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by Jessie Naor and Preston Holland | Experts in Private and Corporate Aviation
Join Jessie Naor and Preston Holland on The VIP Seat for the latest insights in private aviation, covering business aviation trends, private jet reviews, and more. We break down the biggest stories of the week in corporate aviation, from jet charter trends and Part 135 shenanigans to aviation safety news that the big players hope you'll miss. Expect hot takes, sharp analysis, and real talk with industry insiders, operators, and disruptors. Whether you’re flying private or an industry insider, buckle up and let's take off.
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Aviation attorney Joe LoRusso joins Jessie Naor and Preston Holland to explain the lawsuits following the Greg Biffle aircraft crash, including aircraft LLC liability, pilot qualification issues, insurance coverage questions, operational control, and why litigation often begins long before an NTSB final report is released.The episode also covers responsible crash commentary, underinsurance in private aviation, Flexjet’s win against the IRS over federal excise tax, the GAO’s eVTOL infrastructure report, V2 Jets’ acquisition of Corporate Aviation, and the possible sale of ICE’s Gulfstream G700s.Thank you to AB Jets and RealJet for sponsoring this week’s episode.
Berkshire Hathaway has disclosed a major stake in Delta Air Lines — but with Delta now deeply tied to Wheels Up, what does that mean for private aviation, premium travel, and NetJets?This week on The VIP Seat, Jessie Naor and Preston Holland break down Berkshire’s Delta investment, Delta’s continued commitment to Wheels Up, and the growing connection between airline premium cabins and private jet customers. They also discuss the NTSB’s decision to shut down safety dockets after AI tools were used to reconstruct cockpit voice recorder audio from spectrograms, raising major questions about privacy, accident investigation data, and public access.Plus: the FAA’s new Modern Skies air traffic control modernization dashboard, NASA’s moon base ambitions, seaplane bases as aviation infrastructure, and the debut of Captain Keyboard, where Jessie and Preston rate their meanest internet comments like turbulence.
Private jets under attack in New York?! Not so fast.This week on The VIP Seat, Jessie and Preston break down a viral headline claiming NYC’s new mayor is coming after private aviation and why the reality is a lot more complicated (and a lot more political). From Port Authority power plays to sponsored “journalism,” they separate fact from fear.Plus:The truth behind shocking headlines about pilots and drugs (it’s not what you think)Trump’s White House helipad plans and what it says about aviation in politicsSpirit Airlines chaos: repositioning aircraft, lessor headaches, and what happens nextFAA cutting air traffic controller targets… during a shortage?And in Mile High Madness: sunscreen lobsters, ferry pilots, and aviation internet goldIf you care about business aviation, policy, and the stories shaping the industry, this is the episode you don’t want to miss.Subscribe for weekly aviation insights, industry breakdowns, and unfiltered analysis.Listen on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts.Follow us:Instagram: @thevipseatLinkedIn: The VIP SeatNewsletter: thevipseat.comSponsored by AB Jets: premium charter without the ownership headaches...
