The global aviation industry, in a move that can only be described as a collective suicide pact with a side of pretzels, has announced a new generation of 20-hour flights. Because evidently, the seven hours you already spend in a metal tube at 35,000 feet, breathing recycled farts and eating something that claims to be chicken, just wasn't enough. Now you can double that misery, and they've got the gall to call it 'innovation'.
British aviation safety regulators, in a rare display of doing something other than looking stern in high-visibility vests, have set the global bar for these marathon flights. The bar, presumably, is made of pure bureaucratic absurdity and is set at a height that will guarantee maximum discomfort for all involved. They've mandated new rules for these 'ultra-long-haul' flights, including 'enhanced crew rest facilities' which we can only assume means a slightly larger cupboard with a soiled mattress and a disturbing poster of the safety card.
But let's talk about the real story here. The airlines, those bastions of customer service and common sense, have decided that the best way to handle a 20-hour flight is to treat passengers like laboratory rats in a study of human endurance. They've promised 'improved cabin pressure' and 'new lighting systems' to combat jet lag. Because nothing says 'we care about your well-being' like a corporation telling you that they've solved a problem they created in the first place.
Of course, the real question is what happens when you've been on a plane for 20 hours. You will have watched every film twice. You will have eaten three meals, all of which taste faintly of plastic and regret. You will have had a conversation with the person next to you that started with 'where are you off to?' and ended with you knowing their entire life story and wishing you didn't. You will have developed a deep, spiritual understanding of the emergency exit door. You will have contemplated the sweet release of opening it mid-flight.
But fear not, dear reader, because the British regulators have your back. They've insisted on 'medical equipment to deal with potential health emergencies'. So, if your deep vein thrombosis finally gives you a thrombosis that is deep, they've got a defibrillator and a first aider who last used their skills to treat a paper cut. Reassuring.
The airlines themselves are painting this as a glorious new frontier. 'Connecting the world,' they cry, as if the world wasn't already connected by a network of flights that take a reasonable amount of time. This is not about connection. This is about cost-cutting. This is about packing more people into a tin can and flying them over the North Pole because it's marginally cheaper. This is about treating passengers as cargo, and cargo as a inconvenience.
And so, as you buckle up for your next 20-hour flight, remember that you are part of a brave new world. A world where the journey is not the destination, but a trial. A world where the in-flight meal comes with a side of existential dread. A world where the safety briefing concludes with 'in the event of a depressurisation, a mask will drop down. Please affix it to your face, and then proceed to scream silently for the next 18 hours.'
Welcome to the future of flight. It's long, boring, and aerated with recycled despair.








