All Episodes

March 17, 2025 48 mins

Leave us a message, or ask a question?

Safety concerns, disruptive passengers, and theft syndicates might sound like the plot of an action film, but for flight attendants, it's just another day at the office. While recent headlines suggest our skies are becoming more dangerous, the reality is far less alarming when you consider the 45,000 flights that take off safely each day.

Shawn and G pull back the curtain on what's really happening in commercial aviation beyond the sensational headlines. From the Chicago O'Hare airport shooting to engine incidents making national news, they contextualize these rare events while sharing their daily experiences with the true challenges of air travel – namely, spring break travelers who don't understand basic airplane etiquette and families who treat aircraft like their personal playgrounds.

The hosts reveal fascinating insights about organized crime targeting air travelers through the "Steal While You Sleep" syndicates that specifically target passengers with expensive jewelry on high-value routes. These elaborate operations involve multiple conspirators, from jewelry store employees to airline staff, creating a sophisticated theft network that operates silently at 35,000 feet.

Perhaps most importantly, they discuss the critical role flight attendants play as first responders during emergencies, and why passengers who stop to grab their carry-ons during evacuations endanger everyone's lives. As one host emphasizes, "Split seconds matter" when getting passengers safely off a plane.

The episode wraps with a spotlight on Tampa as a destination, highlighting Ybor City's vibrant nightlife, the picturesque Riverwalk, and must-visit restaurants, including the intriguingly named "Naked Farmer."

Have flight attendant stories of your own? Email the hosts at cewithsg@gmail.com to potentially share your experiences on a future episode.

Support the show

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
A shooting in Chicago O'Hare's airport.
Spring break travelers, collegestudents, inconsiderate
families Is it safe to travelAll this?
Next on Cabin Pressure withSean and G hey, everyone welcome

(00:40):
.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
This is cabin pressure what's up people?

Speaker 1 (00:43):
This is cabin pressure People.
I got to try to do somethingdifferent every, every time we
start a show like I'm here.
Let's go.
Weather's changing man,Weather's changing.
The weather's changing.
You know what I'm like, uh,last night, yesterday, I'm like,
um, we were outside, uh, doingsome uh photo stuff and uh, and

(01:04):
the weather's so awesome, man,you sit in the sun right now.
It's just like.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
It's amazing how you start feeling right yeah, it
just changes.

Speaker 1 (01:11):
Like you're refreshed , like the vitamin D is just
soaking into your skin and oh,it's amazing.
No clouds in the sky, no clouds.
It hasn't been.
We haven't had clouds for a fewdays now, which is a great
streak here in ohio.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Yeah, a big streak, right.
I'm like oh man, you got towhat's that big shiny thing up
in the side.

Speaker 1 (01:30):
Well, now I'm starting to look at golf courses
like really hard, really hard.
I'm getting.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
The itch is happening well, it's because you live on
one too right, you know?

Speaker 1 (01:41):
I mean look out your back, yeah you look out the back
door and boom, I'm salivatingand ready to go.
I know my wife.
My wife's the same way.
So the itch has happened.
Right now it's that time ofyear.
She's more than you probably.
What's that Itching?

Speaker 2 (01:55):
Yeah, right.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Well, yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:01):
She actually is a better golfer.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
She's a better golfer than me and she plays way more
than me, amazingly enough, andshe works Sean hits houses
though.
No, not so much anymore.
My game's gotten tighter now,but I used to nail the shit out

(02:23):
of some houses.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
I've hit cars, I've hit houses, whatever you know.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
whatever, it's all good.
At least they know you're hereright, they oh there's a lot of
people I didn't wouldn't haveever known if it wasn't for a
golf ball so what the hell'sbeen going on this week?
uh this week, uh still uh tryingto wrap up my basement stuff
and uh, get that all wrapped up.
I'm hoping to finalizeeverything by next week.

(02:46):
That would be so good to getback in my office and be done
with that.
And then we've been working on.
I had a friend, a professor,actually visit me yesterday and
we're working on an art projectfrom.
She's working on people born in1965.
We're doing this likegenerational thing and there's
nothing significant to 1965.

(03:08):
It's just that we're just likelooking at.
You know, we're 65ers, are allturning 60 this year, so we're
kind of like just like lookingat this whole thing.
Got this whole plan with this.
We've been talking for about ayear and a half, two years on
this project, but it's prettycool.

Speaker 2 (03:23):
So what are you doing ?
You just for about a year and ahalf, two years on this project
, but it's, it's pretty cool.
So what are you doing?

Speaker 1 (03:26):
you're just taking a picture, I mean all you guys
together.
There's uh like stages of this,like she's doing a whole
portrait series because we'rephotographers, so we're, you
know, doing this photographything.
But he's she's also doing thisreally other cool thing where
we're gonna get people tovolunteer to give an archive of
like pictures of them from timethey were born to today and then

(03:47):
what we're going to take at allthose pictures and she's going
to make that into a giantcollage If you can imagine this
like in a huge, like you know,museum, whatever collage on the
wall that runs this wall of allthese generational photos of all
these people that havevolunteered.
And it's interesting in twoaspects.
One, it's just cool to see allthese people that have
volunteered.
And it's interesting in twoaspects.
One, it's just cool to see allthese pictures, but it's also

(04:07):
gonna be like an archive of thehistory of photography and the
processes that happen, so peoplethat are heavily into
photography and stuff.
You're gonna see thesedifferent styles of uh processes
that make you know, from apolaroid to, you know, digital
you're actually.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
Is it different pictures of you?

Speaker 1 (04:27):
Yeah, so it's pictures.
So we're getting people tovolunteer pictures of themselves
from the time they were born.
Try to get like a yearlypicture of them, as many years
as possible of them.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
Oh, I so want to see the one of you look like Lionel
Richie.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Oh, dude, you know you've already seen it, you got
that stache going on, man Richie.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
Oh, dude, you know, you've already seen it, you got
that stash going on, man.
I mean, I, oh God, I want tosee that.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
Oh, we got you know in the grade school pictures,
are you haven't?
You've never seen the pictureof me with the uh the shirt with
the orange uh deers on it.
No-transcript a group of peopleworking on this.

