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American finally solves the centuries-old problem of lateness: make everyone else wait.

In a shining moment for “customer-centric” air travel, American Airlines has unveiled a new technology that kindly, if belatedly, acknowledges that most of us are actually running late to everything. The system, now rolling out at major hubs, detects when connecting customers are hot-footing across the terminal and—if the schedule gods permit—holds flights a few extra minutes. No more just-missed connections, no more Olympic-caliber sprints, no more existential dread from watching your plane taxi away while you’re still stuck in Cinnabon.

But if artificially thoughtful algorithms represent the latest in airline compassion, why stop there? What if, among us, a chosen elite could command a jet’s schedule for reasons far more urgent than a mere tight connection—like deliberating over oat milk foams, or finishing a truly pivotal Instagram post?

Enter: “Hold My Flight” Elite Status

a cartoon of a man holding a phone and holding beer

Drawing inspiration from their new tech, American announces a bold new vision—Hold My Flight™ Elite Status. Forget holding departures for emergencies or close calls; now, the truly important travelers can freeze time (well, 200 stressed-out passengers, at least) to tend to life’s crucial moments: beverage detours, “urgent” phone calls, and last-minute wardrobe changes.

Said an airline rep with an admirably straight face, “If holding a flight for a slow connection is ‘customer friendly,’ holding for a platinum member’s shoe-tying emergency is downright visionary.”

How It Works: When You’re Ready, So Are We

a man lying in a chair with a mask on his face

  • Latte Linger: $129 or 10,000 miles to delay departure up to 10 minutes for “beverage procurement” or general vibes.
  • Business Call Blockade: $249 or 20,000 miles. That Q3 update or TikTok apology isn’t going to record itself—let the entire flight stew while you “synergize.”
  • Ultimate Platinum Pause: (Invitation Only): Halt the plane for up to 45 minutes to finish your Kiehl’s facial or rewatch season finales, complete with apologetic announcements and coupons for future inconvenience.

The new “Empathy AI” decides if your hold request is genuine, analyzing your social feeds, facial expressions, and, controversially, astrological sign.

“We’re putting the me back in team travel,” explained a spokesperson who refused to make eye contact with a single economy passenger.

Field Reports: Lateness Redefined

a cartoon of a man and a woman in a plane

  • “I finally had time to finish my spirulina smoothie and log my macros. My wellness tribe was grateful. Row 33, not so much.”
    —Sage, Wellness Influencer, Executive Pause Plus
  • “My crypto portfolio dipped, but I got to explain DeFi to a whole captive audience. That’s what I call value-add.”
    —Chase, Tech Bro, Business Call Blockade
  • “Delayed the flight to declutter my inbox using the KonMari method. Passengers didn’t clap, but my chakras are aligned.”
    —Sky, Productivity Guru, Ultimate Platinum Pause

Chaos Theory, Now Boarding

a cartoon of a woman holding a bell to a man sitting on the floor

Naturally, competitors have joined the fray. Delta’s “Diamond Dawdle” lets VIPs meditate before boarding. United’s “Gatekeeper Advantage” waives schedule adherence for anyone citing “emotional support snack time.” Spirit now charges a $29 “Rapid Departure” fee for the privilege of leaving exactly on time—an option no one has discovered.

Hubs now report “gridlock minutes” as elites stall departures nationwide. In Dallas alone, not a wing flapped for 43 minutes, but 900 artisanal lattes were served and three passengers achieved enlightenment in the Terminal D yoga nook.

The Future: Customer Centric? Reality Optional.

a cartoon of people in a airport

American hints at further upgrades: Pause Boarding for Full-Moon Reflections, Hold For Your Therapist, and the much-anticipated Last-Minute Priority Boarding For Those Who Left Their Sense of Urgency at Home.

“At American, we believe in loyalty,” said CEO Robert Isom. “Loyalty to our schedules? Not so much.”

For the rest of us: better stretch those legs and practice your gate sprints. Or just miss your flight entirely—it’s the best way to keep your airport streak alive in the group chat.

Would you freeze 180 people for a cortado and a sense of self-importance? Weigh in, right after you finish that call—we’re waiting.

If you enjoyed this, check out more sky-high antics at The Takeoff Nap.

Disclaimer: This is satire. Please don’t actually expect a 45-minute croissant break before takeoff—unless you’re prepared to buy the airline and the moon.

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