Pivot - Future of Travel: How is Aviation Innovating?
Episode Date: July 3, 2024Pivot’s special series on the future of travel wraps up with a last stop: planes. What exactly is happening with Boeing? How will AI play a role in aviation? And most importantly, what is everyone�...�s favorite, and least favorite airport? Kara and Scott discuss it all with Pete Muntean, CNN's aviation and transportation correspondent, who also happens to be a pilot and flight instructor. Follow Pete at @petemuntean. Follow us on Instagram and Threads at @pivotpodcastofficial. Follow us on TikTok at @pivotpodcast. Send us your questions by calling us at 855-51-PIVOT, or at nymag.com/pivot. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, everyone. This is Pivot from New York Magazine and the Vox Media Podcast Network.
I'm Kara Swisher.
And I'm Scott Galloway.
And you're listening to our special three-part series on the future of travel,
where we look at the business and tech trends affecting how we make our way through the world.
Today, we're talking about air travel. Here to chat with us about the future of planes is Pete Muntean. Pete is a CNN correspondent covering aviation and transportation. He's also a pilot
and flight instructor. Probably a good idea. Welcome, Pete.
Thanks for having me.
So you have a voice for radio.
You know, when you're around TV long enough,
it's the compliment I get.
I hope I still have the face for TV, though.
It is a compliment.
Well, yeah, you seem fine about that,
but the voice feels like you're about to talk,
walk us through a sports, like, now on third base.
Yeah.
Don't you think, Scott?
100%. Good hair. Good for you think, Scott? 100%.
Good hair.
Good hair, man.
Jeez, thanks, man.
I didn't know I was going to get showered with compliments today.
Well, it's called objectifying, and we like to do it a lot.
Anyway.
Go on AM radio and be the next crazy Republican to win office.
Yeah, yeah.
Sure, you're done.
Anyway, let's start talking about actual air travel and aviation.
So there's been an alarming number of incidents with Boeing planes in the past year from various maintenance issues, emergency landings, and, of course, the door plug falling off of an Alaska Airlines plane mid-flight.
I'd love to get your take on what needs to improve with this company.
There's certainly been repercussions, lawsuits, investigations, the CEO getting dinged.
Will this impact their business long term?
And what the hell is going on?
I mean, the big thing here is the quality control issue at Boeing. And they have had quality control
issues going back a few years now, not only with the 737 MAX 9 that had this door plug fall off
back on January 5th, but also with the 787 and the 777. There have been whistleblowers coming
forward. It's a huge issue and passengers can't help but ignore it. I mean, people come up to me
all the time and say, what's happening with Boeing? The big thing now is the oversight and whether or
not they can really sort of turn the ship around. And this ship, pardon the pun here, is like an
aircraft carrier. It's this huge organization with so many different products. And the real
critics of Boeing have said that Boeing has gotten just a little
not too flat, not vertical enough. They've sort of lost control. They've siphoned off control to
other contractors. And so they're relying on contractors. Right. And so now they are saying
they're going to really ratchet up their oversight of contractors. The FAA is saying it's going to
ratchet up the oversight of Boeing and its contractors. So that will sort of
really bring things into the proper lane, I think, and will make it so that Boeing can sort of move
forward as the engineering Goliath that it once was, although it's taken this huge reputational
hit. And people come up to me all the time and ask, how do I know if I'm on a MAX 9? How do I
know if I'm on a MAX? How do I know if I'm on a Boeing airplane? And really, it's only two options. You can fly
Boeing or Airbus into a lesser degree on an Embraer or maybe a Canada regional jet, but
it's hard to avoid. And so it's going to take some time. And the big thing is that a lot of
people were wondering whether or not there would be leadership change at the top, and that's
finally happening. Yeah, that's happening.
Nice to meet you. So my understanding is in 1970, it took less time to get from JFK to Dallas on a commercial airliner, that all the innovation, if you recall that, has just been around cost reduction and trying to figure out a way to squeeze more, you know, more shareholder value, which isn't necessarily a bad thing.
But I would argue this has been one of the least innovative sectors.