(05:15):
So hopefully it's going to endup and we're.
The target end date is actuallynext year, but we'll see that's
cool yeah but then so what didyou have to do?
Bud, three words, man, threewords three words.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
What's that?
Spring break travel, oh, suck abig.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Can you say the big?

Speaker 2 (05:35):
suck.
You know it's amazing, thoughit was truly amazing with, with,
about travel, really, with allthese instances that we talk
about right on the, on the, onthe plane, it's a small
percentage of people.

Speaker 1 (05:47):
Oh, for sure.
Right, I mean it's a smallpercent, it's the incidents and
everything that we see on thenews about all airline stuff.
Doesn't matter incidents.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
We're going to talk about that today too.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
It's just that you know it's such a small
percentage of those people andyou know, right now we have the
ebb and flow of our, ourcustomers right when, right now,
it's all these, you know, nontravelers.
It's the non.
You know, the businesstravelers are always there,
right, but the right now we gotthe seasonal vacation travel.
College kids, yeah, familiesyeah, idiots that don't know

(06:21):
what to do.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
You get, you get, get these some of these college
kids and they're gonna I know,they're going to have fun, but
man, I'm just I'm looking at him, I'm like you know, I I just do
not understand how you even aregetting through school right
now you know the uh, uh, I wasthinking about this too.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
It's like that, our tolerance, like remember, like
when we were in our twenties,like like spring break, this
time of season, like us dealingwith this, we have a different
perspective on it.
Like when we were in ourtwenties we were like we got
that whole thing and we werelike, hey, you know, we're going
to be on a labor, we want to beincluded, type of thing, right.
And now we're older, we're likeyou, stupid assholes, what are

(07:08):
you doing here?

Speaker 2 (07:08):
That's daily, though.
I mean that is daily, daily.
You're looking at them.
You're just shaking your head,right, right.
Have you ever got on a flightand you look at this person and
they just react.
And one of these young kids.
You just want to reach overthere, just shake them.

Speaker 1 (07:23):
Yeah, it happened a lot this week yep, this is, this
is a, this is a season thenthen these families, they come
on board and we talk about thisall the time.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
You got to pick up after your kids, folks, you got
to pick up after your kids.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
I mean you, you come on board and you just totally
trash the plane when we saytrash the plane, we're talking
about like crumbs everywhere,food all over the ground.
There's trash everywhere.
They never saw anybody walkingby saying trash, they just
destroy it.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
I know you don't have any children, right, but if you
did Right and you was in arestaurant and those kids dumped
something on the floor, right?

Speaker 1 (08:06):
you're gonna pick it up, everybody's gonna pick it up
it's gonna be reaction, likeyou know, on the plane nope,
they can do everything they can.
They can, uh, piss shit, throwup whatever, yep like they don't
, they don't care and, like some, most people will react it for
the, for the benefit of thedoubt, like 99 of the people
will be like.

(08:26):
You know, help me, I need help,I need to clean this up,
whatever, I'm sorry, whatever,but then we have those families,
right.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Families.
You got that, Don't give a shit.
Then you got that cheap-asstravel going down to the cruise
lines too.
You know what I mean.
They got that group on there,and you know what I mean?
They, they got those on thatgroup on there and that's.
That's unbelievable, I meanthat is unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Clientele in different markets.
Like it is, it doesn't matter.
Like you know flight attendants, we know the routes.
Like we know the routes and weknow the clientele on those
routes, like, what are we goingto expect?
So you know, we're going.
If you're going from Newarkdown to fort myers, we know what
we're gonna get.
We're getting all these likewheelchair city right, yeah you
know, like we know, the markets,each, each, each type of flight

(09:10):
is dictates, uh, the historicalwho's traveling on those routes
.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
But, uh, this spring break, right now, you get these
families that are just like boom, it's like nuclear disaster is
coming and 98 of the people thatare actually traveling are
looking these people as they'rebored too and there's like
they're, they're thinking tothemselves.
Please Lord, don't let them.
Let them sit next to me.
You know that too.
I mean, we're talking and Isaid this is a small percentage
of people, but it's such a smallpercentage and you see them on

(09:37):
social media they blow itcompletely out because it is a
small percentage, but it's asmall percentage that affects a
lot, right?
Right, it does.
I mean because it'd be a bigpain in the ass.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
One of my peeves is like I'm sitting on the plane,
I'm a passenger, and you seethose little kids coming down
and you're like please, don'thave that little shit behind me
kicking my seat.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
There was a grandmother.
She was boarding with thelittle girl and they were really
cute.
Don't get me right.
The flight attendant up fronttried to help the little girl
because it was a step up.
Grandma, don't touch her.
Yeah, I'm like, okay, let herface plant, that's fine.
I mean, what is that?
I mean you?
It's amazing people, this justhappened.
I mean I, I was just my, myface, my eyes were open, mouth

(10:21):
was open.
I'm like she was trying to helpthis little girl not fall, and
you just want her to.
Well, don't touch her.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
That's a weird reaction because we're like the
service people on the planet.
Yeah Right, we're there to helpyou, we're there to assist you,
we're there to explain thingsthat you don't understand, keep
everybody in order, all thatstuff.
But yeah, that's kind of aweird action.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
Welcome on board.
Don't touch her, yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
When, when someone that type of reaction, I'm like
wait a minute.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:53):
Are we looking at human trafficking right now or
something you?

Speaker 2 (10:55):
know, that.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
That's kind of like those senses start going off
when weird reactions like thathappen, right, yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
So beginning of this, I mean the beginning of this
month I've been doing two day,three day trips.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
I know you're going to say something about it again.
But yeah, I've been doing two,three day trips.
Junior puke yeah.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Yeah, this is what you think.
Yeah, but anyway, I've beengoing to some of these
destinations for spring breakCancun, but I went to Dallas the
other day.
Dallas, laid over in Dallas,dallas-fort Worth what?

Speaker 1 (11:25):
city.
Laid over in Dallas-Fort WorthSean.
It's like there's two citiesthere.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
There's.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
Dallas and there's Fort Worth and there's an
airport right in the middle ofit splat.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
See, we go through this shit all the time right.
We do this all the time right.
Which one is it?
This is him.
This is him.
He just can't say, oh, it'sDallas-Fort Worth right.
He's like, well, which city isit?

