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Flying Habits Driving Travellers Mad In 2026

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Air travel brings out the best and worst in people. As we head into summer and planes become fuller, baggage charges continue to rise and passengers spend time in crowded airports, frustrations are stronger than ever. In a world of social media and online chats, a whole new language has been created to describe the passengers they dread sitting next to most because of their flying habits. With ‘gate lice’ and the ‘barefoot brigade’ taking to the skies, recent surveys show that many of us are running out of patience.

Gate Lice, those who queue way before being called

Perhaps the most famous modern travel insult is “gate lice”, the name given to passengers who crowd around boarding gates long before their flight has been called. The term has become so widespread that some airlines have even introduced technology designed to stop passengers waiting to board before their designated time. The sight of dozens of people standing around the gate while boarding hasn’t even started, is enough to raise blood pressure levels in some people before the holiday has begun.

Aisle Lice, the travel habit so many people hate

The phrase exploded online in 2025 and refers to passengers who leap out of their seats the moment the aircraft lands, crowding the aisle despite having nowhere to go for some time.  One Reddit user complained – “I can’t tell you how uncomfortable it is to have someone’s rear end standing beside my face while waiting to deplane.”, with another adding, “I’ve been on planes where they announce there are passengers with tight connections, and idiots still crowd the aisles.”

Main Character Syndrome, trying to get the best video to share with your followers

Social media’s favourite phrase has also found its way onto aircraft. “Main character syndrome” describes passengers who act as though the entire plane revolves around them. This includes everything from filming TikTok videos and making loud video calls to ignoring headphones and conducting conversations at full volume. Lots of people view this behaviour as the decline of basic travel etiquette.

The Airport DJ that nobody wants to hear

Rubbings shoulders with main character syndrome is the rise of the “airport DJ”, passengers who insist on sharing their entertainment choices with everyone else. Videos, films, games or voice notes played through phone speakers. Surveys consistently rank noise pollution as one of the most irritating aspects of modern travel.

The classic seat recliner

The argument over reclining seats has been around for years and shows no signs of ending. Suddenly reclining your seat without warning remains one of the biggest in-flight irritations, with more than half of respondents saying it ruins their flying experience. The phrase “recline assassin” has become popular online to describe passengers who aggressively throw their seats backwards without politely asking first.

Seat kickers, the original flight villains

Long before social media came long and invented new names for annoying passengers, there were seat kickers. Despite all the new travel trends and irritations, repeated kicking, pushing or grabbing of the seat in front is still one of the most universally disliked behaviours on an aircraft. Parents often receive criticism when children are allowed to continue kicking seats throughout long flights.

Seat Squatters hoping no one notices

Another growing frustration involves “seat squatters”, passengers who occupy seats they haven’t paid for and hope the rightful owner either doesn’t notice or doesn’t challenge them. Stories about passengers helping themselves to exit rows, window seats and even premium cabins regularly go viral online. This also links to annoyances where families who wish to sit together, that haven’t paid for the correct seats expect other people to move.

The Overhead Bin Bandits

As airlines charge more for checked luggage,  and only taking hand luggage on board has increased, competition for overhead locker space has become fierce. “Overhead bin bandits” are passengers who use multiple compartments, store bags several rows away from their seats or spend several minutes reorganising their belongings while everyone else waits behind them. Recent surveys found that delays caused by hand luggage are among passengers’ biggest frustrations.

Carousel Campers or Baggage Lice

The lice spreads to arrivals where the irritation doesn’t stop once the plane lands. “Carousel campers”, also known by some travellers as “baggage lice” are the people who stand directly against the luggage carousel in groups, preventing everyone else from seeing or retrieving their bags. As one Reddit user observed “If everyone could just stand three feet away from the carousel, everything would be a breeze.” with another joking “These people HAVE to be the first person to wait for their bag at the carousels!”

The Barefoot Brigade

Few travel habits divide opinion more than taking shoes off during a flight. Some passengers see it as a comfort issue, others believe walking barefoot around aircraft cabins or putting feet on seats crosses a major line. Complaints about poor hygiene are a regular feature on travel forums and passenger surveys.

The Yappers, when all you want is a moment of peace

Another phrase gaining traction on Reddit is “the yapper”, the passenger who talks continuously throughout the flight, regardless of whether anyone wants to listen. As one flyer wrote after a long-haul flight. “Everyone had assumed he was her dad or with her. Nope, just an unwilling audience and enabler to a Yapper.”

Why does flying etiquette feel worse than ever?

