Major US Airline can now remove passengers for “barebeating”
In the increasingly cramped and high-tension environment of modern air travel, the “nightmare passenger” has become a staple of digital discourse. From the aggressive security line cutters known as “gate lice” to travelers who remain indifferent to a child’s sustained screaming, the list of grievances is long. However, a new, pervasive offender has climbed to the top of the most-complained-about list: the passenger who treats the aircraft cabin like a private living room by playing music, videos, or games at full volume without a headset.
The behavior has recently been christened with its own pejorative nickname: “barebeating.” The term describes the act of forcing fellow passengers to endure a device’s raw audio output. While perhaps less visceral than a foot stretched between seat gaps, “barebeating” is a guaranteed way to dismantle a quiet cabin environment. Now, one of America’s largest carriers is signaling that the era of auditory entitlement is over.
