IHeartMedia Aviation Expert Jay Ratliff talks about the week in aviation - podcast episode cover

IHeartMedia Aviation Expert Jay Ratliff talks about the week in aviation

Dec 05, 202421 min
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Speaker 1

Traffic between Norwi Lateral and the Ranking Highway. I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC, the talk station.

Speaker 2

A twenty eight on a Friday eve Woo. Always enjoy this time because a good friend iHeart media. A aviation expert Jay Rali joins the program. Talk about a whole slew of things. Man, we got a lot to talk about this morning. Jay, welcome back to the program, and I hope you are in a festive holiday spirit this time of year.

Speaker 3

I'm in kind of a feisty mood, so yeah, I'm more than I am more than ready for our time. My challenge with you, my friend, is just to bring my a game to keep up with you, because you know, I do fifteen hundred of these a year, and a lot of times the people I'm talking to around the country, it's they asked the question, they wait for their response. They and it's so engaging when you and I talk, and it's hard to it's it's hard and challenging sometimes

to keep up with you. And I love it because rarely do I get that.

Speaker 2

So well, You're great at it. Man, I wouldn't be so enthusied about the segment if you were some monotone sort of guy reading the news kind of stuff. That's why I enjoy our discussions. You don't have to worry about boundaries or image and go anywhere you hell hell you want, you know, and you.

Speaker 3

Have a sense of humor, which is good.

Speaker 1

You know.

Speaker 3

I love working with Jim Scott for ten years. And one year he asked me on the air, Jay Man, how do you know all this? And I said, Jim, what, I don't know? I make up And there's this pause of like five seconds and I said, Jim, I'm kidding, so you know, you and I can laugh, and good lord. I missed Jim so much. But it's just, you know, I love our time together Brian, and I hope it shows.

Speaker 2

It does and I love it. I love it as much. I hope it shows to you too. So let us discuss actually a new addition to the already lengthy list of things today. I'm not sure if we'll get it all in. But the airlines were in front of the Senate yesterday.

Speaker 3

Oh yeah, that was a good one. We had the Senate grilling five airline executives over their practices and their airline feet and their seat fees and when all this was set up. I'm thinking, Okay, come on, guys, this is posturing. All you're doing is these are photo ops. Because if anybody talks about how glorious it is to fly, how wonderful it is to fly, they're obviously lying because you and I've talked about you don't enjoy travel, you

endure it. And the Senate panel was up there talking to these airline executives, and of course they were grilling them over the seat fees and things that were their costs of business and how their business operations were. And I really think the government has z row zero zero role in that. But what I did find interesting was

when they were talking about like Frontier and Spirit. Ohdah, I love this exchange where they said, why are you incentivizing your gate agents to find bags that are too big so they have to be charged a carry on fee? Because Spirit and Frontier have paid out in incentives. Now, remember these are people that don't make a lot of money working for the airlines, right, twenty six million dollars in like two years. Wow, Because they give me like

ten bucks a bag. If you find something that's too big, we'll give you ten bucks of the thirty forty fifty whatever that ends up being charged. They are actually out there, they're looking for bags they are too big.

Speaker 2

Do you find you do you have any problem with them doing that? Do you?

Speaker 3

As far as incentives, Absolutely.

Speaker 2

Not right, because they're forcing the rules that are on the books anyway, you're not supposed to have a book a bag that's beyond X number of size. The employees are helping the company meet its objectives. They're helping them earn the money that they're entitled to because of the rules that you agree to when you agree to fly in that airline. So bully for them.

Speaker 3

Well, you know the thing that I just it amaze me watching the United CEO the frontier that not a single one of them and all that I reviewed, and I didn't see every single second, but none of them said, Look, our number one objective is to push that airplane back on time period. That's where our money is made. And if we have a bag that's too big, if we

miss something, we jeopardize that flight leaving on time. So therefore we're going to incentivize our agents to get out there and look for things that could potentially delay our flight. That's where the focus should have been, but they were

trying to play along, skip along, whatever. And I'm just thinking, guys, you just go that they'd gone straight to the matter, because I would have told every one of the senators, Look, you want your flight to be on time, right, so if we do everything within our power to do so, you're going to be happy, right. And I would have shoved it right back in their face and say, this is how we accomplish that because passengers bring bags that

are too big. We've got to do this passengers. All of the things that could have been addressed, But the bottom line is the Trump administration, if it's anything like round one, they're going to back off. They're going to let the airlines do whatever they want to do. So I think a lot of this stuff that's been being pushed right now is that is not going to continue. And that's sad because I've told you I the Bide administration. It can't the end of it cannot get here too

soon for they. But I do appreciate the fact that they were hard on the airlines. They held them accountable, they made sure that they did everything they could to help push them towards better customer service. And I will forever be thankful for that. And it's just I don't know. I see so much of this as just the typical political you know, the games they play, so they've got soundbites for their commercials and all the other crap that

goes on. And it's sad to me thinking that the airlines are going to return to a time when you know. But look, you and I both agree. Bright. I think I can speak for you that airlines they can do business any way they want, and if people don't like it, guess what They're going to fly another carrier. The free market will determine what takes place. And please get out of our face.

