Arab News

Flying in the face of US electronic­s ban, Mideast airline ads get funny

Carriers such as Emirates and Royal Jordanian Airlines have hit back at the latest passenger restrictio­ns with some amusing adverts

- ARAB NEWS

On Tuesday, the US government stated that passengers on nonstop, US-bound flights from a handful of Middle Eastern and North African countries would have to pack any electronic devices other than cellphones in their checked baggage, leaving many tablet and laptop users at a loss.

Airlines flying directly to the US from 10 airports in eight countries have been affected by the ban, including Emirates and Royal Jordanian Airlines.

Although all airlines complied with the measures, they soon took to social media to respond in a spectacula­r fashion, poking fun at the ban in a flurry of funny adverts.

Within hours of the ban coming into effect, Dubai-based Emirates released a cheeky clip on its social media platforms.

“Who needs laptops and tablets anyway?” the advert reads, before cutting to a shot of Hollywood star Jennifer Anniston playing video games on the in-flight entertainm­ent system.

The clip of Anniston is not new, having aired in an earlier campaign in October 2016, but the repackaged commercial is.

The advert goes on to hype the airline’s 2,500-plus channels of entertainm­ent and ends with an image of an Emirates plane flying high, with the caption “let us entertain you.”

Abu Dhabi’s Etihad Airways chose to take a direct jokey jab at US President Donald Trump himself, with an advert captioned “Make Flying Great Again,” a reference to Trump’s campaign tagline “Make America Great Again.”

The airline pushes its various services, such as an in-flight “nanny” to take care of children and 3,000 channels of entertainm­ent.

Not one to be left out, Saudi Arabian Airlines — also known as Saudia — tweeted out an image inviting prospectiv­e passengers to “take a break with 1,500 hours of entertainm­ent.” The airline also encouraged flyers to bring their own USB flash drives, which they can plug in to watch personal entertainm­ent.

Morocco’s Royal Air Maroc played on the British government’s iconic World War II advice to “keep calm and carry on” and urged passengers to sit back, relax and enjoy a movie. The advert also asks: “Who really needs laptops and tablets?”

Despite the advertisin­g field day, no airline made a more pointed set of remarks than Royal Jordanian Airlines, the flag carrier of Jordan.

Joke-by-joke, Royal Jordanian released via its social media platforms a slew of adverts and posts that make light of the ban. The company kicked it all off with a satirical poem.

“Every week a new ban, travel to the US since you can, we are now poets because of you son, no one can ruin our in-flight fun, we have good tips for everyone,” the poem read.

It then took things up a notch with a

The Middle East’s largest airlines have played their trump card, turning the recent US electronic­s ban into viral marketing ploys that fly in the face of adversity.

12-point plan for what to do on a 12-hour flight with no laptop or tablet. The amusing advice includes such words of wisdom as “appreciate the miracle of flight” or “say hello to the person next to you.”

Not your cup of tea? Well, the airline also suggests you “spend an hour deciding what to watch,” or “engage in primitive dialogue from the preInterne­t era” to pass the time.

Never one to quietly accept a ban, this is not Royal Jordanian’s first comedic response to US travel measures. On Jan. 27, President Trump issued an order restrictin­g travel from seven Muslim-majority countries in a ban that was soon overturned by the US court system.

Proving that comedy is all about timing, Royal Jordanian stepped into the furor and tweeted an image in which the word “ban” had been scribbled out and amended to read “Bon Voyage.”

“Fly to the US with RJ now that you’re allowed to,” the slickly-timed Feb. 5 advert read.

As for the latest ban on large electronic devices, observers point to the threat of internatio­nal terrorism as a major factor behind the measure.

A US government source told Reuters last week that while the latest restrictio­ns arose from multiple reports of security threats, some recent intelligen­ce had arrived that prompted the current alert.

US authoritie­s believe there is a threat from plots similar to an incident last year in Somalia, where a bomb hidden in a laptop blew a hole in the side of a plane but failed to down it, another source told Reuters.

The UK soon followed suit and placed similar curbs on electronic items on flights from six countries in the Middle East, in a move that was implemente­d on March 25.

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