One, do you agree with that? And two, what can be done or what are the dynamics that have led this industry that is so important to be, at least domestically, just such a,
I don't know, such a where innovation goes to die? I've been around aviation and flying my
entire life. And I think that there have has been a lot of innovation
in making it so that people can sort of move more freely, that that there is more access to flying
than ever. I mean, the airlines have really they've really sort of democratized air travel.
But the experience is very unromantic and frankly, kind of sucks.
They want us to pump our own gas. That's what it seems like.
And so I think the big changes are probably going to come in things like getting through
security faster and the TSA is experimenting with that by using facial recognition technology
to speed the lineup.
There are a lot of things to say there about the efficiency of pre-check and then to a
greater extent clear, but that could sort of make things a little bit better.
I think the thing that will also really change is how airplanes are fueled in the future and whether or not we can finally move forward to a future where there is more or electrification.
I mean, the sticky wicket here is that the batteries are really heavy and airplanes are predicated on being relatively light, especially when you carry so many people, 180 people or so on a 737 now when Southwest packs it full of people.
So it will probably come faster to smaller airplanes.
I fly small airplanes, so I'm particularly excited by that.
And then sort of trickle down to larger commercial airplanes.
So like cars to trucks are where most innovation is going on in electric engines.
Yeah. I mean, maybe we'll see some sustainable aviation fuel not too far off in the future.
That could be a five, 10-year sort of range thing.
I mean, you know, one of the things that causes a lot of innovation in aviation, frankly, has been war.
And a lot of aviation innovations came out of
World War II and the Cold War. And really, a lot of that innovation sort of stagnated.
So we need more war.
Well, I'm not advocating that just in general.
Please do that.
I'm not trying to be a hog here.
No, no, I get it.
The point is, you know, there have been big changes that have been brought on by sort of
big government lifts in the space age.
Now, you're right.
It does seem sort of kind of lame.
And so.
Yeah, planes just seem lame.
I do.
Scott and I both take a lot of planes.
But one of the things is very human.
Not enough pilots.
Congress recently set aside $240 million to address the shortage.
Talk about what caused this and will money.
What's the issue?
They just don't like flying? Because they're not going to be AI'd out of this.
No. And there's a lot of concern about whether or not we replace two pilots with one pilot.
There's a big push to do that in Europe. It probably won't happen in the U.S.
But the pilot shortage is really caused by the fact that it's so expensive to learn how to fly.
And there's been a really big shift in interest. I think, you know,
kids now are inundated with a lot of different options and a lot of different interests and rabbit holes to go down. There's not sort of a space race this sort of canyon where it's hard to sort of
get people from seeing aviation and being jazzed about it to taking a flying lesson. And so I've
taught people from zero. I love that more than anything. I love teaching people to fly. It's a
really cool and unique experience. And it's a very joyful thing. But it does take a lot. It's hard.
And there are a lot of easier things now. And I think a lot of a lot of, you know, when you think
about young people, parents are saying, learn to code.
But pilots do well, correct?
No, they make great money. I mean, at first it's hard. And when when you're struggling, the regional airlines, that's not a great way to it's a tough living.
But when you're a senior airline captain, you're making three, four hundred thousand dollars, which is an incredible living.
And in a lot of cases, you don't need a college degree. Right, and you get to travel.
You know, I took a helicopter lesson, and then I thought better of it for the hell of
humanity.
A helicopter lesson?
I did.
I did.
That's hard.
Helicopters is hard.
It's way hard.
I don't even fly helicopters.
I would love to, though.
I know.
I am a lesbian.
I thought, you know what?
I'm going to, I'm now going to take them with Pete or some kind of flying.
This is, I'm going to strafe you at some point. That's what I'm going to do. Kara, whenever you want to take a lesson,
you can always call me. I will. I will. I shall now, of course. But, you know,
one of the things that is the consumer relationship with planes, there's the Southwest
holiday meltdown in 2022, where the airline canceled over 16,000 flights. I saw it all over
CNN. It was probably you talking about it, highlighting the company's outdated processes. It just feels, even though you do everything on apps and I really
like using my, you know, my ticket on the thing, everybody does that. And just recently, there's
been a lot more going through customs and everything else more quickly and the photos,
but it still feels like old technology, like the way they do it.
The behind the scenes stuff can be very old technology, and sometimes it's very manual because to get an airplane, to get a commercial airliner out of the gate and onto the ramp and to the runway is something that takes a lot of behind-the-scenes flight planning and figuring that is not something that is so automated.
