The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has updated its rules for checked luggage.
According to new rules announced by the TSA on social media, cordless curling irons, flat irons, and hair straighteners that use lithium-ion batteries, lithium metal, or gas/butane fuel are now prohibited from checked luggage, though some of the items may be allowed in carry-on bags.
Newsweek has contacted the TSA for comment via email.
Why It Matters
The change directly affects millions of travelers who rely on battery-powered hair styling tools, particularly those who frequently fly for work or vacation.
A notice of baggage inspection by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), an agency of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is displayed in Frederick, Md., on Aug. 12, 2013. A notice of baggage inspection by the Transportation Security Administration (TSA), an agency of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is displayed in Frederick, Md., on Aug. 12, 2013. Jon Elswick/AP
What To Know
Travelers packing these devices in carry-ons must use a safety cover to prevent accidental activation. Spare gas cartridges are strictly banned from all luggage.
Wall-plugged hot tools remain allowed in checked baggage. Popular brands such as Tymo and Conair also offer cordless models that fall under the new restrictions.
The items have been flagged by the Federal Aviation Administration for having potentially hazardous materials, according to a report from TheStreet.
“Any cordless curling irons containing gas cartridges (butane) discovered in a checked bag will be removed and turned over to the airline as a HAZMAT item,” the TSA said on X.
This policy change comes a couple of months after the TSA’s July 8, 2025, decision to end the requirement for passengers to remove their shoes during security screenings.
The TSA said the policy change will increase hospitality for travelers and streamline the TSA security checkpoint process, leading to lower wait times.
“Ending the ‘Shoes-Off’ policy is the latest effort DHS is implementing to modernize and enhance traveler experience across our nation’s airports,” said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.
“We expect this change will drastically decrease passenger wait times at our TSA checkpoints, leading to a more pleasant and efficient passenger experience. As always, security remains our top priority. Thanks to our cutting-edge technological advancements and multilayered security approach, we are confident we can implement this change while maintaining the highest security standards. This initiative is just one of many the Trump administration is pursuing to usher in the President’s vision for a new Golden Age of American travel.”
Since Trump’s second term began, the Department of Homeland Security has made a series of moves aimed at streamlining airport security.
On July 2, TSA launched its “Serve with Honor, Travel with Ease” program, offering uniformed service members and their families benefits such as discounted TSA PreCheck enrollment and access to expedited security lanes at select airports. Earlier in May, the agency began enforcing REAL ID at checkpoints, achieving a 94 percent compliance rate and helping to speed up the security screening process.
What People Are Saying
Daniel Velez, the spokesperson for Florida’s TSA, told the Florida Times-Union: “Bottom line … If these items can catch fire in the cargo area where checked bags are transported, there’s no one there to put it out. That’s why they’re only allowed in carry-on bags.”
The Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) Police Department (MPD) held a press conference to discuss safety and security on the transit system and provide behind the scenes tours of its Real-Time Crime Center (RTCC) and Emergency Operations Center (EOC) at the Chamblee MARTA station.
During the press conference, MARTA Police Department Chief of Police Scott Kreher aimed to dispel misconceptions about MARTA’s safety, emphasizing its status as one of the safest transit systems in the U.S.
“Hundreds of MARTA police officers patrol rail stations, trains, buses, and parking lots 24-hours a day, cracking down on nuisance behavior, acting swiftly during emergencies, and responding immediately when someone breaks the law on or near the transit system,” Kreher said. “The MARTA Police Department stands ready to protect our customers, the system, and the communities we serve every day.”
Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice
Year-to-date crime has decreased significantly: aggravated assaults by 24%, robberies by 18%, and overall crime by 8%, according to Kreher. MARTA employs over 300 officers and utilizes various security measures, including partnerships with the FBI, US Marshals, and TSA, according to Kreher.
He also said the system has suspended over 3,500 people for minor rule violations and issued 224 permanent bans.