Speaker 1 (11:45):
Well, you know why?
Because, man, there's differentthings to do in each one.
Like, fort Worth is my jam.
I love going there.
I got some places to eat therethat I like.
Dude, I got to go there.
You're with me, you're going tonobody, all right.

(12:08):
Yeah, well, it's dallas, fortworth at the airport.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Oh, airport, okay, airport now, is that okay?
Yeah, you know, when I was,when I was going there, it
reminded me of a story a longtime ago.
We were coming in, and everytime I come into dallas, I don't
know, just, it goes back tothis little story.
Uh, we were coming in uh lateat night and we're leaving the
airport.
You know how you have to leavethe airport kind of walk down
and you take a right, come out.
Well, as we're coming out,there's this guy with a big
bundle of flowers sitting outthere and I was like I was

(12:32):
looking at him, I was jokingaround with the crew and I told
him.
I said, look, if it's this lateat night and a dude's out there
with a big bundle of flowersand he's still standing there,
he got stood up.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Yeah, something's, something's not right.
Right, he got stood up.

Speaker 2 (12:44):
I'm like if he's out there, I mean because he's got
flowers, that means she'd beanxious to see him.
His ass is going, you knowshe's.
He stood up.
So the closest I got, you wouldnot believe this.
What's that?
I knew him.
You knew the dude with the Iknow him too.

Speaker 1 (13:01):
Yeah, you do, oh, wow , okay you do.

Speaker 2 (13:03):
But I walked up to him I was like, damn, what are
you doing here?
He's like, well, he goes.
I met this girl.
He goes, and you know she'ssupposed to come pick me up.
And I was like, well, have youtalked to her?
And he's like, no, he goes.
She's supposed to pick me up atthis time.
And he goes yeah, she's runninga little late.
I said, dude, she ain't coming,she is not coming.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
This is like we can do stories of flight attendants
that do online dating for othercities.
This dude flew to this city,yeah, and he's trying to connect
with this gal, and boom, andhe's like.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
But Sean, he's not getting out now because it's so
late, right, exactly.
So you're sitting therethinking that you're going to,
you're going to go hook up withour, hook up with this girl,
spend the time you know with herand and stay with her.
Now, you, you, you need a hotelroom too.

Speaker 1 (13:57):
Yeah, this also smells like a scam, right Like
are you really sucker.
I felt so bad.
You got to tell me who this islater, I will.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
So anyway, I just told him, I said look, when you
realize she ain't coming, youknow back then, back then.
This is, I'll tell you.
A little while ago we were atthe La Quinta.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
La Quinta.
We haven't stayed in La Quinta.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
Do you remember what was across from the La Quinta
over there?

Speaker 1 (14:25):
What Denny's Hooters Hooters?
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, that'sright, the old Hooters Hooters.

Speaker 2 (14:30):
Yeah.
So I told him.
I said, when you realize thatshe ain't coming, I said, look,
just call me, I'll tell themthat I'm going, you know right.
And and you come over and uhand crash, yeah, crash.
And then just come over to thehooters and have a beer, right.
So I know, sooner got the hotel, he calls me up.

(14:50):
He's like, gee, he goes.
I'm on my way.
I was like we'll get rid of theflowers because that shit ain't
for me oh, that's hilarious ohmy god, dallas it.
it just killed me, remind me.
But anyway, went down to Cancuntoo.
Do you know what they do nowwith the international, with us
when we're down there?

Speaker 1 (15:10):
In Cancun, like going through customs and stuff.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
You know when we have sit time, because we've got a
lot of sit time down there.
Oh, wait, wait, have you donethat yet?
No, I've been hours of airportappreciation time In Cancun, yep
.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
That's bullshit.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
It is.
But instead of going throughcustoms now, they let us sit in
that moldy hallway.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Oh no.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
You know that hallway that smells like mold.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
They didn't renovate that thing, got gnats in it and
stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
But we don't want to go through customs, but you
don't want to go through customs, right, right, so you sit there
on that little windowsill forthree hours.
Oh dude, the life of a flightattendant, yeah, Isn't that
something.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
That's just bullshit.
Well, you know what?
Here it is Company to company,contract to contract.
You know some companies.
You don't have those.
You have rules.
You have rules Say, hey, youknow, you sit us here for so
long you're going to pay us,type of thing.
But when you don't have ruleslike that, like we don't, then
we're sitting in hallways.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
You got to love it, though when you're telling a
story to somebody, you're like,hey, where'd you go?
You're like, oh man, I was downin Cancun.
Oh, my gosh, blue water, scott.
No, I sat my ass on a ledge,right.
I waited for a plane to come in.

Speaker 1 (16:24):
The other thing is like because our contract sucks,
you know we have these like 17-, 18-hour layovers and they
never put us on the beach.
Nope, that's BS.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
So I got sat on a ledge.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
So then went to Sacramento.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
Sacramento, yeah, you know, I like.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Sacramento.
Well, I'm sitting therethinking this is going to be
great, right, Get to California,go out there, and the weather
was better than Cleveland that'seasy it was better in cleveland
.
No, it's better in cleveland ohreally, yeah, I left.
It was beautiful here whensacramento raining.
Yeah, that's that's.
That is uh rarity yeah, that'sa that really sucks so I don't

(17:03):
care you get on a plane, you'resitting there going to
california like oh, sunnycalifornia, not today not today.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
I caught that like the what's the percentage in
california?
Like bad days it's got to belike.
I mean just I, we only get like160 days a year or something
like that.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
I don't know that.
I mean what percentage is a badday, my day 20% of the bad Mine
.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
Well, you know, that's it, man, that's our
business, man.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
That was it, man.
Oh, I changed the oil on thecars too.
That was a lot of fun.
Oh, I changed the oil on thecars too.
That was a lot of fun.
Oil on the cars too, that's myday off.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Okay, first of all, quit doing that shit.
You're getting too old.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
No, I'm still doing it.

Speaker 1 (17:43):
Yeah, my ass will be a jippy lube in and out and
you'll be still sweatingunderneath the car.
Probably true.