There is a lot more automation sort of being built into that. The downfall of Southwest was that their systems were so old. And in some cases, they were not really able to be
in front of the problem. It was so manual and it wasn't so automatic that they had to sort of
stop, press pause, and then cancel flights for days and days and days before the system could
catch up because planes and pilots and flight attendants and crews were all over the place and all spread out.
Friends of mine are Southwest flight attendants, and they told me that one of them was on a
completely empty flight during that meltdown.
It was just two pilots and one flight attendant just to get the airplane from one place to
another, which would have incensed any passenger at that time because they're stuck in Midway or Denver or what have you. So there does need to be a lot of technological
innovation there. The airlines invest a ton of money in that. They don't want a repeat of having
to shell out millions and millions and points and also to take their stock to take such a huge hit
like they did after the Southwest meltdown. And so there does need to be a lot of change behind the scenes
to make sure that these meltdowns are avoided.
But the problem is, the human problem,
if there's a shortage of pilots and a shortage of airplanes,
the compounding issues with Boeing, that will delay deliveries.
You can hear the story that I'm spelling out here.
There are going to be more and more airline cancellation delay meltdowns in the
future.
We're not out of the woods on that flight yet.
Some more screamy people.
Scott?
I loved your examples around innovation with facial recognition.
I think Clear is an amazing service.
Also, to the government's credit, the TSA, our global entry, I had such an incredible
one of those aha tech moments where I went up to scan my passport, and I scanned my passport, and rather than waiting
in line, they just said, Scott, and they just said, and waved me through because they're clearly
using facial recognition. I think Expedia does a great job. There's been sort of a lot of
off-plane innovation. In terms of the innovation itself, and as disclosure, I'm an investor in
this company. I'm an investor in a company called Boom Technologies, which is trying to create the first commercial supersonic plane since the Concorde. And to me, the real innovation I'm looking for is someone who spends 180 days a year away from my family. And the moment I'm on a plane, all I can think about is getting back. What do you think is the commercial viability of supersonic? Do you think it's going to come back? You know, I mean, the big trick is the sonic boom because it makes such a loud noise.
And so this commercial supersonic transports have been essentially banned from the mainline U.S. for a long, long time because of the sonic boom breaking glasses and causing damage to homes.
And you would have to fly over relatively unpopulated areas, although it could be a very viable thing.
I mean, I think if there's a way to sort of mitigate that, that would be huge.
And, you know, the Concorde, I mean, it's crazy to think that we took this step back.
The Concorde was getting from JFK to Heathrow in a flight that would typically take six
hours.
They do that in two and a half or three.
And so, you know, it's like pressing fast forward.
And then we stopped flying
the Concorde because the expense of that airplane became so intense and the ability to just sort of
keep it in the air was not making financial sense for these few airlines that flew it.
So we really took a big step back. And so you're right. I mean, there is a real need to sort of
take this step forward and sort of speed up air travel. I mean, the issue now is that a lot
of things have replaced the need for a last minute ticket between New York and London and New York
and Paris because of Zoom and the viability of taking video calls. I mean, that technology has
really sort of taken a dent out of the business traveler that was the bread and butter for
airlines for a long, long time. So it'll be interesting to see if supersonic air transport
and a real 21st century approach to that can actually come to market
and will still have a market.
So one of the things, I'm going to get into AI's role in improving aviation later,
but in that vein, the idea of what to do about sustainability, you mentioned fuels, different fuels, and offsetting environmental impact of air travel.
I've noticed recently they've asked me to pay the money to offset my travel.
They want me to pay for it.
I'm like, huh.
It's like a click here if you want to give $5, whatever.
I was like, I don't want to give you five more dollars.
But Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg released a climate action plan a few years ago with a goal of achieving net zero carbon emissions in aviation
by 2050. It seems rather ambitious on Mayor Pete's part. The FAA put over $90 million in
airports across the U.S. in 2020 to achieve the net zero goal. Airports are getting lovelier,
I have to say. There's been a redo in New York, at LaGuardia, all kinds of airports.
Kansas City's a big one. have to say there's been a redo in New York, at LaGuardia, all kinds of airports. A lot of them.
