Ryanair has confirmed that several overnight flights on December 25 quietly turned into airborne Santa watch operations. According to the airline, passengers flying during the early morning hours spent most of the flight staring out the window, convinced they might catch Santa Claus mid-delivery. Cabin crews reported unusually low screen usage, minimal sleeping, and a suspicious number of adults pressing their faces against airplane windows with childlike optimism and zero shame.
The situation escalated once passengers realized window seats had become premium holiday assets. Internal data revealed that travelers who paid for window seats were suddenly treated like celebrities. The market inflated fast, with some passengers from middle and aisle seats offering up to 300% above the original seat price just to borrow a few minutes of uninterrupted Santa spotting. Ryanair staff described the cabin atmosphere as “festive but economically aggressive.”
The frenzy peaked when one passenger reportedly mistook a shooting star for Santa’s sleigh. Witnesses say the moment triggered audible gasps, frantic pointing, and immediate seat negotiations. Several aisle passengers attempted last minute upgrades using snacks, drinks, and emotional storytelling as currency. Flight attendants confirmed at least one whispered sentence: “I just need the window until we pass that cloud.”
Ryanair concluded that no confirmed sightings of Santa occurred, but morale was unusually high for a holiday flight. The airline noted that passengers appeared happier, more united, and briefly forgot about legroom. Officials are now considering labeling certain window seats as “seasonal optimism zones” during future Christmas flights.
To everyone who believed, negotiated, and stared into the night sky with hope, this story honors your commitment to holiday magic at cruising altitude.
*This article is a work of satire. No interviews were conducted. No statements were requested. No legal teams were contacted, yet. The Roast Times publishes fictional stories inspired by real cultural obsessions, brands, and behaviors. We turn everyday fixations into certified editorial pieces, because some obsessions deserve to be documented.
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