“We wanted to dispel any comments made out in the public recently about MARTA not being safe or having a public safety plan, specifically around large events, and that is definitely farthest from the truth,” he said. “We work every day to prepare for events and remain solely committed to the safety of the system.”
Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice
Also, with three decades of law enforcement background, Kreher said he’s seen safety used as a political talking point to perpetuate unsafety over the fact MARTA is safe. He says MARTA is one of the safest transit systems in the country and doesn’t work in a vacuum.
“We service four counties within the many cities and communities, and crime and public safety in those areas has a direct impact on the water system, saying that year to date, we’ve seen dramatic decreases in crime, especially violent crime,” he said.
He also says if people truly don’t feel safe, MARTA police “have more work to do” and “the reality of crime and perception of crime is always a battle”.
“We’re working very hard to ensure people’s safety, especially during larger events and crowds,” he said.
Additionally, he says they rely heavily on their technology and system of wide network cameras and portable solar cameras. These methods allow the MARTA police department to have an eye on the system monitored by real time crime center officers.
The focus also remains on enhancing public perception and safety, especially for major events like the World Cup.
“We partner with TSA, our neighboring jurisdiction and we do what’s called Tabletop exercises where we go through various scenarios,” he said. “We will continue to have that partnership into the upcoming Labor Day weekend, the World Cup, and more.”
Furthermore, Kreher says he wants the public to understand and know the perception of crime sometimes misconstrued with people who are unhoused, have mental health challenges, or substance abuse.
“While we don’t condone bad behavior, we want the public to understand being unhoused isn’t a crime, however it is an inconvenience to the riders,” he said. “We’re constantly working with our team of licensed clinicians to help these individuals to get resources.”
Upcoming improvements in September include new fare gates and payment systems to combat fare evasion.
American Airlines to Partner with TSA for Biometric Screening
American Airlines has revealed that AAdvantage members will soon enjoy a streamlined process at Transportation Security Administration (TSA) airport security checkpoints through TSA PreCheck® Touchless ID.
In the months ahead, eligible members who choose to enroll will be able to move through security in select airports with ease as part of the airline’s partnership with TSA. After an identity match compares a customer’s image to their existing passport photo, the customer will be able to move through the security checkpoint hands-free.
“We want to give our customers an easy experience while they move through every point of their travel journey, and the airport is a big part of that,” said American’s Vice President of Customer Experience Kim Cisek. “Introducing this option will help customers move more seamlessly from the airport lobby through TSA security to enjoy the next step in their travel.”
Before travel, AAdvantage® members will be prompted to opt in by providing the following to confirm their eligibility:
AAdvantage number
Valid U.S. passport information
Known Traveler Number (KTN)
Members will only have to renew enrollment once per year and can opt out at any time. Eligible locations and launch date have not been revealed yet. AAdvantage members will receive more information about that in the future.
Sandals. A baseball hat. An adorable stuffed panda. They all sat on a table in Ronald Reagan National Airport, and they all hid potentially deadly explosives.
Sandals. A baseball hat. An adorable stuffed panda. They all sat on a table in Ronald Reagan National Airport, and they all hid potentially deadly explosives.
They weren’t the real thing but mock-ups of the kind of items the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) has discovered over the years.
“There was a shoe-bomber, this is why you have to take off your shoes,” said Lisa Farbstein, a TSA spokeswoman. “There was a liquid explosives bomber.”
That’s why passengers to this day have a limit on the amount of liquids, gels and aerosols they can carry onto a flight.
Farbstein said there’s still some confusion among the flying public of what is considered in gels or liquids.
Any container larger than that has to be stowed in your checked bags, Farbstein said.
Ahead of the 23rd anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, Monday’s demonstration by the TSA was punctuated with the routine security announcements at the airport that’s just miles from where the Pentagon was struck on that sunny September morning.
Farbstein points out that there are young TSA agents who were born after the attacks happened.
“Anywhere that was immediately impacted, whether it was New York City, whether it was Arlington, Virginia, or whether it was western Pennsylvania, I think those individuals tend to think of it more personally,” Farbstein said.