I'm like, oh, this looks nice now, which needed it for sure. I just as in DCA, it looked a lot better. It still doesn't look great. But America's Airport. America's Airport. Right. Yeah. I was in
the old, I was Terminal 1, which is still feels like 1953. But what do you see to deal with the
sustainability? Because we have to do
that, obviously. Yeah, I mean, the climate crisis is a huge problem. And to be able to figure out a
way to abate the emissions from aviation will be a really big challenge. Because of the sort of
weight issue that I sort of laid out before, you know, carbon emissions from aviation are a really
sort of small slice of the pie. They sort of account for about 3% of all CO2 emissions.
But the way to get around that will be really difficult.
And so it seems like SAF, sustainable aviation fuel, is the near-term way to do that.
By using fuel made of biomass.
I've been on a United Airlines flight, a demo flight that they flew between Chicago and DCA, where essentially half the plane was running on sustainable fuel.
It will sort of take some regulatory behind-the-scenes minutiae to make that happen.
And Virgin Atlantic just did this flight across the Atlantic where they flew a plane on entirely sustainable fuel.
Like corn oil?
Yeah. I mean, that's the way to do it. And spent fuel mass.
I mean, it's a really pretty incredible thing.
It's sort of a hard and esoteric thing to do for TV. It's not super visual, but it is really, really interesting. And so that is a way to sort of do it in the near term. I think electrifying aviation in the long term, that will be tough could be the sort of timeline for that.
Some of these electronic,
electric vertical takeoff
and landing companies,
eVTOL companies,
and they are sort of envision
a big drone essentially
that you would fly in,
sort of also colloquially
called flying cars.
That is a really sort of interesting
and emerging space.
There are a lot of sort of
serial entrepreneurs that have gotten a lot of investment. And we're talking billions of dollars to sort of get time, but the flying. But you would fly a helicopter.
I'm going to fly a helicopter now because I have a goal.
I have a goal to float you.
I've flown the flight simulator for a couple of these eVTOLs.
It's way easier to fly than a helicopter.
They say helicopters like balancing sort of a broomstick on your hand.
One of these eVTOLs, you let your hands off the controls and it will hover automatically,
which is incredible.
Yeah.
Also, it flies you in that case
in a lot of the consumer ones.
So, but does sustainability
is an area they're working on
or it's just like,
oh, we can't figure this out
because gravity.
Well, no, I think sustainability
is a place that they're working on.
And I think that the airlines
know what's on the horizon.
They will get more and more criticized,
just like when business
show up at Davos.
You know, that is not a great look for the business community at large.
And so now it's really focused on what these huge corporations that are airlines will now figure out when it comes to sustainability going forward.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's all Taylor Swift's fault because she flies.
My son has a whole theory about her flying and how she could be more efficient. Alex, of course.
So Pete, if you had mentioned five years ago, if you'd asked people in aviation or analysts to
name two companies that were real innovators or great from a shareholder perspective,
I think almost everyone's list would have included Boeing and Southwest. And both those
stocks have been cut in half the last five years.
Give us your view of who is really well-managed, what airlines are doing a great job, and also
include the manufacturers, including some of the private guys, the General Dynamics, the
Bombardiers, the Dassaults, Dassault, did I say that correctly? The Embraers. Who do you think across the entire
aviation ecosystem? By the way, do as I say, not as I do. The aviation industry, as Warren Buffett
said, if he could go back in time, he'd kill the Wright brothers. It is a terrible place to invest.
The joke is, if you want to make a million dollars in aviation, start out with two million dollars.
Yeah, start a billionaire, right?
You're with a billion, yeah. here's what i think i think that
you know i can't sort of name a lot of names here and i don't want to tell people how to invest but
um there's a lot of interesting talk in the aviation space about sort of shimming uh a wedge
into the boeing airbus domination of the transport category airplane world, which keeps a big opening now, makes a big opening now for someone like Embraer, potentially.
Oh, Embraer.
But Embraer is owned by Boeing now, isn't it?
No, I think it's their own thing.
And so, I mean, but I would have to check on that.
I think that I'm happy you're doing Googling for me.
I thought they took a big investment on them.
I can't remember.
I think something like Embraer could have a really big opening here.
