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Southwest Airlines Faces Backlash For Calling Out This Common Passenger Habit On Planes

Southwest Airlines Faces Backlash For Calling Out This Common Passenger Habit On Planes

Erika W. SmithFri, July 10, 2026 at 7:45 PM UTC

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A Southwest airline flies through the sky on a clear day - Boarding1now/Getty Images

On social media, brands walk a fine line: They want to be funny enough to go viral, but they don't want to offend loyal or would-be customers. Some end up reaching a new group of social media users who might not have thought about the brand in years, others end up mired in controversy when a joke goes wrong. That's exactly what happened to Southwest Airlines on Threads.

On June 30, Southwest Airlines released a Threads post reading (emojis included): "You ๐Ÿ‘ won't ๐Ÿ‘ get ๐Ÿ‘ off ๐Ÿ‘ the ๐Ÿ‘ plane ๐Ÿ‘ faster ๐Ÿ‘ by ๐Ÿ‘ standing ๐Ÿ‘ up ๐Ÿ‘ .001 ๐Ÿ‘ seconds ๐Ÿ‘ after ๐Ÿ‘ the ๐Ÿ‘ seatbelt ๐Ÿ‘ sign ๐Ÿ‘ turns ๐Ÿ‘ off ๐Ÿ‘." It's in line with the cheeky voice of the airline's other Threads posts, like "You know it's serious when you start tracking their flight.๐Ÿ˜" and "Summertime is for kicking off your shoes, just not on our planes please," both posted earlier in June. But something about the new post seems to have struck a nerve, bringing a barrage of both comedic comments and legit complaints alike โ€” roughly 5,000 of them at the time of writing.

Read more: 8 US-Based Budget Airlines Ranked Worst To Best, According To Reviews

How Threads users responded

The interior cabin of a Southwest Airlines airplane, with passengers seated in cramped-looking seats. - Joni Hanebutt/Shutterstock

Southwest was ranked No 1 in customer satisfaction in 2025,ย compared to other airlines, and it's been deemed the only major domestic airline that's fully transparent about economy pricing, but many travelers still have valid complaints about flying in 2026. Rising prices, reduced leg room, extra fees, and frequent flight delays are all reasons why the airport experience is getting worse. Some appeared to see Southwest's Threads post as mocking them for their way of dealing with those unpleasantries โ€” standing up to stretch after being cramped in a tiny seat for hours, or racing to catch their connecting flight because a delayed takeoff cut into their layover.

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In response, Threads posters weren't shy about sharing their anger, often posting with equal emojis.ย "I ๐Ÿ‘have๐Ÿ‘ a ๐Ÿ‘connecting ๐Ÿ‘flight ๐Ÿ‘that ๐Ÿ‘I ๐Ÿ‘am ๐Ÿ‘going๐Ÿ‘to๐Ÿ‘be๐Ÿ‘late ๐Ÿ‘to๐Ÿ‘," wrote one person. Others took it as an opportunity to rail against the airline in general: "With๐Ÿ‘ ๐Ÿ‘the ๐Ÿ‘ elimination ๐Ÿ‘ of ๐Ÿ‘ free๐Ÿ‘ checked ๐Ÿ‘ bags ๐Ÿ‘ and๐Ÿ‘ now ๐Ÿ‘ the ๐Ÿ‘added ๐Ÿ‘ benefit ๐Ÿ‘ of ๐Ÿ‘rising ๐Ÿ‘ ticket ๐Ÿ‘ prices ๐Ÿ‘ and ๐Ÿ‘ condescending๐Ÿ‘ customer๐Ÿ‘ service ๐Ÿ‘ there's ๐Ÿ‘ fewer๐Ÿ‘ and ๐Ÿ‘ fewer ๐Ÿ‘ reasons ๐Ÿ‘ to ๐Ÿ‘ fly ๐Ÿ‘ Southwest."

The whole experience is a message in social media management: Not all attention is good attention, andย Threads users have short fuses. Following the backlash, Southwest's Threads posts became a lot more subdued, wishing followers a happy Fourth of July, and celebrating the people who design and fly their planes. Each post has less than 50 responses, but they're all positive.

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Read the original article on Islands.

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Source: โ€œAOL Breakingโ€

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