Perhaps the biggest reason these behaviours cause such strong reactions is because modern air travel has become more stressful for everyone. Planes are fuller, seats are tighter, baggage costs have increased and passengers are spending longer navigating airports than ever before. This means even minor acts of selfishness can feel much more irritating than they might have done a decade ago.

In 2026, an entire vocabulary has been developed to describe the people they least want to be travelling alongside them, and that dictionary seems to be growing. What would you add to your list?

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Fatboy Slim Sends Mallorca Into A Frenzy

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The king of big beat proved exactly why he remains one of the world’s most celebrated DJs as Fatboy Slim delivered an electrifying performance at Es Jardí in Calvià, transforming a warm Mallorcan night on Friday July 3 into one giant open-air dancefloor.

From the moment Norman Cook stepped behind the decks, thousands of fans erupted, with the iconic British DJ unleashing hit after hit from a career spanning more than four decades. It was a celebration of dance music at its finest, as Mallorca turned out in force to praise him (as they should.)

A soundtrack of dance music classics

The crowd barely had a moment to catch its breath as Fatboy Slim rolled through an arsenal of timeless anthems. “The Rockafeller Skank” immediately ignited the audience, while favourites including “Praise You”, “Right Here, Right Now” and “Weapon of Choice” prompted thousands of voices to sing every word back to the stage.

True to form, Cook blended his biggest hits with inventive mash-ups and remixes, seamlessly weaving classic tracks into modern dance beats. One standout moment came during a remix incorporating an Elton John classic, accompanied by spectacular visuals that lit up the huge LED screens and perfectly complemented the music.

The production matched the performance throughout, with vibrant graphics, dazzling lighting and immersive visuals adding another dimension to an already unforgettable evening.

An electric atmosphere under the stars

There was a festival buzz from the moment gates opened, but as darkness fell the energy reached another level. Fans of all ages packed the venue, dancing from the opening beats until the final track.

Fatboy Slim has always had a unique ability to unite audiences, and that spirit was on full display. Every iconic drop was greeted with deafening cheers, creating the kind of communal atmosphere that has become synonymous with his live shows.

One of dance music’s greatest showmen

Born Norman Cook in Surrey, England, Fatboy Slim became one of the defining figures of the 1990s big beat movement. His groundbreaking albums, including You’ve Come a Long Way, Baby, helped bring dance music into the mainstream, earning him a Grammy Awards, multiple Brit Awards and worldwide acclaim. Even after more than 40 years behind the decks, he continues to headline major festivals across the globe while reinventing his live performances.

Es Jardí continues to grow

The concert also showcased why Es Jardí has become one of Mallorca’s standout summer music destinations. Set within the former Mallorca Live venue in Calvià, the boutique open-air concert series combines international headline acts with Mediterranean surroundings, food, culture and an increasingly impressive production. This year’s edition introduced a redesigned main stage with new LED screens, alongside expanded cultural and hospitality spaces, making the experience bigger than ever.

If Fatboy Slim’s opening night is anything to go by, Es Jardí’s 2026 season is set to be one of its most memorable yet.

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188 People Evacuated As Forest Fire Strikes Grazalema

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Grazalema area blaze out of control. Credit: EMA infoca X

Evacuation numbers were raised to 188 on Monday night from a forest fire near Grazalema, a village in Cadiz province. The start of the blaze began shortly after 1pm at El Alamillo in the Sierra de Grazalema mountain area, near Ronda. Evacuations affected second homes in the Gadiovar area and roughly a dozen hotels plus rural lodges nearby.

Smoke and ash spread quickly to the nearby village of Zahara de la Sierra and appeared visible from Algodonales and from Ronda.

Rapid spread forces road closures

Flames advanced into Las Veguetas and crossed over the main road to Ronda. Closures hit that road and the Grazalema-Zahara link via Ribera del Gaidovar, where more evacuations continued. Slopes and valleys in the park helped the fire move faster than expected.

Extensive resources tackle blaze

Andalucia’s emergency agency activated INFOCA operational ‘situation one’ (the highest alert) over risks to people and property. An advanced command post was opened in Grazalema’s main square, previously used in the dramatic February floods.

Over 150 ground workers as well as 15 aircraft were sent to tackle the fire. Focus was kept on the right flank, advancing to Ribera del Gaidovar with a pending possible southerly wind change that would increase intensity.

Initial evacuation figures break down

Numbers included 60 guests at the Hotel Fuerte in Grazalema, 40 from nearby homes and nine from La Vegueta. Even more residents were forced to leave Ribera del Gaidovar later. Flames had not reached the hotel or houses so far, though rural spots with animals were seriously exposed.