I think when it comes to the airline space, the biggest innovators are sadly the ones who are the biggest legacy corporations.
Delta does a lot of innovation.
United does a lot of innovation.
Delta does probably the most innovation on the customer experience.
United does probably the most innovation on the operational experience.
And I've been sort of behind the scenes and in the belly of the beast to sort of see how they make sure that they sort of move the chess pieces the right way every day.
It's a really pretty incredible thing to see if you can see it in person.
It's amazing.
Just so you know, Boeing and Embraer, a Brazilian aerospace company, proposed a joint venture
in February 2019
to design, build,
and sell commercial airlines.
And the deal,
Boeing agreed to purchase 80%.
But they terminated the deal.
There we go.
Sorry, citing COVID-19.
They were going to invest
$4.2 billion.
There you go.
So you're right, Pete.
They're in arbitration.
As somebody who has
literally been molesting the planet for the last 30 years, I've spent time on every airline.
Oh, wow. That's a vision.
There's a distinction between domestic airlines and foreign carriers.
I mean, the moment I can get off a domestic or a U.S. carrier onto a foreign carrier, especially those out of Southeast Asia and the Gulf. It's just an entirely different world. Is that solely a function of subsidies from the government where they just
have more money to play with? Or why is it there's so many amazing carriers that are outside of the
U.S. when the U.S. tends to be much better with respect to sectors and technology?
Competition. I mean, I think it's just competition. Like the foreign carriers have not had as big of an opening as they've had lately when
it comes to taking routes from U.S. carriers.
And so I think it's, you know, the real question here is whether or not the domestic carriers
can sort of stay on top of that.
And it seems like they want to just sort
of expand, expand, expand, especially when it comes to international air travel. And that is
something that's going to be a huge market and it's something that just continues to explode.
I mean, it's so hard to find a ticket right now just to Europe. I mean, people from the U.S. are
clamoring to travel abroad right now. And so, you know, I think that competition
is really the big bottom line here.
There's more competition to make money in the U.S.,
and there's a different level of competition abroad.
Wouldn't that connote that if there was more competition domestically
that the airlines would be better?
I don't understand.
That's a good point.
I think it's all—custom customers are very motivated by the ticket price.
And by price, yeah.
Fair enough.
Thanks, Pete.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back,
we'll talk with Pete
about the rise of facial recognition in airports.
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Scott, we're back with our special series on the future of travel, and we're talking with CNN aviation and transportation correspondent Pete Muntean about the future of air travel. Let's
talk specifically about airports. And actually, Scott brought up the idea of facial recognition,
biometric technology, specifically facial recognition is becoming more widespread at airports. 70% of global airlines are expected
to use some sort of biometric ID by 2026, and 90% of airports are currently investing in technology.
It's all over the place. That's what I see most of anyway. Delta has started its digital,
Delta digital ID at some airports. It allows pre-check travelers to use facial ID instead
of documents at bag drop and security.
You see more and more of it.
What do you think of,
is this a good thing?
Obviously, they've all got our faces now everywhere we go,
but it's easier than dragging things out.
It speeds things up.
Totally.
Yeah.
I think that,
I talk to passengers about this
and the opinion sort of vacillates.
Like everyone has an iPhone. Everyone uses the facial recognition on their iPhone. So they I think it's become really sort of habitual eyes for a lot of people. But there's would sort of implement if they continue to sort of expand facial recognition, the largest government use of facial recognition ever. And so there is there is definitely some chafing and concern there.
84 some odd airports in the U.S. where you take your ID, put it in the machine,
the machine has a camera on it, it matches your face to the ID, and then you're done.
Whereas the old version would be a human looking at your ID,
then looking at you, making sure those two things match. They say that the level of accuracy is actually better than a human
using the naked eye to match your ID with your actual face.
And with passports, they don't, they just look, they know who I was. I didn't put my passport in.
That's a little different because you opt in when you do global entry.
Right.
So the next thing, so they call that first version where you use your ID and put it in
the machine, they call that one-to-one matching. You're providing the photo and the camera and
the software matches it. There's something else called one to N matching. So it could match your photo that live you coming up
to the camera with a government database of different photos of you. So now we're kind of
getting into this sort of minority report thing. And so they could use something that's already in
the government's database, like a
passport photo or something else. Or they think you're not who they think you are. This feels
racial issues. Yeah. So this gets a little tricky. And so the real question will be the execution.
