the announcement asking who's [sic] bag that was," wrote another. Shaw, in turn, later clarified that the flight attendants tried to fix it by putting some paper towels into the overhead compartment. "They put some paper towels in the locker so I guess they had tried to fix something but couldn't," Shaw told Kennedy News. Southwest has not been reaching out to talk about its clean-up efforts or what caused the leakage.
[Read more...](https://www.thestreet.com/travel/southwest-passenger-leak-on-flight)
TheStreet
A tech founder is calling out Southwest for disgusting in-flight situation
The video of the "unidentified liquid drips" gathered more than four million TikTok views.
A tech founder is calling out Southwest for disgusting in-flight situation
While many disgusting moments on different airlines have gone viral over the years, new ones never fail to tap into the internet's salacious and can't-look-away instincts. The latest travel post to gather over four million views on TikTok occurred when an artificial intelligence startup founder posted an eight-second video of "unidentified liquid drips" over her seat in the back of a Southwest (LUV) - Get Free Report plane.Related: Delta flight forced to make emergency turnaround for a very smelly reason "POV: unidentified liquid drips from someone else's bag on you the entire flight because the flight attendant said she can't move you or the bag," 24-year-old Sophie Shaw wrote overtop the footage of water dripping from the overhead compartment above her flight. @pocketmouse35 Im filing a claim dw #southwest #flightattendant #flighthorrorstories #flying #travel #traveltiktok #plane ♬ Lifehack - Itsyourboymrkebs 'Filing a claim, don't worry,' traveler tells TikTok followers of experience The entrepreneur, founder of AI company Azuryne, was using the airline to travel between San Jose, Calif. and Santa Ana, Calif. In the caption to the video, Shaw also told her followers that she was "filing a claim dw don't worry." The eight-second footage is also accompanied by dramatic Halloween-style music culminating in a honking tun-tun-tun. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane The video had initially only been seen by Shaw's friends but started gathering steam on the internet in January a few weeks after the incident. It has now been viewed nearly 4.5 million times and received over 136,000 upvotes. In an interview with news outlet Kennedy News, Shaw explained that she was not able to move the bag herself due to being 5'2 and too short to reach it in the back of the overhead compartment while a Southwest flight attendant reportedly told her that she could neither move the bag nor put her in a different seat. "It was the worst experience on a plane I've ever had," Shaw described to the news outlet while also comparing it to "Chinese water torture" in reference to a fifteenth-century torture method in which water is dripped onto someone's forehead slowly but consistently over a long period of time.Commenters weigh in: 'The flight attendant couldn't just make an announcement?' The San Francisco native also said that she had gone to sleep while waiting for the flight to take off but woke up when she felt her legs and seat "completely soaked" and discovered a "big drip coming from the ceiling." While Southwest has not been reaching out with responses to questions on how it handled Shaw's situation, TikTok users quickly jumped in to express outrage on her behalf and criticize the airline's actions even though the drip was most likely caused by a fellow passenger. "I would’ve said so loudly 'WHOSE BAG IS THIS!!!!'" one commenter wrote in a post that was upvoted more than 56,000 times. "The flight attendant couldn't just make the announcement asking who's sic bag that was," wrote another. Shaw, in turn, later clarified that the flight attendants tried to fix it by putting some paper towels into the overhead compartment. "They put some paper towels in the locker so I guess they had tried to fix something but couldn't," Shaw told Kennedy News. Southwest has not been reaching out to talk about its clean-up efforts or what caused the leakage.
Read more...
While many disgusting moments on different airlines have gone viral over the years, new ones never fail to tap into the internet's salacious and can't-look-away instincts. The latest travel post to gather over four million views on TikTok occurred when an artificial intelligence startup founder posted an eight-second video of "unidentified liquid drips" over her seat in the back of a Southwest (LUV) - Get Free Report plane.Related: Delta flight forced to make emergency turnaround for a very smelly reason "POV: unidentified liquid drips from someone else's bag on you the entire flight because the flight attendant said she can't move you or the bag," 24-year-old Sophie Shaw wrote overtop the footage of water dripping from the overhead compartment above her flight. @pocketmouse35 Im filing a claim dw #southwest #flightattendant #flighthorrorstories #flying #travel #traveltiktok #plane ♬ Lifehack - Itsyourboymrkebs 'Filing a claim, don't worry,' traveler tells TikTok followers of experience The entrepreneur, founder of AI company Azuryne, was using the airline to travel between San Jose, Calif. and Santa Ana, Calif. In the caption to the video, Shaw also told her followers that she was "filing a claim dw don't worry." The eight-second footage is also accompanied by dramatic Halloween-style music culminating in a honking tun-tun-tun. More Travel:A new travel term is taking over the internet (and reaching airlines and hotels)The 10 best airline stocks to buy nowAirlines see a new kind of traveler at the front of the plane The video had initially only been seen by Shaw's friends but started gathering steam on the internet in January a few weeks after the incident. It has now been viewed nearly 4.5 million times and received over 136,000 upvotes. In an interview with news outlet Kennedy News, Shaw explained that she was not able to move the bag herself due to being 5'2 and too short to reach it in the back of the overhead compartment while a Southwest flight attendant reportedly told her that she could neither move the bag nor put her in a different seat. "It was the worst experience on a plane I've ever had," Shaw described to the news outlet while also comparing it to "Chinese water torture" in reference to a fifteenth-century torture method in which water is dripped onto someone's forehead slowly but consistently over a long period of time.Commenters weigh in: 'The flight attendant couldn't just make an announcement?' The San Francisco native also said that she had gone to sleep while waiting for the flight to take off but woke up when she felt her legs and seat "completely soaked" and discovered a "big drip coming from the ceiling." While Southwest has not been reaching out with responses to questions on how it handled Shaw's situation, TikTok users quickly jumped in to express outrage on her behalf and criticize the airline's actions even though the drip was most likely caused by a fellow passenger. "I would’ve said so loudly 'WHOSE BAG IS THIS!!!!'" one commenter wrote in a post that was upvoted more than 56,000 times. "The flight attendant couldn't just make the announcement asking who's sic bag that was," wrote another. Shaw, in turn, later clarified that the flight attendants tried to fix it by putting some paper towels into the overhead compartment. "They put some paper towels in the locker so I guess they had tried to fix something but couldn't," Shaw told Kennedy News. Southwest has not been reaching out to talk about its clean-up efforts or what caused the leakage.
Read more...
TheStreet
A tech founder is calling out Southwest for disgusting in-flight situation
The video of the "unidentified liquid drips" gathered more than four million TikTok views.