From Gogo’s latest ATG whiplash to the world’s first piloted hydrogen‑electric helicopter circuit, this week’s VIP Seat is packed with the stories insiders are actually talking about. In this episode, Jessie Naor and Preston Holland break down the most important—and the strangest—moves in business aviation right now, with their usual mix of data, operator reality, and memes.We start with Gogo’s 5G saga and the surprise six‑month reprieve for legacy ATG users. After years of delays, chip and software issues, and shifting launch timelines, Gogo’s next‑gen network is supposed to be ready for prime time, but a last‑minute software problem has pushed the full conversion again, and the FCC has allowed classic ATG to stay on until November. Jessie and Preston talk about what this means for operators who scheduled downtime, paid for upgrades, and now feel like they’ve been jerked around—plus why Starlink‑equipped fleets like ABJets suddenly look very smart.FlyExclusive has finally turned the adjusted EBITDA corner while still relying on some non‑cash fleet‑modernization add‑backs, and the team digs into what that actually tells you about the business versus the headline “we’re positive now” story. They look at revenue mix shifts away from pure wholesale charter, why uptime and aircraft choice (CJ3+, XLS, Challenger) show up directly in contribution margin, and how moving to more fractional and managed structures is changing the economics.Then it’s over to Wheels Up and its ongoing turnaround. The hosts unpack the latest from Delta‑backed financing, new mezzanine capital, and a fleet reshuffle away from aging Hawker 400XPs and Citation Xs toward Phenom 300s and Challenger 300/350s. They talk about what 10% gross bookings growth really means when you’re still burning cash, why on‑time performance is a meaningless KPI in private aviation, and how the new ability to use Wheels Up funds to book Delta flights inside the app might help chip away at that giant prepaid liability balance.On the OEM side, it’s a very different story. Embraer is battling US tariffs that are squeezing margins even as its backlog remains strong, while Gulfstream posts higher revenue, more deliveries, and a big jump in services income for both Gulfstream and Jet Aviation. Bombardier continues to ride a huge order book and refinance older debt on better terms. The hosts discuss whether OEMs are forgetting what a downturn feels like—pulling back from trade shows, refusing to deal much on price—and what that means for operators who need the OEMs as partners when the cycle turns. If you live in business aviation—operator, broker, OEM, financier, or just a hardcore airplane nerd—this episode gives you a fast but deep scan of everything that matters this week: connectivity drama, earnings quality, real market sentiment, future propulsion, safety data gaps, and the memes that keep us all sane.
Spirit Airlines’ big yellow buses have officially been parked for good, and this week we unpack what its bankruptcy and shutdown really mean for fares, competition, and consumers in key markets like Fort Lauderdale, Newark, and beyond. Jessie and Preston wrestle with the bailout question, government intervention in failed mergers, and whether killing the Frontier and JetBlue deals helped set Spirit up for failure. They also share their own very mixed experiences on Spirit’s “big front seat” and what the loss of an ultra-low-cost carrier does to ticket prices on the majors.From there, the conversation climbs to 43,000 feet and straight into the Wi-Fi wars, where Starlink is rapidly eating Gogo’s lunch in business aviation with significantly higher speeds and growing airline deals. Jessie breaks down the sunset of legacy Gogo ATG 4000/5000 systems, the pricey stopgap C1 box, and why many operators are eyeing next-gen satellite solutions instead of patching old air-to-ground gear. They look at Gogo’s battered share price, the Satcom acquisition, and whether the company can really compete with Starlink’s momentum, or if diversification is now its only path forward.In Mile High Madness, the hosts roast AI-slop LinkedIn “thought leadership,” celebrate honest industry humor, and politely torch a viral clip that garbles 135 operational control and cost-sharing rules into one dangerous sound bite. They dig into why social media teams can quietly damage aviation brands when technical claims go unchecked, and why some compliance-heavy topics simply don’t belong in 30-second skits.Then it’s on to metal and money: the Piaggio Avanti “catfish” is back as the Avanti NX under new Turkish defense-owner Baykar, and Jessie connects the dots between Piaggio’s oddball design, its Hammerhead UAV past, and a likely unmanned, AI-enabled future for the platform. Preston compares the Avanti’s performance and stall-resistant design with workhorse types like the King Air, and asks the real ramp question: is the extra capability worth being seen in aviation’s most polarizing silhouette.On the finance side, Vista’s fresh Moody’s upgrade to B2 and new $525 million unsecured bond signal renewed confidence after a tough 2025, but leverage, integration risk, and a potential IPO still hang over the story. Jessie contrasts Vista’s bond-first growth and disciplined roll-up strategy with Wheels Up’s more chaotic public trajectory, while Preston explains—in plain English—how bond pricing, demand, and cost of capital actually work for