Temporary housing options made available

Staff opened El Olivar pavilion for those displaced. Only one family used it at first while most went to second family homes in the village. Zahara de la Sierra prepared its town hall function room for people affected by road cuts and trapped in the area.

Leaders stress precautionary approach

Vice President Antonio Sanz of the Junta de Andalucia said that this was a second major challenge for Grazalema after the floods. He issued a message calling for calm, and confirming resources focused on saving inhabited areas. Elevated temperatures and the Levante wind kept influencing the fire in the rugged sierra terrain. Officials warned evacuation totals could rise further.

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Giant Heat ‘flames’ Found Beneath The Mediterranean

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Scientists say giant invisible heat plumes are rising deep beneath the Mediterranean Sea. Credit : hyotographics, Shutterstock

For millions of people, the Mediterranean means beach holidays, turquoise water and lazy afternoons by the sea. Yet far below the yachts, swimmers and sunseekers, something remarkable has been happening unnoticed for thousands of years.

Scientists have discovered giant heat ‘flames’ rising from the Mediterranean seabed, with some reaching around 100 metres high. It sounds like the start of a disaster movie, but the reality is far less dramatic and far more fascinating.

These aren’t flames in the usual sense. There’s no fire, no lava and no underwater volcano erupting beneath holiday hotspots. Instead, they’re slow-moving columns of slightly warmer seawater, gently rising from the seabed so gradually that nobody at the surface could ever see or feel them.

The discovery comes after researchers spent three years watching one of the deepest parts of the western Mediterranean using an enormous network of underwater sensors. For the first time, they were able to create detailed three-dimensional images showing how these hidden plumes form, drift upwards and disappear back into the surrounding water.

Hidden nearly 2.5 kilometres below the Mediterranean

To find these invisible structures, scientists had to go where almost nobody else can.

The research team placed nearly 3,000 ultra-sensitive temperature sensors on the seabed around 2,500 metres below the surface. Spread across 45 mooring lines, the instruments continuously recorded tiny temperature changes over a three-year period, allowing researchers to watch the deep sea in unprecedented detail.

What they found surprised them.

Tiny amounts of heat escaping naturally through the Earth’s crust warm the water sitting directly above the seabed. Because warmer water is slightly lighter than colder water, it slowly rises, creating tall columns that resemble flickering flames when turned into computer visualisations.

Some of these plumes stretched around 100 metres above the seabed, yet the temperature difference between the warmer water and its surroundings was astonishingly small, often measuring just thousandths or even ten-thousandths of a degree Celsius.

That’s why they’ve remained hidden for so long. Without highly specialised equipment, they simply can’t be detected.

They’re invisible, harmless and happening all the time

The word ‘flames may sound alarming, but it’s really just a way of describing their shape.

Nothing is burning beneath the Mediterranean, and there is absolutely no risk to swimmers, divers or coastal communities. The plumes are made entirely of seawater and form almost two and a half kilometres below the surface.

By the time any of that gentle warming mixes into the surrounding ocean, the temperature difference has effectively disappeared.

The researchers also noticed something else. These geothermal plumes weren’t always acting alone.

Around 40 per cent of the time, warmer water arriving from elsewhere in the Mediterranean swept across the seabed, creating even stronger mixing than the geothermal heat itself. In the computer reconstructions, these moving masses looked more like drifting clouds than rising flames, constantly reshaping the deep-water landscape.

Until now, scientists could only study these kinds of movements in limited detail. The vast sensor network allowed them to watch the entire process unfold in three dimensions, revealing a hidden world that had never been seen like this before.

Why this hidden world matters

You might wonder why anyone should care about tiny temperature changes taking place so deep underwater.

The answer lies in the way the ocean stays alive.

The deep sea isn’t a still, silent place. Even without waves or sunlight, water is constantly moving, carrying oxygen, nutrients and organic material that help sustain marine life. The newly observed heat plumes are part of that natural mixing process.

The study suggests that these slow, invisible movements work alongside underwater currents and internal waves to keep deep Mediterranean waters circulating. Without that constant mixing, life on the seabed would struggle to access the oxygen and nutrients it depends on.

Perhaps the most remarkable part of the discovery is how ordinary it really is.

These giant heat plumes are not a new phenomenon. They’ve almost certainly been rising from the Mediterranean floor for thousands of years, completely unnoticed by the millions of people enjoying the sea above them.

Only now, thanks to one of the largest deep-sea monitoring projects ever carried out, have scientists finally been able to watch this hidden underwater world in action, revealing that one of Europe’s most familiar seas still holds spectacular secrets beneath its surface.

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