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A TSA official in Maryland recalls being in New York City near the base of the World Trade Center complex when the first plane hit on 9/11.
Tom Battillo shows a tattoo on his arm that includes the World Trade Center towers in front of an American flag and the words “Never Forget.”(WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
Tom Battillo shows a tattoo on his arm that includes the World Trade Center towers in front of an American flag and the words “Never Forget.”(WTOP/Nick Iannelli)
As Americans look back on 9/11 over the coming week, an official with the Transportation Security Administration in Maryland recalls being in New York City near the base of the North Tower at the World Trade Center complex when the first plane hit.
“The plane went right over my head and went into the north building,” Tom Battillo said.
Battillo, who worked on Wall Street at the time, was supposed to be in a meeting at the top of that building.
It just so happened that his son called him, so he decided to stay outside and talk to him on the phone.
His colleagues who went into the building did not survive.
“Good friends of ours didn’t make it because they went upstairs,” Battillo said. “We went to a lot of memorial services without closure. It takes a lot of time to get over what you would call survivor’s guilt.”
He added that “days, weeks and months after that we were just trying to get ourselves back together.”
Wednesday marks 23 years since the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Nearly 3,000 people were killed when hijacked planes crashed into the World Trade Center, the Pentagon and a Pennsylvania field.
“Around this time of year, things are a little tough,” Battillo said. “It just brings back everything that happened.”
“When people were jumping — these are sounds that never leave your mind. You can still hear it,” he said. “You can still smell jet fuel burning.”
Battillo works at BWI Marshall Airport as the assistant federal security director for mission support with the Transportation Security Administration, the agency that was created as a response to 9/11.
The job itself provides some closure and holds deep meaning for Battillo, especially around the time of the anniversary.
“There’s been a lot of healing just being able to work with people who every day come and support the mission,” he said.
Battillo has a tattoo on his arm showing the World Trade Center towers in front of an American flag, along with the words, “Never Forget.”
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TSA has had limits on the amount of liquids that you can bring with you when flying ever since 2006. Recently we heard rumors that the TSA could soon change those rules, but don’t hold your breath.
These liquid limits are often referred to as the 3-1-1 rule. Each passenger may carry liquids, gels and aerosols in travel-size containers that are 3.4 ounces or100 milliliters. Each passenger is limited to one quart-size bag of liquids, gels and aerosols. Common travel items that must comply with the 3-1-1 liquids rule include toothpaste, shampoo, conditioner, mouthwash and lotion.
The 3-1-1 rule will be in place for many years to come, based on recent comments by the TSA. Here’s what they told Travel + Leisure:
“TSA is still deploying Computed Tomography (CT) units that are capable of screening larger sizes of liquids, however the agency will not be able to change the current 3-1-1 liquids rule for some time to come, because there are about 2,000 screening lanes in about 430 airports. We are anticipating that it may not be until 2040 that we have CT units fully deployed across the nation and have the capability of changing the requirement across the system.”
Yes, they said 2040. So get ready to keep gulping those drinks before you get to security check for another 16 years at least.
“This is going to exceed Memorial Day, which we set the history record for United Airlines here in Houston,” said Peggy Slay, a customer service manager at United Airlines. “We expect to handle about 50,000 people a day.”
The travel surge comes on the heels of an already record-breaking Spring Break and Memorial Day travel season, according to the Houston Airport Systems.
In May, 2,816,854 people boarded nonstop or connecting flights at either Bush or Hobby airport, breaking the last record set in July 2018 with 2,794,798 passengers.
To handle the surge in passengers this summer, particularly around those big holidays, airports and airlines are urging customers to show up three hours before a domestic flight.
“Anticipate being here three hours before your flight time, because you never know what the TSA line is going to be,” Slay said.
At Bush Airport, it’s all hands on deck for United Airlines.