And so so far, it seems like people are mostly OK with it. I think people just want to get
through security quickly. It's their least favorite part of traveling. It's a government-run operation. So I think people just want to get it done. And you can opt out if you
show up to something like this and there's a sign that says you can leave. Yeah, I think I'll bring
my birth certificate on a piece of paper to you. So do you think we'll get to the point where
airports are entirely automated for travelers from everything? You just go and you don't like
hotels are now, right? You just show
up. Yeah, I guess. But gosh, it seems so far off. I mean, and like Scott said, it's kind of an
industry that can be a little slow to change. I mean, it would have to be, think about the
airports that we've seen that have seen these major changes in their sort of aesthetics and
there's been big rehabs and things like that. And airports
have gotten a lot more modern. Those have been huge, multi-billion dollar projects to make
LaGuardia better, to make JFK better, to make DCA better, to have to really redesign airports.
And one of the big redesign reasons at DCA was to make it so that security was a bit more
centralized rather than every concourse
having its own security, it would just be such a huge lift. The TSA joke internally is if you see
one TSA checkpoint, you've seen one TSA checkpoint. They're all a little bit different.
That's not a funny joke. TSA isn't funny.
And so they have to sort of streamline this thing, and it would be, I think, a long time coming.
Okay. Favorite airports. I'll go first. PBI and Hollywood Burbank.
Your turn.
Where's PBI?
Where's PBI?
West Palm Beach.
Best airport.
You can be dropped off
and be at the gate
within 11 minutes.
Yeah, Burbank
because it's so antiquated
and fantastically old.
It's cute, right?
It's cute.
It's adorable.
Yeah.
You think you're going to run
into Bob Hope.
Yeah.
Yeah, John Wayne Airport.
John Wayne Airport is close.
John Wayne Airport is good.
Yeah. All right, what's yours? What are yours, Pete? Mine is DC Yeah. John Wayne Airport. John Wayne Airport is close. John Wayne Airport is good. Yeah.
All right.
What's yours?
What are yours, Pete?
Mine is DCA, Reagan National Airport.
They are so accommodating to me when I have to show up there to do live shots.
One, so I have a vested interest there.
Oh, that's different.
But also, I mean, I think it's a very—
They have a chili, a Ben's Chili Bowl.
That's good.
They have Ben's Chili Bowl.
It's a very easy airport to navigate.
And I think, you know, you can get through security and at your gate so quickly.
And that's the big thing for me.
My girlfriend loves to prod me for before they redid the Kansas City airport, which was designed way, way pre-9-11.
It was one of those ideas where you drive up to your gate and just walk to it.
It's like a semicircle design.
It's the only time I've ever been paged at the gate.
They held the flight for me.
I like SFO, too. It's gotten better.
Yeah, it's not bad.
The new terminals are really nice. But what's your least favorite one, if you're going to do that?
Yeah, that's the better one.
Gosh, least favorite.
I'll go first. Miami, I win.
Orlando. I'm not a big fan.
Orlando.
Orlando.
Orlando.
Because the security line is always crazy because it's a lot of people who don't travel very often.
They travel one time a year to Disney World. LAX isn't great. Yeah, no. Yeah. I would say of all things, Mumbai.
That was one crazy airport. Mumbai. Yeah. I was like, where am I? What is happening? I couldn't
figure out the lines. And it was just, it was so chaotic. Maybe they've changed. Maybe they've
changed. But US, the worst one. I think LAX. I would say LAX.
What a crazy frigging airport that is.
I didn't know we were going international.
De Gaulle is pretty bad.
Oh, okay.
It's hard to drive around LAX.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's hard to get in and out.
Why isn't the U?
Why is there always a...
Yeah, right.
You're always kind of caught in the airport.
Caught in...
We're six?
Oh, no, I'm in six, not one.
Oh, fuck.
Yeah.
So, anyway, what are some other airport innovations we're going to see or airline that you can do airline to our airport down the pipeline? And what would you like to see? And I think the turbulence technology will continue to advance a lot. And this is something that's really interesting.
