The hits just keep on coming 😱
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Southwest Airlines makes passenger change shirt
01:39 PM CDT on Friday, October 5, 2007
Associated Press
Also Online
Blog: See the shirt that caused the latest flap
Southwest apologizes for fashion fracas
Woman says Southwest made her cover up
TAMPA, Fla. — It's happened again.
Dallas-based Southwest Airlines says it plans to apologize to a Florida passenger after a Southwest employee told him to change out of a sexually suggestive T-shirt—or risk getting thrown off the plane.
The incident happened Sunday in Columbus, Ohio. Joe Winiecki of Largo, Fla. said he was sitting in the last row of a Columbus-to-Tampa flight when a Southwest employee told him he had to ditch his T-shirt, turn it inside out, or leave.
The shirt, which was purchased in the Virgin Islands, uses sexual double entendre to promote a fictional fishing tackle shop.
Winiecki said he argued that the airline was infringing his free speech right, but he changed rather than risk getting bumped from the flight and missing a day of work.
Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz said the airline's employee made a mistake.
The incident comes after Southwest created a public uproar by telling a woman on a flight in July that her outfit was too revealing for her to fly.
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Southwest Airlines makes passenger change shirt
01:39 PM CDT on Friday, October 5, 2007
Associated Press
Also Online
Blog: See the shirt that caused the latest flap
Southwest apologizes for fashion fracas
Woman says Southwest made her cover up
TAMPA, Fla. — It's happened again.
Dallas-based Southwest Airlines says it plans to apologize to a Florida passenger after a Southwest employee told him to change out of a sexually suggestive T-shirt—or risk getting thrown off the plane.
The incident happened Sunday in Columbus, Ohio. Joe Winiecki of Largo, Fla. said he was sitting in the last row of a Columbus-to-Tampa flight when a Southwest employee told him he had to ditch his T-shirt, turn it inside out, or leave.
The shirt, which was purchased in the Virgin Islands, uses sexual double entendre to promote a fictional fishing tackle shop.
Winiecki said he argued that the airline was infringing his free speech right, but he changed rather than risk getting bumped from the flight and missing a day of work.
Southwest spokesman Chris Mainz said the airline's employee made a mistake.
The incident comes after Southwest created a public uproar by telling a woman on a flight in July that her outfit was too revealing for her to fly.
I'm starting to think SWA should have held it's ground on the first case. Now we get to see all the crazies with a t-shirt or halter top try to get their 15 minutes of fame by getting kicked off SWA.