fleet-heavy operators. They also hit GMR’s long-awaited IPO push, how the company has refocused around core medical transport and FEMA-style disaster response, and what a $5B-plus valuation says about aero-medical’s place in the broader aviation ecosystem.Finally, the episode closes on safety with a new Airworthiness Directive impacting Challenger 604/605 engines after corrosion and hung-start concerns, and what this means for borescopes, maintenance philosophy, and the industry’s willingness to treat safety data as a shared, non-proprietary resource. Jessie and Preston tie it back to a growing corrosion conversation across business aviation, from inlet mods to pre-buy inspections, and why engine OEMs and operators need a more transparent partnership going forward.If you want to sound smarter walking into the hangar or the office, this is your fast, brutally honest update on the week’s biggest aviation stories.#aviation #aviationnews #businessaviation #privatejets #airlineindustry #SpiritAirlines #Starlink #Gogo #inflightwifi #VistaJet #VistaGlobal #aviationfinance #GMR #Piaggio #Avanti #MileHighMadness #NTSB #FAA #Challenger604 #Challenger605 #bizav
In this episode of The VIP Seat, Jessie Naor and Preston Holland sit down with Barry Ellis, CEO of Hop-A-Jet, for an important and deeply candid conversation following the release of the NTSB final report on the February 2024 Challenger 604 accident in Naples, Florida.Barry reflects on the loss of pilots Ed Murphy and Ian Hoffman, the extraordinary actions of the flight attendant and passengers who survived, and the difficult realities of leading an aviation company through an accident response.The conversation also examines the NTSB’s findings, including corrosion in both engines’ variable geometry systems, near-simultaneous compressor stalls, hung-start troubleshooting, engine maintenance programs, compressor wash intervals, borescope inspections, and what Challenger 604/605/650 operators should be thinking about now.This is not a discussion about blame or litigating responsibility. It is a conversation about lessons learned, operational responsibility, emergency response, OEM communication, and how the industry can work to prevent a tragedy like this from happening again.NTSB Accident Information and Documents: https://data.ntsb.gov/Docket?ProjectID=193769Topics covered include:Remembering Ed Murphy and Ian HoffmanThe flight attendant’s lifesaving actionsWhat the crew did in the final momentsEmergency response planning and family notificationThe NTSB final report and probable causeCF34 engine corrosion and variable guide vane systemsHung starts vs. slow startsOn-condition engine programsCompressor washes and corrosion preventionWhat operators, brokers, and aircraft buyers should know nowSubscribe to The VIP Seat for serious conversations, sharp analysis, and insider perspective on the business aviation industry.Thank you to AB Jets for sponsoring this episode.This episode is based on publicly available information, including the NTSB final report and related public materials, as well as the personal views and experiences of our guest. Nothing in this episode should be construed as a legal conclusion, finding of liability, accusation of wrongdoing, or definitive technical determination beyond the official public record. The VIP Seat, its hosts, producers, and guests do not provide legal, regulatory, maintenance, or safety advice through this content. Any opinions expressed are those of the individual speakers. Viewers should rely on the official NTSB materials and consult appropriate legal, regulatory, maintenance, or safety professionals before making decisions.
This week on The VIP Seat, Jessie and Preston break down Bond’s growing Bombardier order book, fresh Vista IPO chatter, Wheels Up’s latest reverse stock split, and what EBACE’s cancellation says about the state of business aviation events. They also dig into JetNet IQ’s shake-up, the FAA’s smart air traffic control modernization push, and a Mile High Madness segment on cheap old jets and social-media storytelling in private aviation.
In this episode of The VIP Seat, Avfuel president C.R. Sincock pulls back the curtain on how jet fuel really moves from wellhead to wing, why pipeline access and storage are the true competitive moats, and how a family-owned company scaled into a multi‑billion‑dollar “downstream aviation energy” powerhouse without selling out to private equity. We dig into the Strait of Hormuz crisis, war premiums, airline hedging, and what sustained volatility means for FBO margins, charter rates, and operators trying to budget fuel in 2026 and beyond. C.R. also shares the Avfuel origin story, the generational handoff from his father Craig, and why culture, reliability, and credit support matter more than a two‑cent spread when the market breaks.
Join Jessie Naor and Preston Holland on The VIP Seat for the latest insights in private aviation, covering business aviation trends, private jet reviews, and more. We break down the biggest stories of the week in corporate aviation, from jet charter trends and Part 135 shenanigans to aviation safety news that the big players hope you'll miss. Expect hot takes, sharp analysis, and real talk with industry insiders, operators, and disruptors. Whether you’re flying private or an industry insider, buckle up and let's take off.
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