Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Spirit Airlines Sparks 'Home Alone 2' Comparisons After Flying 6-Year-Old To The Wrong City

YouTube screenshots of a Spirit Airlines plane and the child in question
ABC News/YouTube

In a very 'Home Alone 2'-esque mixup, the airline accidentally sent a young boy to the wrong Florida airport to visit his grandmother.

In a bizarre incident that seems to echo a scene straight out of Home Alone 2: Lost in New York, a six-year-old boy traveling unaccompanied was inadvertently placed on the wrong plane at Philadelphia International Airport, destined for the incorrect destination, reminiscent of the film's protagonist, Kevin McCallister.

According to CNN, the child was scheduled for a Spirit Airlines flight to Fort Myers, Florida, but instead was mistakenly boarded on a plane bound for Orlando.


Although not as drastic as Kevin's misadventure in the movie, where he intended to fly from Chicago to Miami but ended up in New York City instead, the Orlando-Fort Myers confusion posed a relatively shorter three-hour drive between the destinations.

After landing in Orlando, the child contacted his grandmother, who had anxiously awaited his arrival at Fort Myers airport. Concerned when he didn't disembark, she drove 160 miles to retrieve him. The airline reimbursed her travel expenses, though her time was not compensated.

The airline noted their error relatively quickly, releasing the following statement:

“The child was always under the care and supervision of a Spirit Team Member and as soon as we discovered the error, we took immediate steps to communicate with the family and reconnect them.”
After an internal investigation, Spirit has fired the agent who was found responsible for allowing the boy on the wrong flight.Maria Ramos, the child's grandmother, told CNN affiliate WINK-TV she was frightened by the experience and wants definitive answers from the airline:
“I want them to call me. Let me know how my grandson ended up in Orlando. How did that happen? Did they get him off the plane?"
"The flight attendant – after Mom handed him with paperwork – did she let him go by himself? He jumped in the wrong plane by himself?”

Social media users have humorously compared the incident to the famous movie mishap.





Spirit, a major ultra-low-cost airline, is no stranger to travel controversy.

In 2019, the Department of Transportation (DOT) imposed a $100,000 fine on Spirit Airlines due to the mishandling of complaints concerning passengers with disabilities.

This penalty was a result of Spirit Airlines' failure to adequately record and address these grievances, a violation of DOT's regulations implementing the Air Carrier Access Act. This Act prohibits any form of discrimination against passengers with disabilities in air travel.

In 2016, DOT released a report that showed Spirit Airlines had the highest rate of consumer complaints during 2015. The data showed that 11.73 out of every 100,000 customers who flew Spirit had complaints about their experience.

More from Trending

Mark Alford; Bad Bunny
Patrick T. Fallon/AFP via Getty Images

MAGA Rep. Blasted After Saying Republicans Are Now 'Investigating' Bad Bunny's Halftime Show

In an interview with Real America's Voice, Missouri Republican Representative Mark Alford said House Republicans are now "investigating" rapper Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime show, claiming it "could be much worse than the Janet Jackson wardrobe malfunction" for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

The Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show, which was broadcast live on February 1, 2004, featured singers Justin Timberlake and Jackson. The show is infamous for the moment Timberlake exposed Jackson's breast for a moment.

Keep Reading Show less
Karoline Leavitt
Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Karoline Leavitt Ripped After Trying To Sweep Aside Trump's Role In Epstein Files During Press Briefing

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt was swiftly criticized after she tried to sweep aside President Donald Trump's role in the Epstein files, urging the press—and by extension the public—to "move on" from the matter.

Trump has done everything he can to dismiss or downplay the outrage surrounding the documents, which are said to contain detailed lists of some of his former friend and associate Jeffrey Epstein's most high-profile clients and enablers. The late disgraced financier was a convicted pedophile and sex trafficker.

Keep Reading Show less
JD Vance
Kevin Lamarque / POOL / AFP via Getty Images

JD Vance Slammed After Warning U.S. Olympians Not To 'Pop Off About Politics' During The Olympics

As several Olympians have made headlines in the past week for statements critical of the Trump administration's policies, particularly amid the ongoing nationwide immigration crackdown, JD Vance criticized those Olympians who, as he put it, "pop off about politics."

For instance, freeskier Chloe Kim, the daughter of South Korean immigrants, who has previously addressed how racism has impacted her career, said "it is really important for us to unite and kind of stand up for one another for all that’s going on." Figure skater Amber Glenn also described the current climate in the U.S. as especially difficult for herself and others in the LGBTQ+ community.

Keep Reading Show less
sign listing rules: no smoking, littering, loitering, skateboarding
David Trinks on Unsplash

Couples Share The Dumbest 'House Rule' They Implemented As A Joke That They Now Enforce

House rules is a phrase that refers to the guidelines a specific household maintains.

How those rules are developed is very individual to the people living there, although some are quite universal.

Keep Reading Show less
Rich Ruohonen
David Berding/Getty Images

MAGA Is Melting Down After Olympic Curler From Minnesota Speaks Out To Condemn ICE

Richard Ruohonen is a curler from Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, about 18 minutes north of Minneapolis. At 54 years old, Ruohonen's first appearance at the Winter Olympics is historic as he's the oldest athlete to ever represent the United States.

He is a two-time national curling champion and a World Senior Curling Championship silver and bronze medalist, but his full-time profession is as a lawyer. Ruohonen is a six-time Minnesota Lawyer Attorney of the Year winner.

Keep Reading Show less