The United Airlines Operation Center inside George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on June 28, 2024. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)
Inside of Bush Airport, the United Airlines Operations Center is constantly watching the weather, monitoring flights and making adjustments to ensure the smoothest operation they can, while maximizing the efficiency for their airplanes.
Meanwhile, out on the ramp crews are battling the sweltering summer heat to load and unload luggage from airplanes, bring in fresh water, pump out the bathrooms and keep the airplanes full of fuel.
All of this is done while crews inside prep each plane for the next group of passengers.
United Airlines employees load luggage into the belly of an airplane at George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston on June 28, 2024. (Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.)
Speaking of passengers, United Airlines is making room for even more people to fly on their planes, without adding any flights or routes to their already incredibly packed schedule.
This is called “upgauging.” In simple terms, United is opting to fly bigger planes with more seats this summer to handle the surge in customers.
“We increase the passenger numbers by putting larger aircraft on routes that demand additional seats to get people there, so we can accommodate as many people as we can,” Slay said. “Same number of aircraft, but more seats get a lot more people out of here.”
United Airlines explains why airplane size helps drive up passenger records:
United Airlines is the largest airline in Houston, currently flying 490 daily flights out of Bush Airport, including 56 international destinations (including Latin America, Canada, Europe and Asia), averaging about 55,000 customers served a day.
As part of the United Next growth plan, an enterprise-wide investment in fleet, network, airports and customer experience, over the next decade United intends to introduce more than 800 narrow and wide-body aircraft to its fleet and expand its global network to reach new points on the map. With that growth plan underway, United is utilizing larger gauge aircrafts for domestic and international routes. United is phasing out its 50 seat aircrafts and utilizing 75 seat aircrafts. This transition allows for the use of more mainline aircraft and ultimately offer 12% more seats per departure compared to last year.
United Airlines expects this Independence Day weekend to be its busiest on record with more than 5 million passengers forecasted to fly United – airline wide – between June 28 and July 8, up more than 7% compared to last year.
Houston isn’t the only city seeing record passenger numbers.
According to data from the TSA, the top five busiest days ever have all been in 2024.
JUST IN: Friday, June 28th, was the 4th busiest day ever for TSA – our officers screened 2.93M individuals at airports nationwide. Please arrive at the airport early with plenty of time to get through security. Have travel questions? Ask the experts: @AskTSA. pic.twitter.com/uv0pmVN9Ek
Nine of the top ten busiest days ever recorded are now post-pandemic travel days, a sure sign that travelers are ready to set into the sky once again.
“They’re ready and it’s time,” said Ashley Kelsey, who’s flying home to North Carolina. “We’re good. Let’s start traveling.”
In order to get to your destination, both United Airlines and the Houston Airports System is encouraging all travelers to arrive at least three hours before their flights.
“We don’t want you missing the cruises. We don’t want you missing the dinner dates, any of that,” Slay said.
Copyright 2024 by KPRC Click2Houston – All rights reserved.
This is a roundup of news and other interesting pieces that I’ve come across over the last few days. I thought they are worth sharing so I hope you enjoy reading them.
