Internet Culture

Delta roasts United on Twitter over leggings debacle

‘Fly by the seat of your pants’ is somehow a business model now.

Photo of Monica Riese

Monica Riese

leggings
Photo via sean_hickin/Flickr (CC-BY) Remix by Monica Riese

With a single feisty tweet, Delta seized the opportunity of a little turbulence for competitor United to smoothly sail into the running for Troll Airline of the Year.

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Over the weekend, a gate agent for United in Minneapolis forbade three girls from boarding their flight to Denver, allegedly because they were not “properly clothed.” United later tried to clarify its stance on Twitter, saying the girls were flying as part of the “company benefit travel” program, which has more strict requirements. Predictably, this only made things worse: Celebrities from Sarah Silverman to Seth Rogen all took a second to roast the airline for its seemingly arbitrary policy.

On Monday, rival airline Delta decided to get in on the fun with a sly little subtweet about flying in comfort.

https://twitter.com/Delta/status/846393226890280966

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United might’ve missed the burn as it tried to triage the rest of its DMs today, but that doesn’t mean this jewel went unnoticed by many others. Dozens replied to the tweet saying they’d be sending their business Delta’s way.

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https://twitter.com/cmclymer/status/846398137451339777

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There are two asterisks on this victory, of course: 1) Delta’s group of premium cabin seats with additional legroom is literally called Delta Comfort+, so yes, you can always fly in comfort, but for that capital-C comfort, you might have to cough up an extra 30 bucks to do it. And 2) Delta shared its official dress code, which prohibits “unclean, revealing or lewd garments” for its Buddy Pass travelers. It is unclear from the site whose judgment deems something revealing.

https://twitter.com/Delta/status/846397064858750976

This isn’t the first time the internet has rallied around the sanctity of leggings, because of course it’s not. In January, Kellyanne Conway apologized for offending “the black-stretch-pants women of America” after wearing what was functionally an American Girl doll outfit to President Trump‘s inauguration.

It turns out that women want from their airlines what they also want from their pants: a little flexibility.

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H/T Huffington Post

 
The Daily Dot