Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

We’ll take it: a TikToker rallies pledges to buy Spirit Airlines after its abrupt weekend collapse

read original get Spirit Airlines Travel Bag → more articles
Why This Matters

The viral TikTok campaign highlighting Spirit Airlines' sudden shutdown underscores the power of social media to mobilize public sentiment and spark discussions about airline ownership and consumer influence. While the pledges are non-binding and symbolic, the response reveals a growing desire among consumers for more accountability and community-driven solutions in the airline industry.

Key Takeaways

In Brief

When Spirit Airlines shut down overnight Saturday — canceling all flights, letting go of 17,000 employees, and telling ticketholders to just not come to the airport — people were flabbergasted but also bereft. For all its indignities, Spirit was cheap. Then one of them had an idea.

Hunter Peterson, a voice actor with frequent flyer grievances, posted a TikTok asking: what if 20% of American adults chipped in the price of a Spirit fare and just . . . bought it? He called it “Spirit 2.0: Owned by the People.” Within hours he’d thrown up a website — a janky, one-hour job, by his own admission — and by Sunday, 36,000 “founding patrons” had pledged nearly $23 million, crashing his servers in the process.

None of it is real money. These are non-binding pledges. Also worth noting: the actual cost of acquiring and relaunching an airline runs into the billions. Peterson knows this. In a video posted earlier today, he winkingly tried recruiting aviation lawyers, PR people, and lawyers with a one-word ask: “Help?”

“I know what I don’t know,” he told his followers, but “you’re committing to this bit, so I’m committing to this bit.”