Speaker 2 (17:52):
That is true.
That is true.
You know, we were talking aboutthis, the last podcast, and
there's a lot of things going onin the industry right now,
right, I mean you know there's alot of stuff.
I mean you see it in the news,right?
45,000 flights a day, though.
People, 45,000 flights a day.

(18:16):
Think about that for a minute,okay.
So you're going to havesomething that's going to happen
, and I get it, and it's on abigger scale.
I'm on those planes everysingle day.
I'm not afraid to get on anairplane, I'm not.
I mean, I'm just telling youI'm not.
And we have 45,000 a day, andyou're seeing one or two
incidents.
Okay, an engine, an enginecatches fire.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
One or two incidents that might happen, like week or
whatever Start times, and thatthere are days go by that
nothing happens.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
But a fire with an engine.
How many times on a freewayhave you seen a car catch fire?

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Not often, but super rare.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
Yeah, but you'll see them Right, right, right.
Yep, you'll see a car fire, ohyeah.
In our lifetime we've seen afew car exactly there was one,
actually there was one, uh, outin front of the airport.
Uh, I think it was down in fortlauderdale not recently.
Oh yeah, yeah, there's a carthat caught, that caught fire.
But you, you'll see a blurb onthat.
I mean you, you know, but it'san engine and and that's the

(19:10):
thing.
Okay.
So you have, you have anairplane, and something happens.
And then next, you know, themedia just blows this shit out
of proportion.
And don't get me wrong, it'ssomething that does happen, but
you're making it sound like it'sthis huge thing, like all this.
There's this big thing going onin the industry that where are

(19:31):
they having all these problems?

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Yeah, like it's every time, you, everybody's gonna
gonna experience this.
You know the the rate of thingshappening now is just
astronomical, it's.
It's not that it's astronomical, it's just that it's being
reported so often, like news isjust like anything, and
everything is on the internet.
I mean from you know everybody'sgot a phone yeah, everybody's

(19:53):
got a phone, there's cameraseverywhere and there's always a
video of now for everythingthat's happening, which is
there's a good and bad to allthat stuff.
It's good to see.
So you have recorded facts,right, right and what really
happened, and then you also have, you know, the uh, you know the
bad part is doing it all at thewrong time.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
More important, Sean, who gets their ass off the
plane.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
Who gets their ass off the plane?
The passengers?

Speaker 2 (20:17):
right, but who gets them off the plane?
Oh, we do, dude.
Yeah, exactly, yeah, we're thepeople who get them off.
You want to know why we'rethere when you see these few
things happen.
When they do happen, you see abunch of people coming off the
airplane, don't you?
Yep, you, yep, and you see himsliding down, slide, going out
windows, coming off the planes,evacuating, getting away from

(20:39):
the airplane.
That's the reason why we'rethere, folks we're there,
believe it or not, I mean that'swe're there to for service.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
But the main thing is , when that does happen, when it
occurs, we're there to get yourass off that plane right, we're
trying to assist you in everyway possible to keep you as safe
as possible in all situations,it doesn't matter once the you
know, evacuation happens, allthat stuff that I saw only like,
uh, there's one that thatincident that happened up, uh,

(21:03):
with the plane you know flippingover and all that stuff.
You know, I did see a videowhere flight attendants like
trying to get people away.
Right, you know, like, so youdon't see a lot of those videos
every now and then you get tosee that part of the whole thing
.
But like our job doesn't juststop after, like everybody just
gets off the plane, we're still,like you know, triaging and
trying to figure out who's hurt,who's there, is everybody there

(21:25):
doing head counts?
All that stuff, trying to getassistance from wherever we can.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
Yeah, it's a best part of those videos, sean?
Best part of those videos isyou get to see how stupid
passengers are when they taketheir bags off.
It just shows the importance oflife, right, right, I mean the
plane's burning, you're havingall these things, but you've got
to take your bag off now.
That makes no sense at all.
Your life was so important thatlater on that you have

(21:51):
something against the airlineright for this.
The most important thing to youis to get that damn suitcase
off, Not your life, Not fearingfor your life.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
There's nothing that you bring on a plane.
That's so important Becausetechnology today, like
everything's backed up to acloud.
99% of everybody that's likedoing some type of business,
whether it's you know they gottheir business computer or
whatever.
It's all backed up andeverything.
Like You're not going to losestuff.
It's so rare that you're goingto lose that Something that's so

(22:23):
important that you've got to berisking your life for those few
seconds or risking somebodyelse's life.
What people don't understandabout these things is that when
they're doing these actions ofgrabbing their bags and holding
the things, split seconds matter.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Well, your ass will be in the clouds.
Sean, you'll be a spirit.
You ain't got to worry about nodamn clouds.
Your ass, don't get off theplane.
You will definitely be in theclouds, right.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
Yeah, I mean you have to be freaking.
People are only thinking aboutthemselves and they don't
realize that, especially like ina fire man, there's some
historical fires that havehappened in the industry where,
just because after the you know,this is after, uh, the action
report of the what happened andstuff in tsb put now, but
whatever somebody had likeslowed down, because they had

(23:03):
slowed down the exit at acertain point, it blocked the
exit for all the people behindthem and if they would have had
that split second, so many morelives would have been saved, you
know.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
But it was some asshole grabbing a bag.
They really don't understand ishow fire runs inside of an
aircraft.
Right sean.
If they ever seen that, trustme, that bag you, your ass would
be off that plane.
Just get off the get off theplane.
Let me tell you something assoon as that flame gets inside
that cabin, you do not want tobe anywhere near that no, the
other thing about this thing too.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
This is just a point from our perspective, as, being
flight attendants, you know, Idon't know why we haven't been
designated as first responders.
We are the, we are a frontlinefirst responder in a safety
industry, right, I mean theflight attendants.
Millions, if not thousands,hundreds of thousands of flight

(23:53):
attendants all over the worldreact.
We are their first responders.
We have a medical emergency ona plane, we got them.
We have a incident on a plane,we have, uh, you know, incident
off the plane.
Flight attendants are firstresponders and they should be
classified as first responders.
That this is just my opinionabout it.
I know that afa yeah, is umadvocating for trying to get

(24:16):
that push through Congress toshow that we are recognized as
first responders, because itdoesn't take a smart person to
understand that we are the firstline of response.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Well, they only understand.
That was when your ass isgetting them off the plane.
And see, that's exactly whatI'm saying.
When you see these incidents,there's people getting off and
that's us.
It doesn't matter what youthink of us on the plane, what
we're doing on the plane whenthose things happen, trust me,
we're the ones that are gettingyou guys off.
But you know, other thing Iwant to talk about is what

(24:49):
really things that happen moreon an airplane is, when you get
these ding-dongs, that that likethese one percenters right,
there's less than 1% but thesedumb people like this dummy that
was vaping on that flight Doyou see him that diverted?
Are you kidding me?
First class pastor.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
We talked about this First class pastor.
Did we talk about this lastweek, right?