You know, for a long time in aviation, the only way for pilots to really avoid turbulence ahead on the route was something called a ride report.
So the previous pilot ahead of you on the route would say, I encountered turbulence here.
You know, it was this type of severity.
This was occasional or heavy or whatever.
They would sort of radio that in to air traffic control.
And then it was only as good as the information you gave it.
And so now there are different technologies that will sort of grab and read through a sensor on an airplane where the turbulence is happening and upload that to the cloud.
And so it sort of makes the ride report for you.
And I think that will be really interesting,
especially as we see more and more of these turbulence incidents
rise with climate change.
With more heat means more turbulence.
Right. So we're going to get that.
So it's really, you know, it is.
It is.
Turbulence is something that's gotten worse than better,
which is, of course.
Yeah. I mean, we see these incidents.
It's the top cause of injuries on commercial airlines for a long time.
What would you like to see in an airport innovation?
I feel like an invisible plane is what I would like.
In an airplane innovation, I think the electrification is a really cool and emerging thing.
What about hydrogen?
I've been invited on one of those, a hydrogen one.
Because I fly on small airplanes.
You know, most of my flights, I fly aerobatics. And so most of my flying is like half an hour to 45 minutes long because it's strenuous and it takes a lot of energy. And so it's perfect for that because I don't need a ton of fuel. I go up and fly and do my thing and come back down and plug it in. And so that would be perfect. And I think to deal with the pilot shortage, it would also be perfect because it really takes the cost of renting an airplane from a couple hundred dollars an hour down to something so de minimis.
So that would be huge.
What about hydrogen? Because, again, I've just been invited on one of those.
It's interesting. I mean, I think there's.
Explosive.
That is kind of an issue. I mean, they would sort of have to deal with that.
I mean, they would sort of have to deal with that.
But I think there are a lot of different factors.
Aviation is a world that is a total different sort of risk set than any other form of transportation. They're always trying to get me in that hydrogen when I'm like, and I kind of want to do it.
I'll tell you what I love is a glider.
I do those in California.
Yeah, I've done some gliding too.
It's pretty amazing.
It's so nice.
It's so nice.
Scott, let's go on a glide together so we can bond a little better.
I'd say there's a greater likelihood I'll be on a helicopter with you.
Yeah, that's true.
Don't you get nauseous?
No, Gladi is so pretty.
It's so quiet and beautiful and no noise, except for the wind.
That's beautiful.
I love it.
You've had all these cool aviation experiences.
Yeah.
In California, below San Francisco, there's a whole gliding area down there that's just beautiful and beautiful. And then you're down near Carmel and everything else. So yeah, I speaking of my best aviation thing, I'm going to tell you my story is when my ex-wife turned 40 or whatever, I rented a helicopter to fly all over the Bay Area.
fly all over the Bay Area. And I got the suggestion from Larry Page, who has his own helicopter pilot.
He was, they all, all the tech people are learning how to fly helicopters. I don't know if you know that because they want to escape to their compounds when there's the apocalypse and they're
going to fly their helicopter. That's why, I swear to God. So I've been in helicopters with lots of
VCs. So I rented this helicopter and we went under the Golden Gate Bridge. This guy had the rights,
there's not many of them, to fly under the Golden Gate Bridge and then up around it. And it was
quite something. I know. It was amazing. Like under and then above it. It was fantastic. But
then we land and I forgot to ask how much it costs. And Larry had told me, he goes, oh, it's
not that bad. And I was like, okay, cool. And I get there. They're like five thousand dollars. I was like, what? Like what? Like and then I forgot he was a billionaire. Like it wasn't. That's my plane story. That's my. So anyhow, last question. How do you think AI will play a role in improving aviation? Obviously, it's the it's the word du jour. But where does it fix with scheduling, with plane management, with crew management? airplanes sort of moving in the right way and to avoid incidents. But I think it could really sort of help out controllers and reduce their workload because they are also facing a giant shortage,
too. The FAA needs 3,000 new controllers every year. More controllers retire. They only net
sometimes in the single digits. So it can be really a huge problem. So I think in that world,
it could sort of siphon off some of the workload and help make that job a lot easier.
Robot.
But, yeah, you don't want to like, you know, I think that it's an industry that really wants to protect jobs.
And these are people who are also the last line of defense.