TSA sets new record Friday for most travelers screened in a single day
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) announced that it set a new record for most travelers screened in a single day on Friday, according to a post from the agency on X, formerly known as Twitter. TSA officers screened 2,951,163 individuals at checkpoints nationwide, surpassing its previous record from November 26, 2023, over the Thanksgiving holiday weekend. ➡️ Read more
Spirit Airlines Expands U.S. Military Benefits to Include Spouses and Children
The airline announced it is extending the existing benefits for active-duty U.S. military service members to their spouses and all their children when traveling with the service member effective immediately, including two free standard checked bags, one free standard carry-on bag, and the existing one free personal item per person. Complimentary priority boarding is also available for active-duty service members, and their spouses and children when traveling with the service member.. ➡️ Read more
Virgin’s cruise giveaway goes horribly wrong
Virgin Voyages is dealing with a PR nightmare after a woman who won a free cruise said she’d have to pay $8,000 in flights to claim her prize. The winner booked a cruise out of Brisbane for herself and her partner. However, in February, the company announced that all of its Australia voyages were canceled due to tensions in the Red Sea. So they would have to fly from Australia to Europe or the Caribbean to claim their prize. ➡️ Read more
Resort At Pelican Hill Joining Marriott, Becoming St. Regis
The Resort at Pelican Hill, located in Newport Beach, California, has operated independently since it opened in 2008. But that is changing later this year. As of July 1, 2024, the Resort at Pelican Hill will join Marriott, and will participate in the Marriott Bonvoy program. Then, after an extensive renovation, the property will be branded as a St. Regis. ➡️ Read more
JetBlue Starts Flying From New York to Edinburgh
JetBlue has added another route to its transatlantic offerings with new, nonstop flights to Edinburgh from New York. Daily summer-seasonal service from New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK) to Edinburgh Airport (EDI) will operate through September 30, 2024. Prices start at $499 round-trip. This is only the second direct offering from New York’s JFK to Edinburgh. ➡️ Read more
Azul and GOL Announce Codeshare Agreement
Azul and GOL airlines have announced a commercial cooperation agreement that will connect their flight networks in Brazil through a codeshare agreement. This partnership covers all domestic routes operated exclusively, meaning rotes operated by one of the two companies but not the other. The agreement also encompasses frequent flyer programs, allowing Azul Fidelidade and Smiles members to earn points in their preferred program when purchasing segments included in the codeshare agreement. ➡️ Read more
Guru’s Wrap-up
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The U.S. Transportation Security Administration is using Philadelphia International Airport as a test site for new handheld devices that translate statements from TSA officers for people who aren’t proficient with English.
The TSA said the devices are intended to make interactions with travelers who do not speak English easier and help them understand what officers are asking of them.
The devices are smaller than cell phones and contain libraries of 83 languages. An officer speaks into it and what was said gets translated into the language spoken by the passengers. The electronic translator can reproduce speech from a TSA officer as audio and as text displayed on the device’s screen, making it useful for communicating with people who are deaf, hearing impaired or blind, too.
“We hope that this will turn out to be a valuable tool for our officers to provide guidance to passengers who might not speak English,” said Gerardo Spero, TSA’s federal security director at Philadelphia International Airport.
TSA has begun using five of the devices at the airport — in terminals A-East and A-West, and at the busiest checkpoints in terminals B, D and E.
The federal agency said officers have encountered benefits and technical challenges. One of the problems is that colloquial terms, like “pat-down,” cannot be translated in every language, so officers have been advised find different words to explain what they need to do.
TSA officers can store up to 10,000 pre-programmed translations to handle typical interactions that help speed up the process. The devices also distinguish among dialects of the same language. With Spanish, for example, the translators are programmed to understand dialects spoken in Spain, Argentina, Colombia and the United States.
The TSA said it views the technology as a “game-changer” for assisting people who aren’t fluent in English. Travelers at Philadelphia airport already have among the shortest wait times — at just over 9 minutes — at security points among the nation’s 31 busiest airports, according to a study released last year.
“The field testing of these units is one step that we are taking to improve our communication with a broader traveling population,” said Jose Bonilla, TSA’s executive director of traveler engagement.
Self-Service Screening for TSA Precheck Passengers
The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) have unveiled a prototype checkpoint technology. The two agencies will offer a self-service screening system at Harry Reid International Airport (LAS) in Las Vegas.
TSA PreCheck® passengers at TSA’s Innovation Checkpoint will be the first travelers to have the option to use the new system starting in mid-March, when the testing begins. The same rigorous screening standards and rules required of passengers using the TSA PreCheck lanes apply to the self-screening lane.
How It Works
The self-service screening system is a prototype technology that TSA and S&T designed, developed and tested initially in a laboratory setting at the TSA Systems Integration Facility in Arlington, Virginia.
The prototype has a video monitor that provides step-by-step instructions for passengers to complete screening at their own pace. Once passengers have completed the required screening process and are cleared for travel, automated exit doors open so travelers can proceed to gather their belongings and head to their flights.