Speaker 2 (25:10):
I don't know if we did.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
Yeah, we talked about this.
Him vaping and diverting andall that stuff.
Like it's a uh uh, these peopleare like it's it's to follow up
on this whole thing.
Is that, like?
This kid posted more videos ontiktok, like you know, saying
you know baby, f the f, theairline, and you know I'm vaping
, you know, but all they'regonna do is use this in court

(25:32):
you gotta love that, thoughthey're so stupid that they they
keep posting these videos aboutwhat they did right.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
And so, the next thing you know, they're in court
, sitting there and they're likeso are you going to do it again
?
Oh no, Well, you just said itin a video, you dummy.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Yeah, let's play this .
This is how you respond whenyou're not in front of everybody
trying to lie.
How about that dumb tiktoktrend?
Did you see that one?
Oh my gosh, this is thestupidest trend out there in
tiktok.
But you know what?
I'd love to see how many peopledon't make this and what we're
talking about.
Tiktok has this thing where you, these uh, vacation travelers

(26:09):
right now spring breakers rightare trying to show up to an
airport and get onto the plane15 minutes before departure.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
That's the dumbest damn thing, sean.
I mean seriously.
That is the stupidest thing.
You pay all this money, sohere's the thing.

Speaker 1 (26:25):
Here's the thing these TikTokers don't get it
because they don't do theirhomework and research One.
Most airlines can leave 10minutes early, and we do, and we
do, man.
So let's start just from thataspect.
They're going to show up 15minutes, so they've given
themselves five minutes to stepout of their car, get through
security down to wherever thejetway is, the gate they're at,

(26:49):
and, depending on the airport Imean, I know some airports
there's no way we're airborne.
Yeah, that plane is gone.
We haven't shown up and,literally, if you don't, you're
not checked in at the frontcounter, or they have any.
You know any way to make themaware that you're in the airport
?

Speaker 2 (27:07):
They're not holding the plane for you.

Speaker 1 (27:09):
And they're not going to, even if you, they know that
they're not necessarily goingto hold the plane.
And they've called your name afew times so you think it's
funny.
You'll be on that dumb videothat you got too right.
Hey, but they're calling yourname.
Yeah, but if that video is soimportant to you for tiktok, do
it, man.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
I I just I mean some of these stupid trends that they
do.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
I mean it's unbelievable well, I mean, how
many times have you seensomething on tiktok that is like
they, they do this trend andit's so not safe and like, like
that cinnamon, that cinnamontrim, do you remember that?
Uh, these kids were like ohyeah, yeah they were.
They take a tablespoon, yeah,cinnamon, and then they try to
swallow and eat it I kids, kidswere like killing themselves

(27:51):
over this, over a stupid day Imean, there's certain ones that
are like you know, like the icebucket thing was cool last, but
you know yeah, you can gethypothermia.
There's all kinds of stuff andpeople were doing in all
different types of temperaturesand stuff, but it was a split
second thing and people weren'tgetting hurt from it.
But there's so many things, somany trends out there that you
gotta, you know, just thinkabout it.

(28:13):
Take a second to think is thisreally important?

Speaker 2 (28:18):
okay, I I like this next one though first class
passenger vegas called 9-1-1.
Call 9-1-1 for what they said.
He was so stoned that he wascalling them to make the airline
depart.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
I would love to have just like a series of stupid 911
calls.
Honestly, I wish 911, I don'tknow if that agency could like
release over a certain time likehistorical stupid calls,
because I mean it would be soentertainment to listen to some
of these stupid things.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Do you think he's going?

Speaker 1 (28:56):
Yeah, mean, here's the thing, it's a you like say
you were on our flight, if hewas calling 9-1-1 and you know
talking all this stuff, rightright, we don't know, and you
know we were walking by doingour job and everything, and he
hangs up the phone, we don'tknow, right, right, but I mean,
could 9-1-1 stop the flight fromgoing?

(29:16):
Uh, yeah, they could and belike, you know we need to get
this guy off or whatever, andare you?

Speaker 2 (29:22):
it made sense.
So because, vegas man, it justfrom the time you're walking
that airport, all around justweed, that's all.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
You smell horrible man, I just can't stand that
smell we talked about that lastweek.

Speaker 2 (29:32):
Big old skunk smell.
Can't stand it.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
The skunky, smell, nasty.
You're talking about this.
Here's the crazy thing.
So, like we went last weekendto Indiana back for our last
visit for about a month.
Here we're going to kind oflike take a break here because
we've got things settled downand stuff.
But we had this hotel we stayin, always stay in there, and
but we had this hotel we stay in, always stay in there, and

(29:54):
they're always super kind to us,upgrade our room and all this
stuff.
So we walk in this room that wealways, pretty much always stay
in.
They know us by name when wewalk in the door and I open the
door, I open the door.
The whole room was just reeking, reeking of marijuana.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
I can't stand that.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
And we had just stayed in this room like four
days prior.
So between that some yahoos hada little party in this room and
it was just reeking.
But amazing enough I didn'trealize this that the hotels had
this thing called a hurricane.
But amazing enough, I didn'trealize this that the hotels had
this thing called a hurricane.
And they come in the room andthey just freaking bomb the crap

(30:35):
out of this room and spray allthis stuff that encapsulates the
smell and boom, it was gone.
Man, I was like I couldn'tbelieve it, but I mean it was
everywhere.
I mean, in the freaking, youopen up the closet in the room
and you just like it was likewhoosh in your face, you know,
like it was.
So people just don't realizehow it just like permeates and
sticks.