Pilots are the last line of defense and have saved some of these runway incursions that have been budding at airports across the country and air traffic controllers, too. And so, you know,
it's hard to sort of replace that judgment that comes with experience in those jobs. So
it may happen. I would say aviation may be sort of the last frontier for AI.
All right, Scott, you get the last question.
So we were talking a lot about commercial aviation. I think there's been a lot of
innovation in private aviation, mostly because of income inequality, both with fractional, but TSA isn't an issue. It's just, in my opinion, some of the most dramatic advances in terms of actual planes have been among the private manufacturers.
What are your thoughts on innovation in the private aviation sector,
and who do you look to for innovation? The technology has come such a long way.
And I grew up in airplanes. Both my late parents were pilots, and I traveled with them around the
country, and they had aviation businesses. For just being able to look at weather,
which is something that was so difficult to
do.
Like even in the 90s, it was paper charts and it was we had an airplane, a little single
engine airplane called a Piper Lance.
It had something called a storm scope in it, which showed truly only where lightning strikes
were.
That was the only piece of data you could get.
And now I get so much data on my phone in real time.
I think there is truly an app for that. And I think
the advancement when it comes to getting real-time information that allows pilots to make the best
decisions and avoid risks, that is probably the biggest thing that will sort of make flying,
especially the private flying, but also aviation in general, easier. And so, you know, being able
to just pick up,
there's this whole thing where pilots will have to radio in to get their clearance to be told,
I'm going to go from this point to this point to this point. It's a very cumbersome thing. You
have to read it back word for word. It sort of breeds in the ability to create errors.
To be able to sort of get that sent to you on your phone would really sort of change the world,
I think, for aviation and make things a lot more streamlined. And also for an air travel consumer, a passenger, make the information that
they need to sort of make decisions about delays and cancellations a lot more sort of free-flowing.
So I just got to follow up one question. David Zaslav decides, you know,
I've taken a quarter of a billion dollars of shareholder money in exchange for cutting the stock in half.
I'm going to distribute to employees.
And all of a sudden, Pete has the money to buy a private plane.
Give me your top one or two private planes.
We're not doing this, the poor CNN guy.
I'll tell you my favorite.
What are your favorite private planes?
I fly an airplane called a Super Decathlon, which is a little aerobatic airplane.
It's a two-seat airplane.
I'm not flying to go places.
That's for the airlines to do.
I'm flying for fun, and I would buy an airplane,
either an extra 300 or an airplane called a Game Bird
built in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Oh, so you like the acrobatic stuff.
You do it for fun.
Yeah.
The game.
The joy of flying.
Game Bird.
Good for you.
Wow.
Check it out.
Good for you.
We will not be flying that.
Tara and Scott do not do acrobatics in a plane.
It's just like, that is like literally.
That sounds like the seventh ring of hell.
I know.
I don't like acrobatics.
Do you like acrobatics, Scott?
I don't like acrobatics.
I've been doing it.
Acrobatics.
You know, when they flip it around, they do the flip-a-do, and they're like, oh, look what we're going to do.
You guys can come with me anytime, and I wouldn't make you sick.
Oh, all right.
Well, I did the same.
I won't go on Space Mountain.
I have to say, the Golden Gate Bridge one was cool.
That was kind of a backup.
That does sound pretty amazing.
It was amazing.
Anyway, Pete, this has been a pleasure.
We love planes.
Oh, we do.
Thanks, me too.
We love planes, and we thank you so much.
Pete Muntean, again, on CNN.
You can watch him there covering aviation.
It's an industry everybody is interested in, so we're waiting.
Okay, Scott, that's it for the final part of our series on the future of travel.
I think it was the best one.
Read us out.
Today's show was produced by Lara Naiman, Zoe Marcus, and Taylor Griffin.
Ernie Unertott engineered this episode.
Thanks also to Drew Burrows and Miss Averio.
Nishat Kerouac is Vox Media's executive producer of audio.
Make sure you subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
Thanks for listening to Pivot from New York Magazine and Vox Media.
You can subscribe to the magazine at nymag.com slash pod.
We'll be back next week for another breakdown of all things tech and business.
It's a bird. It's a plane. No, it's a podcast host and a helicopter.
Take cover!