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She graduated as a pilot in 2013, [4] and she started her YouTube channel under her alias DutchPilotGirl June 2014 gaining hundreds of thousands of subscribers and ten of millions of views over the following decade. Her first videos were of her first solo flights in a Piper PA-28 Cherokee and a Diamond DA40 Diamond Star. [4] [6]
A Royal Australian Air Force aircraftswoman demonstrating the use of an oxygen mask during a pre-flight safety demonstration on board an Australian Airbus A330 MRTT. A pre-flight safety briefing (also known as a pre-flight demonstration, in-flight safety briefing, in-flight safety demonstration, safety instructions, or simply the safety video) is a detailed explanation given before take-off to ...
Katherine Lee-Hinton, better known as Deltalina, [2] [3] [4] is an American flight attendant for Delta Air Lines and was one of the presenters of Delta's onboard safety videos. The first Deltalina safety video was released in February 2008 [5] [unreliable source?] and became one of the most-watched videos on YouTube.
Aljoscha Wendholt [2] [3] (born 17 June 1986 [citation needed]), professionally known as Josh Cahill, [2] is a German aviation vlogger, airline critic and blogger who presents airline reviews primarily through his YouTube channel. [4]
The YouTube video was posted on July 6, 2009. It amassed 150,000 views within one day, prompting United to contact Carroll, saying it hoped to right the wrong. The video had over half a million views by July 9, [6] 5 million by mid-August 2009, [3] 10 million by February 2011, and 15 million by August 2015. It has roughly 24 million views and ...
American Airlines Flight 587 was a regularly scheduled ... from a video of a toll-booth camera on ... on YouTube This page was last edited on 16 December 2024, at ...
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The largest international airlines sometimes pay more than $90,000 for a license to show one movie over a period of two or three months. These airlines usually feature up to 100 movies at once, whereas 20 years ago they would have only 10 or 12. In the United States, airlines pay a flat fee every time the movie is watched by a passenger.