Speaker 2 (30:56):
Everywhere we go anymore.
I mean some of these cities,man, it just smells, yeah it
just smells.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
I can't stand it.
But that's, we'll be dealingwith that for a while All right,
check this out.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
This was actually.
I didn't hear about this and Istarted reading about it.
It was called Steal While youSleep.
Steal While you Sleep.
I thought it was interesting.
I was like I got to read this.
You know what it is.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
What's that?

Speaker 2 (31:22):
So these crooks, what they do is on these high-dollar
flights where they know thatpeople travel with a lot of
money, like routes.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Yeah, certain routes, yeah, okay.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
All right, like Hong Kong and Dubai, oh, okay.
China anywhere, you know?
So what they do is this wholeorganization, and I've never
even heard of this.
Is that?
What they do?
Is they target passengers thathave a lot of jewelry on board
the flight?
Oh right, they can try to stealtheir shit of jewelry on board
the flight.
Oh right, they can try to stealtheir shit, yeah, on the plane,

(31:54):
but it's crazy how deep it goes.
So it starts at the verybeginning.
When this passenger or thisperson buys this high-end
jewelry from these jewelrystores, one of their people is
working in them.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
Oh, okay.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
So they talk to them, they find out that they're
traveling and they give them alittle information.
Okay, so they're writing thatinformation down.
So then what they do is theygive it to an airline personnel
that actually works for thisgroup of criminals too.
So then that airline person hewrites, or she writes all their
information down.
They determine whether this isenough money for them to send a

(32:32):
crew on.
So they have a crew of peoplethat come on.
Now there's usually, they said,a person in every cabin.

Speaker 1 (32:38):
That's crazy, man.
It's just a whole syndicate ofpeople that are like trying to
do this whole scam Like it getseven better, Sean.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
Yeah, I mean it gets better.
So this person they get up andthey know that this bag is in
the overhead bin.
So one of them will get up andthey go in the overhead bin and
they retrieve that bag.
Now, if they can get the stuffout, they'll just leave the bag
there.
If they can't, and they feellike they're being seen, they'll
move the bag to another bin.
They'll take the stuff out.

(33:06):
Now, it's kind of tricky fromthere.
So they take the stuff out andthey'll put this bag either back
or they'll put it in anotherplace.
Well, they walk this and theygive it to the other person.
So then they go back and theysit down and then this other
person has the stuff and thenthey go give it to the other
person.
So if somebody actually comes onboard and they see that these

(33:26):
jewels and all this stuff ismissing, they start looking
through people, right, andthey've seen the person with the
bag and so they identify thatperson.
Well, then he or she doesn'thave it.
So then they look to everybodyelse.
It's that game of cat and mouse.
So this third person what theydo is they hide it on the
airplane somewhere, because theyhave ground staff working at

(33:48):
the airports that come in andtake this so they don't get
popped in customs.
Yeah, now it's been such a bigthing, though it's been such a
big thing when the aircraft getsmet this whole group of
security people from Hong Kongcome on board the plane Right,
and then what they do is theystop everybody.
They go through all their stuffwhen they know it's gone, but

(34:10):
they said nine times out of tenit's not gone.
Have you ever heard of that?

Speaker 1 (34:13):
No, isn't that crazy?
Well, here's my.
I mean, if I'm a courier ofjewelry and stuff, I ran into a
couple people here in the Statesthat do that type of stuff.
They go back and forth to likeCentral America, mexico,
whatever, and they're buyingmassive quantities of jewelry

(34:38):
back and forth, taking it back.
You know, I don't know if I'mjust traveling alone with a
unlocked suitcase, you know it'sgonna have to be locked and um,
and you need somebody else witha pair of eyes.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
You shouldn't be doing it by yourself, right it's
kind of like I truly don'tthink that they're thinking
about it, right, right, theyprobably, they, probably, they
probably are thinking nobodyknows that they have it on them
and, and you know, they just putin the bag right over there,
over over their uh, their seatyeah, but these scams and stuff
can only go on.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
So so long before they start, you know, the uh
industry starts getting, youknow, figuring out how to
prevent this.
You know, because I'm thinking,like, if this person never goes
to sleep and they've sent thesethree people like and this
guy's watching, you know,they're watching their bag the
whole time or uh what, what ifthey like, get these three
people on and the person puts abag under their seat in front of

(35:21):
them?
you know, like, like, and I'msaying like, how are they?
You know they're getting luckyin certain ways where the person
goes to sleep.
If the person goes to sleep,they're being, they're stupid.
But um, if they're carryingthat much, you know, valuables
and all that stuff, well, theseflights, these flights, you know
how long they're, they're goingto sleep.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
They're going to sleep sometime.
You know that they're up.
They're up in the, in the umfirst class cabins.
They're going to sleep.
I mean, it's just a matter oftime and that person, as soon as
they they see them go to sleep,this crew goes into stealing
this stuff.
Right, I just thought thiswhole thing was really
interesting.

Speaker 1 (35:55):
I mean it's interesting to a point.
I mean obviously there's alwayspeople looking to scan somebody
some way, somehow.

Speaker 2 (36:02):
Well, how many times have flight attendants had their
stuff stolen?
Oh, I've been one of thevictims of that, yeah.

Speaker 1 (36:07):
Early in my career I had somebody steal something on
a plane.
When I'm, yeah, early in mycareer I had a uh, somebody
steal something on the planewhen I'm on the plane.
We only had a handful of peopleon the plane.
I know there was a person onthe plane that took them, took
the item that I had and uh,there was nothing I could do
about it.
This is like way, way pre 9-11and all this stuff.
And uh, the person just took itoff the plane and there's
nothing I could do to stop him.
You know, because I didn't seeit, I couldn't tell them.

(36:28):
You know this is, I had mysuspicions and all this stuff,
but you know it's crazy.

