Overweight Tourist Removed from Plane for Insisting on Aisle Seat

Overweight Tourist Removed from Plane for Insisting on Aisle Seat

This is the moment an overweight tourist was dragged out of a plane after he allegedly demanded an emergency aisle seat for his bigger frame.

The unidentified traveler, spotted in a video wearing an orange Garfield shirt, reportedly grumbled about insufficient space in his window seat on a Thai Lion Air flight departing from Bangkok on Wednesday.

He asked to be moved to the emergency exit seat, which offered more leg space, but allegedly became irate when flight attendants denied his request.

The man鈥檚 outburst was said to have delayed the flight by around an hour before police arrived to drag him off the Boeing 737 aircraft.

Footage shows officers yanking the stubborn passenger off his seat. He then lay down and blocked the aisle in protest.

Cops then resorted to carrying the man by his arms and legs to remove him from the aircraft.

Furious passengers are heard screaming at him to 鈥榞et out of the way鈥 as airport police haul him off the jet.

One British woman is heard calling the man 鈥榝***ing selfish鈥, as cops drag him down the aisle floor.

鈥榃hen you said apologise for the first thing I said, don鈥檛 forget that,鈥 another woman says.

The flight eventually took off from the Don Mueang International Airport around an hour later.

The person who filmed the video said: 鈥楢t first, I thought we couldn鈥檛 take off because the man had fallen ill.

It turned out he just thought the economy seat was too crowded and insisted on moving to the emergency exit.

鈥楾he flight attendants had to call the police because he refused to cooperate.鈥

MailOnline has approached Thai Lion Air for comment.

The incident comes amid recent conversations over whether airlines should adopt weight-based pricing, charging passengers based on their weight to reduce fuel consumption and emissions.

While Samoa Air鈥檚 2013 鈥榝at tax鈥 failed to gain traction, Finnair recently conducted a three-month voluntary data collection initiative, gathering passengers鈥 weight along with their carry-on luggage.

This anonymous data 鈥 including age, gender and travel class 鈥 will be used to refine aircraft balance and loading calculations from 2025 to 2030.

A separate study of 1,012 U.S. adults examined the public鈥檚 reaction to three pricing models: the current system (a standard fare with a luggage limit), a 鈥榳eight threshold鈥 model (extra charges for passengers over 160 pounds) and a 鈥榖ody weight鈥 model (pricing based on individual weight).

Lighter passengers favored weight-based fees, while heavier passengers preferred the current system 鈥 though nearly half of the heavier respondents were open to change.

Support for weight-based pricing was higher among younger travelers, frequent flyers and wealthier individuals.

Meanwhile, American plus-size advocate Jaelynn Chaney has gone the opposite direction and pushed for airline accommodations for larger passengers 鈥 even suggesting free extra seats.

But critics on social media have hit back at Chaney and said that because they have to pay when their suitcase is overweight, she should therefore have to shell out more money for extra room on flights.

But she was seemingly offended by this comment and said: 鈥楽o now my body is being compared to luggage? Charging by weight is fat phobic and dehumanising. I鈥檓 not a suitcase.

鈥楶aying extra for luggage is a different issue entirely. Let鈥檚 talk about fair, equal treatment for all passengers.鈥

Others have told Chaney that she should upgrade to first class on planes but she argued the focus should be on 鈥榝ixing the system, not the people鈥.

The content creator added: 鈥楩irst class is a luxury and guess what? First class isn鈥檛 big enough for some fat bodies.

鈥楾he cost is way out of reach for most people and upgrading doesn鈥檛 solve the fundamental issue of under-sized seats for fat people in economy. Fix the system, not the people.鈥

The incident on the plane also comes days after an entitled passenger was caught having a drunk meltdown after she was forced to 鈥榮it next to a f***ing fat lady鈥 on a cross-country flight.

The 32-year-old repeatedly pulled another female passenger鈥檚 hair, spat in her face and kicked her on a Southwest Airlines plane at LaGuardia Airport in New York en route to Kansas City earlier this month.

Several clips also showed the woman screaming at the unidentified passenger over her weight and clothing.

The 鈥榠ntoxicated passenger鈥 who donned long black hair, a red baseball hat and an all-black outfit, appeared to get verbally confrontational with the other woman just moments before things turned physical.

She then gripped the other woman鈥檚 hair and screamed: 鈥楽hut the f*** up, don鈥檛 f***ing touch me!鈥

Several people then stepped in, including two Southwest employees and another passenger, seemingly trying to de-escalate the situation.

A female employee then called another staff member on the phone and repeatedly asked the woman to let go of the other passenger鈥檚 hair, but she refused to and flashed a cunning smile.

鈥業鈥檓 not even touching her hair b****,鈥 the unhinged passenger replied while she hung onto the woman鈥檚 hair and grinned.

A traveler who recorded the intense scene told Daily Mail the woman was so aggressive she even 鈥榢nocked the glasses off the southwest employee.鈥

鈥榃hen she first started saying stuff I called out 鈥渨hy don鈥檛 you be nice?鈥 She turned around and called me ugly a few times and that I could never get a boyfriend or have sex. I looked at her and said I鈥檝e been married for almost 20 years lady,鈥 the passenger recalled.

After asking other staff to notify police of the incident, she shouted: 鈥911!鈥 with her arms held behind her back.

Still holding the woman鈥檚 hair, she yelled: 鈥榊eah, I鈥檓 sorry! I didn鈥檛 want to sit next to a f**ing fat lady.鈥

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