There will be minimal assistance from Transportation Security Officers (TSO), but they will be on hand if needed. TSOs will work to ensure TSA PreCheck passengers using the self-screening lane are following security protocols.
The goal is to establish a passenger screening process that is nearly self-sufficient. This involves providing passengers with direct, on-person alarm information and enabling them to independently address and resolve these alarms. The objective is to minimize situations requiring additional measures such as pat-downs or secondary screening procedures.
Feedback
During the assessment in a live checkpoint environment, TSA will collect passenger feedback and data on the system’s performance, design, cybersecurity, human factors and other variables to inform future design requirements and system development and to understand how passengers and TSOs interact with the system. The data collected will inform design, development, feasibility and viability decisions for future iterations.
In 2021, One Shot blasted into action fans’ hearts, making full use of Scott Adkins’ varied skill set. It’s a high-octane tactical action movie with a fun gimmick: The whole movie is designed to look like one continuous take.
The newly released sequel, One More Shot, now available everywhere you rent or purchase movies digitally,is a more confident, polished effort than the original, adding a compelling and familiar action-movie setting (an airport), more action legends (Tom Berenger and Michael Jai White), and a string of exciting fight sequences that make the most of the location, the conceit, and the talent.
One More Shot also reunites director James Nunn with Adkins and fight choreographer Tim Man, who’ve each worked with Nunn four times. But this movie is Nunn and Adkins’ most accomplished collaboration yet. Polygon spoke with Nunn about the difficulties of shooting an action movie in one take, following in the wake of Sam Mendes’ Oscar winner 1917, hiding the cuts, what he learned from the first movie, and his hopes for the future of the series.
This interview has been lightly edited for length and clarity.
Image: Sony Pictures Entertainment
Polygon: As someone who’s filmed more conventional action movies, like Eliminators, what do you think is different for the audience when a movie is portrayed as one continuous take?
James Nunn: Well, it’s funny, because it started as an exercise in How can I push something? How can I be different? How can I be unique? How can I use Scott’s raw, amazing ability to the best? And how can I use my technical knowhow? So it actually started as more of an experiment in just proving to people, I’m really good technically, he’s really good physically and on camera — merge them skills, make a movie. That was where the initial pitch came from. But as time went on, and as we started filming it, honestly, I’ve kind of fallen in love with doing it this way. You realize that you’re pushing this immersion on your audience.
All movies have a ticking clock. That’s the premise of a lot of stories: You’re going from A to B, or A to Z, but it’s not about the letters, it’s about the journey between. There’s always a ticking-clock narrative, especially in action movies. Whether it’s a bomb going off or saving your loved one because she’s about to fall into acid, there’s always a timer. And I think what happens when you don’t manipulate time with cuts is, you’re actually forcing people to, almost on a subconscious level, just feel that timer a bit more, feel the urgency, and be a bit more present in it.
Now look, a lot of problems come with the style, because you can’t film Scott as the best martial artist in the world, necessarily, because you can’t do the angles that really show off what he can do. Equally, he can’t be like, spinning around doing amazing butterfly pirouette kicks, because it would just be of a different world. So the format comes with restrictions. And we know what we’re doing. We try to hold back on the flashiness and go for, like, this grounded CQC [close-quarters combat] military vibe, which fits really well. I think the elongated take of it, whether you like it or not, you’re just being sucked in.
Certain actors will really rise to the occasion and be the best you’ve ever seen, because they’re like, I don’t want to be the one in this 10-minute take who messes it up. So they switch on to this level of authenticity and focus, and you can feel that as well. But then equally, if you’ve got a slightly weaker performance, it’s harder to hide away from that.
I’ve fallen in love with it. I won’t do it forever. I will return to normal, conventional moviemaking soon, I’m sure. But I’m having a lot of fun. And I am so pleased with the reception that we’ve had.