Speaker 2

Amen. And I guess I'm under the I think safe presumption. Again, you're the expert on this, and if you don't know the answer, just make it up.

Speaker 3

Absolutely.

Speaker 2

I'm under the impression that most people follow the rules. So it's the guys who refuse to follow the rules that show up with an oversized bag. Obviously, it's not going to fit in the overhead bin, it's not going to fit underneath under this seat in front of you. So they're going to stop, they're gonna have to tag it, They're going to put you know, everybody in standing in line trying to get to the damplane. This is the delay you're talking about. Those people are fewer than the

people who find the rules. So this is like trying to create a villain in the airlines for providing this incentive where there is They're not a villain, there is no The only group of constituents out there that would benefit from this attack and maybe getting rid of this incentive are people who want to carry on oversize bags, and we can call.

Speaker 3

Those in the minority, right, so we could call it like the EPA checks we used to have here in the in the city of a while where you had to prove and like only three percent of the cars failed or whatever, like hey, wait a minute, why are we continuing to do this? And that's exactly the point. But you know a lot of people push back on airlines and I've told you I'm not ever encouraging people

to do this. But when you show up at the gate instead of paying to check your bag at the counter, a lot of people drag that bag to the gate. And when the airline says we're super full today, if anybody would be kind up to let us check their bag, we'll do it for free. Okay, take my four bags and then boom, you didn't have to pay a penny in the check bag fees. Now, I'm not telling people

to do that now, Brian. They do that all the time, and you know, if it saves them money, I guess they figure it's it's an okay thing to do.

Speaker 2

Fair Enough, we got more topics talk about with iHeart Media aviation next for Jay Ratless, So please don't go away, We'll be right back.

Speaker 1

Fifty five KRC, Would and Living Attorneys Head seventy one, seventy five Sound found slows from the Lachland Split to Town Street. I'm Heather Pasco on fifty five KRC the talk station.

Speaker 2

You ever been in the cockpit before? Jay RYTLFAZ. It's a thirty nine on a Friday Eve. I heard media aviation next for Jay Rattler. All right, so we were talking in advance of the Thanksgiving holiday how busy it was going to be and uh so, how did it turn out in terms of airline travel and travel generally speaking? Was it as bad as they already talking about?

Speaker 3

Well, I always look at the number of people flying and that is indicative many times of the challenges or the success we had. Typically, the Sunday after Thanksgiving is the busiest travel day of the year, and we get every day from the TSA the number of screen passengers that they had. And actually on the Sunday after Thanksgiving, we did see a record number of travelers. It was over three million people that we had traveling. It was a record for the year. That was the most that

we had. But the second busiest day is typically and always the Wednesday before Thanksgiving. So when you go back and look at the Wednesday before Thanksgiving, Brant that number was lower than what we expected. In fact, it was probably number fifteen or sixteen ranking wise in the quarter alone had nowhere near a record number of any kind, and a lot of that had to do with the

weather and the number of delayed and canceled flights. So the week ressed we were fighting weather delays that caused a lot of problems, delayed a lot of people, had people traveling on different days, canceling their reservations, all kinds of things. So even though we ended the Thanksgiving holiday week on a record as expected, the Sunday after Thanksgiving, as we tend to do every year, the other days that we had of the week were a little bit subdued,

and that's because we were fighting some weather issues. And fortunately it improved is that weekend got here because we needed that. But some people it was Monday or Tuesday before they could get home because some of the flights had been canceled, so it was a challenge. Now airlines

made money. They made quite a bit of it because this is their super Bowl week, the busiest travel week of the year, and they can charge higher fares, and it ticks us off when they do, but there's nothing we can do about it other than after the first of the year, a lot of people are looking at making next year's reservations. Buy them. If you know you're going to be flying, grab the trip cancelation assurance, lock in those super low fares, and then you're guarded against

any future rating creation. And that's what the savvy travelers do that every year that they fly, they say, look, I know what I'm flying. I'm gonna buy them as part in advance as I can. Yes, I'll get nine million flight schedule changes once they make my reservation, but two cares, I've locked in a lower fare. And if it's the two entities. I want to pay the less two. I've told you, Brian, it's airlines in the irs. So if I can pay early to pay the airlines less,

you better believe it. I'm going to do that every single chance.