Speaker 2 (36:33):
I mean, like we've had I had a security person in
Mexico security person in Mexicogo up into our overhead bin,
take one of my bags down,started going through my bag.
I caught her in the bag.
I caught her in it.
I went and had their supervisorcame up and and she was.

Speaker 1 (36:53):
She gave me some lame excuse like she thought it was
a another bag.
I said you know what crew bags?
Yeah, crew bags are superobvious.

Speaker 2 (36:57):
Yeah, and you gotta make sure they're not putting
anything in it yeah, I remember.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
I remember when I first started this gal, she was
she.
You know how the flightattendants like to put the
purses and stuff on under thelast row seats, stuff like that,
which I think the, if you're aflight agent out there, don't
put your purse or any valuablesunder the seats.

Speaker 2 (37:17):
They've taken money out of their wallet.
Sean, this girl lost her wholepaycheck.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
Yeah, her whole paycheck.
She had just cashed her checkback in the day and she had a
bunch of money in her purse andthey took her wallet and it was
gone she had nothing.

Speaker 2 (37:30):
They even take the money out of the wallet, leave
the wallet.
So they they don't think,because they see their wallet
and they don't know that theirmoney's gone until they actually
go to buy something I meanthat's why, on our you know, the
airline that we work for wehave locked bins now.

Speaker 1 (37:42):
so, like we, you know we have a place to actually for
the crews to lock our personalvaluables up.
You know it's it's it's limitedspace, but if you have like
really expensive stuff, you'regoing to want to put it in that
lock bin and lock it Right,absolutely.
Yeah, you got to be smart outthere, don't.
Don't just be.
There's people trying to scamand all this stuff.

Speaker 2 (38:02):
but but listen, you know, going back to this thing
that we just talked about alittle while ago, do not be put
off from flying because, again,it's 45,000 flights a day and
even though you see a couple ofthings, you know I get it, but
don't don't let that scare youfrom going to the airport and
getting on an airplane.
Like I said, I do it everysingle day.
Sean will be back at doing itpretty soon, but, yeah, don't,

(38:24):
don't do that, because it's justthe media that's blowing all
this up and you know they alwayssay what's going on with the
airlines?
Nothing's going on with theairlines.
An incident happened, ithappens like that and we start
flying again 30 minutes later.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
Yeah, they should be asking like what's going on with
all these videos that we'reseeing?
Why is it so?
You know, why are we doing this?
Well, direct to the pointthere's cameras everywhere and
people taking videos ofeverything, and you're seeing
everything.
Now, I mean, it's a I mean dude.

Speaker 2 (38:58):
Just get on an airplane Right.

Speaker 1 (38:59):
Get on an airplane, all right.
Destination no, no, no, no wait, we're not doing.
Destination Did we talk aboutChicago.

Speaker 2 (39:06):
Oh yeah, that's right yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:13):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, that's right, yeah, oh yeah,
chicago man, that was like thewild west, crazy shit happening.
Yeah, I forgot they had.

Speaker 2 (39:17):
They had the brawl in , the brawl in o'hara and right
outside the bag, actually thosedoors.
You know we went through thosedoors right oh yeah, right in
between those doors they startedswinging yeah, the double doors
, they're just like brawling andI don't know what I have no
idea what the whole issue was,but it was like you could tell.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
It was like two gangs or something like that.
Who knows what it was, butthese guys brawled all the way
into the airport, rolled outinto the back, into the streets,
out there on the lower levelthere in O'Hara, and nothing but
gunfire.
Yeah, and on the lower levelthere in o'hara, and nothing but
gunfire.
Yeah, and I'm not talking aboutlike pop pop.
It was like pop, pop pop pop,pop.

Speaker 2 (39:55):
You watched the video watch the video.

Speaker 1 (39:56):
Google the video.
It is crazy.
You can see the bullet you knowin the windows and stuff the
holes and stuff.
You're like I can't believethat somebody else didn't get
how busy chicago is out therewaiting for vans and stuff.
It had to been like in the mid,like late at night, or
something like that.
Like there's no way, likeduring business hours normal

(40:17):
time, like the airport's alwaysactive but during, like any time
we've been there, it doesn'tmatter what top or lower, lower
level or upper level you'regonna be.

Speaker 2 (40:26):
There's a lot now that's how scary people that
scary.
That was scary because younever know.
All of a sudden you just hearthis pop, pop, pop.
You have no idea where it'sgoing.
You know if you're around, ifyou're in the vicinity, if
you're safe.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
Right.
I mean, what was interesting tome about this too was, like you
know, you think you're going tothe airport and we're getting
screened and all this up.
What was that screening, thatprotection?
Only is that a certain area inthe airport, right, we don't
think about baggage claim andyou're down in baggage claim and
there's they're picking them upyeah, somebody's picking them

(40:59):
up or, um, somebody's trying tomeet somebody or intercept
somebody but they think, youknow, somebody's coming in
exactly that happens.
You know, like, yeah, that'sthat's.
You don't think about that typeof stuff, but that does happen
and it has.
It's nothing new too.
I'll tell you a story, and thisis a person that we both know,
but this guy's a little kind ofoff and he, he decided that he

(41:24):
knew somebody his, his, hisex-wife, they were going through
a separation and all this stuff, and his ex-wife and her
boyfriend were coming in from aflight, and so this Yahoo
decided that he was going tomeet the flight there and down a
baggage claim.

Speaker 2 (41:40):
Same problem.

Speaker 1 (41:40):
I know where you're going, yeah, and then all of a
sudden, when he meets the flight, they come rolling down outside
of security and everything andhe walks into the baggage claim
area with a loaded squirt gun.
He has a squirt gun that he hadpissed into the.
The filled the squirt gun upwith piss and he started

(42:01):
squirting the boyfriend, newboyfriend, because they're
having this domestic quarrel.
Whatever saying I'm, I'm, I'mpissing on you, I'm pissing on
you, I'm pissing on you, dude,and start squirting him.

Speaker 2 (42:12):
He is so far left of center man.

Speaker 1 (42:14):
Yeah, but he got arrested there.
You can't have even a toy gunin that type of area.

Speaker 2 (42:20):
That's a whole other story too.
I mean that one is a wholeother story.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Yeah, but just to the point here.
You think that airport isusually pretty safe area but
just remember, you're not reallyprotected in any screening
until you get beyond thatscreening.
So you have to get into thegate areas and all that stuff
and even the gate areas.

