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Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko
While celebrities can escape the lines and indignities of check-in, they can't skip security screening.
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Read More »If you think walking through a busy airport is incredibly stressful, imagine how hard it is when you’re a celebrity being hounded by throngs of adoring fans, persistent selfie requests, and paparazzi yelling your name. That’s probably why Los Angeles International Airport, which is paparazzi central, won approval last week to build a $3 million VIP-only private lounge where the rich and famous can await their flights. You probably haven’t seen Jennifer Lawrence or Bradley Cooper standing next to you in the gate waiting for the agent to call your row numbers. According to the Los Angeles Times, the facility will be located in a converted cargo facility, apart from the main terminal, where stars can chill before their flights without worrying about onlookers and picture takers. When it’s time for the stars to catch their planes, shuttles will ferry them right to the passenger gates. LAX’s special new VIP lounge, which reportedly will cost travelers up to $1,800, isn’t scheduled to open for another six-to-eight months. Until then, airlines at LAX will have to continue doing what they’ve been doing discretely for years: whisking celebrities through the airport with minimum intrusion and maximum privacy. Over the years, American Airlines has done it better than most. The Hollywood Reporter talked to a number of industry insiders — including managers, agents, and publicists — who named American one of the industry’s preferred airlines. One producer told THR, “It’s the best in terms of VIP attention." "We have been committed to this community for a little bit over 80 years,” Juan Carlos “J.C.” Liscano, head of American Airlines’ operations for LAX, tells Yahoo Travel. He notes that going back to the Golden Age of Hollywood, his airline has been the favorite of Hollywood heavyweights. “We do a good job for them and we make sure we take care of their travel needs quite well,” he says. “That’s one of the reasons why throughout the decades it has been the airline of choice for the entertainment industry.” So how does an airline whisk its A-list clientele through the celebrity world’s favorite airport while minimizing the chaos that can unnerve a celebrity, inconvenience fellow travelers, and disrupt the secure environment airports require? It’s a hard job, especially when you’re dealing with persistent paparazzi. “You’d be surprised how creative individuals can get if they really want to take your picture,” J.C. says, adding, “we do everything we absolutely can to keep the paparazzi away to protect the privacy of those that are traveling." J.C. invited me to LAX for a special, behind-the-scenes look at the secret passageways and privacy-ensuring procedures (some of them, at least) his airline uses to whisk their VIPs to and from their flights. It was a rare opportunity to fly like a rock star.
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Read More »But there are no paparazzi chasing J.C. and me, so we go in unbothered to check out the check-in. “Come right on in,” he says to me as he leads me through the red double-doors. Once inside, I don’t see the typical gigantic and super-crowded check-in areas, with their kiosks, and loud families and tour groups. Instead, this is a cozy, tastefully decorated and quiet area that looks like the lobby of a hip downtown hotel. Unless you had the misfortune of arriving right behind Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie as they begin a family vacation with the kids, chances are, you won’t find a line for the two agents stationed there to help you check in. “We make sure to keep it quiet and discrete and private,” J.C. says of the room, which — unlike the gigantic glass-enclosed check-in area in the main terminal — is completely sealed off. “You can see there’s no way anybody from the outside can look in.” While celebrities can escape the lines and indignities of check-in, they can’t skip security screening. But this airline tries to make this process as private and unobtrusive So after we “check in”, J.C. whisks me up through a door rear staircase (“The elevator is down for repairs,” he informs me) and up through an area that includes what appears to be offices. “If we need to maintain privacy and be very discrete, for those very unique occasions we can bring you through a separate entrance,” J.C. tells me. After going through another door, we end up at a TSA security line that’s smaller than usual for such a major airport. Here you are searched with few delays, small lines, and very little chance of people fumbling with their laptops. After security, we go through another side door down another empty hallway. One can’t help but feel like you’re the President of the United States being taken to a secure bunker. But such measures are necessary to protect from the prying eyes of the paparazzi. “We do try to go through great lengths to make sure there is no area where they can come into and take that picture or invade your space,” J.C. says. At the end of that long hallway, we go through another door and then, voila! We’re standing right inside the bright, airy terminal, with all its stores and coffee shops. Here, the traveling celebrity is slightly exposed to the public (hey, if they want zero exposure, they’re gonna have to spring for a private jet). But the exposure is minimal. For one, no one can get to this area without a boarding pass, and not even paparazzi are willing to spend several hundred dollars on a ticket on the off chance of getting a fleeting photo of a celebrity. Paparazzi are relegated to the other side of the security checkpoint at the front of the terminal entrance, well away from the hallway from where celebs enter the terminal. “You’ll notice there’s very limited opportunity for anybody to really get a view of you as you come through the terminal,” J.C. says.
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Read More »One thing J.C. won’t divulge is exactly when in the boarding process you might expect to see a celebrity brought on board a plane. All he will say is, “We try to pick the time appropriate to make sure we have control of that.”
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