A scene that occurred earlier this week at Miami International Airport (MIA) is going viral after two OnlyFans creators were removed from an
American Airlines flight when they allegedly sat in first-class seats that were not assigned to them. Later reports indicated that the pair refused to move from these seats that did not belong to them. Videos online have shown officers escorting the pair off the jet in handcuffs.
One of the creators even elected to do a split in the aisle as passengers looked on. Reports have said that the situation escalated far beyond a simple seating dispute, with authorities citing that the creators were intoxicated and that they refused to comply with multiple directions. Clips of the incident have continued to spread across social media, and the episode is drawing fresh attention to how airlines may choose to handle disruptive passengers.
Two Unruly Creators Cause Widespread Havoc
According to reports from the New York Post, this incident unfolded at Miami International on the morning of January 9, when Sania Blanchard and Jordan Danne Lantry, both content creators in their 30s, boarded an American Airlines flight and took first-class seats that they were not assigned to. In a video shared online, an airline representative asks for boarding passes, and one woman replies that they did not have them, all while being visibly intoxicated.
After multiple repeated requests for them to move, authorities were called to the aircraft, and the pair were escorted off the jet in handcuffs. Footage of the incident shows Lantry dropping into a split in the aisle during the removal process, creating even more of a scene. Reporting says that both women were charged with misdemeanor trespassing after a warning, and they were taken in for booking. Afterward, the pair posted about the arrest on social media and shared additional clips from the airport. Reports also say that they returned the next day and boarded another flight.
Airlines Don’t Negotiate With Drunk Passengers
Even in the event that some kind of seat misallocation sparked this disagreement, airlines have grown to treat refusal to follow instructions as a clear safety issue, not some kind of customer-service detail that can be debated. American Airlines’ conditions of carriage explicitly allow the airline to deny boarding or remove customers who appear to be intoxicated. This will further occur if they refuse to obey crew instructions or otherwise pose a risk to safety or order.
Separately, the FAA has noted that regulations prohibit airlines from allowing intoxicated passengers to board and flag noncompliance with crew directions, which is a common driver of unruly passenger cases. In practice, once a confrontation starts onboard an aircraft, crews tend to escalate the situation by stopping the clock.
With textbook precision, airlines will tend to call for law enforcement, get the intoxicated person off board, and then reset the cabin before departure. This is almost always the case when incidents occur on the ground, where removal is faster and safer than letting a conflict of any kind roll into the air. For passengers, the moment that a dispute turns into any form of resistance, they can expect to be quickly and efficiently removed from the jet.
American Eagle Flight Attendant Attacked By Unruly Passenger Who Swallowed Rosary Beads
The incident took place on a Savannah-Miami flight.
A Spectacle Meant To Generate Online Buzz
What made this incident so high-profile is not just the alleged first-class seat grab but also the surrounding performance. Videos show the removal itself, including a split in the aisle, and other posts on social media that framed the arrest as the punchline of some kind of joke.
Reports highlighted the pair sharing mugshots on social media and pushing clips of them leaving the terminal, trying to capture even more attention from the incident. This dynamic makes it difficult for airlines to manage these kinds of situations, as enforcement of basic rules creates an opportunity for viral content creation.
Social media captures the most shareable moments, which rarely capture the full context of an interaction between onboard crew and unruly passengers. American Airlines is well aware that every cabin dispute has a camera, an audience, and a creator-economy incentive behind it.