Speaker 2 (42:42):
You know you're not expecting guns and stuff for
sure and sean just showed youthat there's some crazy ass
airline people too.

Speaker 1 (42:48):
Yeah yeah, it's not.
It's not exclusive to just thepublic no, we'll have another
one later.

Speaker 2 (42:54):
He just, he just triggered another thought we're
going to talk about in anotheranother podcast, because, uh,
he'll remember this one, uh.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
Flight attendant with her husband oh yeah, yeah,
there's a there's yeah, thatwasn't we need to.
We'll do episode on just crazycrazy ass employees.

Speaker 2 (43:12):
That's gonna be a funny one, all right, tampa is
the destination yeah, tampa'sthe destination man.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
Tampa's a fun city.
Um, there's so many things todo there.
You know tampa's named for thebig.
You know they got the sportsteams, tampa big buccaneers
there and all that good stuff.
But one of the fun, cool placesthat gary g and and I that G
and I both used to hang out atis Ybor City.

Speaker 2 (43:38):
Yeah, they revamped that man.
That was bad and then it wasgood and it's kind of like
sketchy, but Ybor City is a lotof fun.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
Ybor City is long, it's continuous.
I don't know how many blocks itis, but it's just a long strip
of nothing but bars andentertainment and all that stuff
.
There's no cars going down thestreet so you can just kind of
walk around, see all the peoplewatch and all that stuff.
Ybor City is a cool place to do, but other things.
Cool is the Riverwalk.

(44:05):
It's not that popular in Tampa.
People don't realize it's notlike a San Antonio Riverwalk but
it's a that popular in tampalike.
People don't like realize it'snot like a san antonio riverwalk
, but it's a cool riverwalkwhere you can like go down.
There's all these really niceexclusive hotels and business
buildings along the play and youcan kind of walk around
different places.
Uh, you have a few eatingplaces here and there and stuff,

(44:26):
but they built it up.
But riverwalks is really cool.
But uh, the other thing to do intampa is bushes, bush gardens,
bush gardens, yeah I mean,that's like, that's a classic,
you know attraction to come totampa and go to bush gardens,
one of those things you got todo.
Yeah, I mean, if you, if youlike roller coasters and
amusement parks, bush gardens isa just a a classic place to go.

(44:47):
This first food was gonna befunny, though the though the
food one man.
Hey, food in Tampa there's foodeverywhere.
I mean, you just like we're not.
There's so many hundreds ofrestaurants and stuff there, but
we just picked a few that arelike, kind of like stood out,
and the first one we want totalk about is the Naked Farmer.
I don't want to see a nakedfarmer.

(45:10):
Well, why not, man?
There's some hot naked farmersout there.

Speaker 2 (45:14):
Are we talking about the?

Speaker 1 (45:14):
same farmer, sean.
Yeah, well, yeah, these galsare.

Speaker 2 (45:18):
No, we're not, oh, okay.

Speaker 1 (45:19):
These gals are hot.

Speaker 2 (45:21):
Naked farmer's wife or naked female farmer.

Speaker 1 (45:24):
So you didn't say Farmer's a farmer, it's not
gendered, it's not a farmer,farmer is a farmer.

Speaker 2 (45:29):
It's not gendered.

Speaker 1 (45:29):
It's not a farmer, no , a farmer.
You're thinking like farmersare only men.
Farmers can be women too.

Speaker 2 (45:34):
All right, well then, I changed what I said then A
naked farmer is a naked farmer.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
All right, I'm going to the naked farmer.
Good, and whichever side youwant to visualize naked, do that
, that's your choice.

Speaker 2 (45:47):
We have choices, your choice.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
There's no shame, we don't care.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
That'd be funny, though You're sitting there
telling somebody where are yougoing?
I'm going to the Naked Farmer.

Speaker 1 (45:55):
Yeah, naked Farmer.
Naked Farmer downtown Tampa isknown for their harvest plates
and all these salads and stuff.
It's like super healthy choicesand stuff.
That's all downtown Tampa.
The other place that was reallykind of a hot place is called
the Flan Factory.
Flan the Flan, you know, likethat Mexican flan.

(46:16):
Not like a fan, but a flan nono flan, you know flan, like the
Mexico dessert, I do Flan right.
So the Flan Factory, which theyhave that there.
But their famous thing is theirCuban sandwiches.
I freaking love Cubansandwiches.

Speaker 2 (46:28):
Yeah, the Cuban sandwiches must be crazy off the
hook there in the Flan Factory.

Speaker 1 (46:34):
But the food in Tampa , there's just so much stuff
there to go to.
We were just talking about oneof the historical places we went
to in Ybor City.
That's not there anymore, butnew places all the time.
But you're not going to be lostat getting good food in Tampa,
but anyways.
So what do you got for thequote today?

Speaker 2 (46:54):
I'm just going to tell people again do not stay
away from the airlines folks.
Do not.
No matter how many of thesethings that you see on the news,
don't stay away from them.
Yeah, don't be scared to fly.

Speaker 1 (47:03):
This is the safest way to travel period.
I mean we've talked about thisbefore we I mean you just we've
talked about this before.
We're kicking tires, checkingeverything, get your butt back
on a plane.
Yeah, get out there and do it.

Speaker 2 (47:14):
Yep, okay, here's a quote.
You don't have to be great tostart, but you do have to start
to be great.

Speaker 1 (47:22):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (47:24):
All right guys.
Man, it was a lot of fun thisweek.
You guys have a great week.
Can't wait to see you next week.

Speaker 1 (47:29):
Yeah, great week man Cabin Pressure.
We're going to see you, see youguys Later.
Bye, thank you for listening toCabin Pressure with Sean and G.
We would like to ask any flightattendant that has crazy crew
stories to contact us with yourstory so we can talk about it.
On Cabin Pressure and if you'd,like to be a guest with your

(47:52):
story so we can talk about it oncabin pressure.
And if you'd like to be a gueston cabin pressure, email us at
C-E-W-I-T-H-S-G at gmailcom.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.