Speaker 2

I get, every chance you get. All right, Well, you always emphasize how safe airline travel is. I mean, notwithstanding the fact that Boeing has doors blowing off the aircraft and crazy stuff happens, but overall it is a very safe means of travel. You know, compared to automobiles and pretty much any other form, you're probably less likely to get killed in an airline crash. So apparently somebody added up all the passenger miles flown since the last crash. What is the total on that one, Jay.

Speaker 3

Yeah, this goes back. Got a fifty seven hundred and some days. The last airline crash who we had was the Colgan Air crash in Buffalo killed fifty people February twelve, two thousand and nine. So someone who obviously and clearly had way too much time on their hands, did add up all the number of passengers who've flown since then and the miles they've flown going back to that crash comes out to thirteen point three trillion miles. In other words,

two light years, if you know what that means. And of course I don't know what the light year is, but here's what I do understand. It's the same number of miles that would be accumulated if you and I again, this is the number of miles flown safely since the last aviation crash here in the United States. You and I could go to the moon and back twenty eight million times. That's how big of a number it is.

So when when I say you're in a lot more danger getting to the airport then you're going to be getting on a plane, it's because, as I've said so many times before, and we've talked about this for years, we're enjoying, thank god, the safest air ever of commercial jet travel. And that's because we have better technology, we have better training. The pilots have more at their disposal

than ever in history. We've got mechanics, air traffic controllers, everybody's doing their job on the ground in the skies. And you know, the only danger is if we start to become a little complacent. And that's where the Boeing conversation begins, and I have not had enough coffee for that one. But amazing when you look at just how safe aviation is. And Brian, I remember when I got started in the eighties, we had we had them every year and the question was how many are we going

to have this year? We knew we were gonna have accidents, we knew they were going to be fatalities, and this is back in eighty one eighty two, and it was a matter of how many are we gonna have this year? It was it was never a even though we wanted it, a foregone conclusion, you know, could we have fewer or maybe none this year? But every when you look back at the history of aviation, sadly it's a reality that seemed to always creep up. A lot of it had

to do with pilot there. And thank god for the NTSB, the National Transportation Safety Board are the all stars because every single accident or near accident, they would try to glean from that the mistake or mistakes that were made, enhancements that could be made, and they would pass those on as recommendations to the Federal Aviation Administration, saying here's our suggestions, twenty three ways where you can make aviation safer. Now, my arivation is the FA might take one or two

of those only implement them into new changes. But Brian, from every single accident or near accident, we've made aviation safer. When we had the horrific crash of Air Canada back here in the eighties at CBG, the NTSB came up, I think with twenty six different recommendations on how to

make aviation safer. Many of those were implemented after that crash and the lives that were lost, and you're always wanting to learn from the crash so that any lives lost, we can on the memory of those that we did lose by making aviation safer. And that's what they've done, year after year after year. And thirteen point three trillion mile that's a lot, a lot my little brain and I deal with numbers all the time. I numbers that big.

Speaker 2

I know, I know, I know, But like every time I mentioned, you know, a trillion dollars in debt or a billion dollars spent, I always try to express it in terms of thousands of millions, so you know you got a billion, it's a thousand stacks of a million. A trillion is a thousand stacks of a billion. It tends to put things in perspective. So I appreciate your going to the moon and back parallel on that figure. Let's pause.

Speaker 3

It helps us. Well, it's like the national debt right now, Yes, exactly is thirty six trillion. And it's such a big number. People don't understand it. But if you sat there and went one, two, three, four, and every second had a number, it would take you a million years to get to thirty six trillion. Yes, so that's how big that number is.

Speaker 2

Oh, I'm gonna get your blood pressure.

Speaker 3

Yes, this guy's just well, yeah, pushing all my button and.

Speaker 2

You're gonna you're gonna stay fighting on behalf of the Spirit Airline employees. I think I understand why they are as you described, furious. We'll bring Jay back for a couple more topics. Hang on, it's eight forty six. I'd be right back fifty five the talk station wrapping up the full half hour with that jay rattle. If I forced them to stay on for the whole time. It

just these topics are great. Spirit Airlines. I think their employees are legitimately and the word you chose furious, explain to my listeners what just justifies their anger.

Speaker 3

Well, you talk about how Spirit Airlines, which has gone into Chapter eleven bankruptcy. But before they they made that leap Brian, they started laying off the other pilots, some ground personnel. They were selling off their airplanes. They were obviously in a lot of trouble. They tried they were going to merge with Frontier, backed off of that, tried to merge with Jet Blue, was denied. They went back to Frontier. Frontier said no, we're not going to merge

with you. So they're trying to make it on their own. So they're selling off all of this, laying off employees. And then it's found out after the paperwork comes out on the Chapter eleven bankruptcy filings, because it's all right there that just before the airline filed for Chapter eleven bankruptcy, they paid up five point three million dollars in retention

awards to five of their upper executives of the airline. Now, imagine being laid off, trying to figure out what you gonn do with your family for Christmas and finding out that one of the people used to work for was part of a five point three million dollar bonus that

was awarded before the airline filed Chapter eleven bankruptcy. Now, Brian, all the years I was in the industry, especially at Northwest Airlines, I was in management, used to butt heads daily with my union friends, and I was never considered

a union kind of guy ever. But I tell you, when I see this kind of stuff, where executives get this kind of money, when they are the ones responsible for the airline being driven into Chapter eleven bankruptcy, it makes me want to lose my mind because I'm thinking, but that's corporate America, and that's one of the reasons I couldn't wait to get away from it all those years ago, and it still bugs me.

Speaker 2

To this day, I imagine so well, anyhow, as still sorry for them, not the airline executive. Naturally, front Tier taking an upgrade move. Here they're going to provide premium first class seats.

Speaker 3

Now, yep, I love Frontier. Remember they're the carrier that came here first, bringing their one flight a day from Dayton to Denver down to Cincinnati. When people said you're crazy. That's where low cost carriers go to die. You'll never make it. Frontier flourished. Here comes Allegiant Southwest moves our operation from Dayton. I love Frontier and what they've said is, look, some of our customers are saying they'd like premium seats. So what they're going to do is they're on their

low cost carrier Airbus Aircraft. The first two roads are going to be first class. And what they're saying is we're hearing what our passengers want, but we're also following the lead up. Remember Southwest Airlines is going to go to assigned seats and have some premium or coach plus seats. You've got other low cost carriers looking at this. Now.

Frontier says, look, our numbers say, if we give our travelers first class, we're going to have additional revenue in twenty twenty six to two hundred and fifty million dollars. They think in twenty twenty eight that additional revenue because of those premium seats that are going to be a little bit more expensive than the typical Frontier seat, is going to be five hundred million dollars in revenue in twenty twenty eight. So they're going to be giving passengers

what they're asking for. They're going to make more money as a result, and to fly a low cost carrier with a first class option. I love that because what you're doing is you're giving the passenger more options. You don't have to sit there. But like every other carrier, they're saying, we can really make some good money here by making this option available for passengers. And I tell you it's a move that from the low cost carrier side,

airlines are shifting in that direction. Spirit Airlines was also a carrier that's decided to do that, which is a long overdue that's going to help them in type of move I wish they had done a years before.

Speaker 2

Well, it takes it takes a little bit of that budget stereotype off of the airline by having that option, and you know, if you want to, you want to stretch your legs out and still get a discount fly it sounds like a great idea to me.

Speaker 3

A you're gonna be on the premium, if you's gonna be up front. You know a lot of people take take the bulkhead rows like we do on those carriers. Sure, so you've got that extra leg room, but to have a slightly bigger seat, oh my gosh, yeah, sign me up.

Speaker 2

Yeah, no doubt about it, especially given the spillover effects some flyers have into your seat. Leave it at that, And as next.

Speaker 3

To my wife, Sherry, I'm always in good shape.

Speaker 2

I know you are see that you married out of your element, you got kicked your coverage taking good.

Speaker 3

I'm so far I'm married so far above my I know you're exactly right.

Speaker 2

I know you and I both acknowledge that in a regular basis as well we should. And it's smart advice to men out there who are considering a spouse, marry out of your league, oh big time. The more the better hub delays. What's going on out there in the world of travel today, Jay, A.

Speaker 3

Lot of wind and weather towards the northeast, Washington, d C. New York, especially Boston's getting pounded right now. We're seeing quite a few delays up there that sadly, are going to last throughout the rest of the day. Anything south, anything West, very good shape. I don't think you're gonna see much as far as any other than minor morning de icing delays, but those aren't too much. But the real headaches, obviously, Brian, today are going to be the Northeast.

Speaker 2

As always, wonderful having you on the fifty five Carssy Morning Show Jay Ratliffe and looking forward to next Thursday, another enjoyable conversation. Best of health and love you and your better half have a wonderful weekend, my.

Speaker 3

Friend, You too, my friend. Thank you.

Speaker 2

A fifty five ifty five KR City talk station wonderful conversation with tennant governor

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