Image: Sony Pictures Entertainment
What did you learn from One Shot that you applied to One More Shot? The movie feels more confident — did it feel that way to you while shooting?
For sure, we did. And I say “we” because I’ve got a very solid core team who I love working with, and they’re all on the same train with me. I think the first movie, although I was confident… Look, I tried to keep it a bit of a secret in the first one, but we all know there’s hidden cuts in the movie. Don’t get me wrong, I will run a take as long as I can. There’s three reasons to break: safety, geography, or actor availability, if you have to shoot out of sequence. Those are really the reasons I cut. If not, I’ll go for as long as I can within that time frame. So you’re really looking at, like, eight- to 10-minute takes.
On the first movie, I knew we could do it, but we hadn’t done it, in that we hadn’t actually hidden cuts before. So I put a lot of the focus in the first movie on making sure that we could hide the cuts. The difference with the second movie was that weight had been lifted. We’d done it. I knew we could do it. I knew how to do it. I knew how to get myself out of a bind, even if something wasn’t working on the day and I needed to get out of it. Because we’d tried and tested it before.
So that weight had been lifted off my shoulders. So it’s like, OK, well, now I’ve actually got the time to think a bit more about being more elaborate with the camera. And also, we had a tiny bit more money on this one. So we could do stuff like hand the camera out of the car and throw the camera down a stairwell on a rig and know it would be OK. We were able to be a little bit more tricksy.
How did you manage filming at London Stansted Airport?
That was the most difficult part of this whole process, filming in the working environment of an international airport. We knew we wanted to go bigger. The fan response to the first one was overwhelmingly positive, and much more than we’d anticipated. Obviously when you set out on these ventures you believe in the movie — you have to, otherwise you wouldn’t do it. But I really wanted it to land. And it didn’t necessarily get the big push I hoped for, because of COVID at the time, but it did enough to really find an audience.
We listened to the feedback of the fans. Not necessarily the big paper reviews, but the fans. And we tried to respond to that in this movie and give them more fights, give them more hand-to-hand, give them more plot, but also make it not feel as low-budget of a location, which was something we bumped into a lot in the comments.
So once we found out we were given the lucky opportunity to go down the road for number two, we embarked on what we’re going to do, and we were like, We’re never gonna get an airport. We’re just imagining we’re gonna get, like, some private little runway. It’s gonna be rubber, it’s gonna feel low-budget anyway. So the producer, Ben Jacques, was tasked with Can you get an airport? And as if by some sort of miracle, the fourth-largest airport in England, Stansted Airport, showed an interest. They were like, Oh, we love the sound of this. Yeah, come on down. And so we did.
Image: Sony Pictures Entertainment
So we went down and we looked, and we thought it’d be perfect. And then we wrote the script around it. But this is where it became tricky. The first movie, we had a derelict location, which we could film for 11 hours a day, no questions asked, easy-peasy. But going to Stansted came with a huge amount of restrictions, the same restrictions you face as a traveler flying internationally. You’re going through the metal detector, you’re going through the screening thing. Getting a hundred crew in with guns, with knives, with fake explosives takes an hour off your day easily.
Equally, you’ve got tourists running around waiting to catch their flights and stuff. In the U.K., you can’t fly between midnight and 4 a.m. They basically close it down so that people can sleep. And that was when we shot the movie. So we’d get in the airport at like 7 or 8 at night, do some rehearsals, have a bit of food. And then we really started kicking off between midnight and 4. It was a hard stop at 4, because the planes were coming in, or people getting on planes.
One particular night, we were in the baggage claim area, and we had a long take and an hour to go. And we’ve had months and months of meetings about this. But you know, there’s always one guy who’s never at the meetings who shows up and is like, Oh, you’ve got to wrap in 20 minutes. We managed to get two takes that were nine minutes each. The second one’s in the movie.
Everyone knows the layout of an airport, so it becomes a lot easier for the audience to ground themselves in where things are, what access-restricted locations look like, that kind of stuff. But it lets you interact more with the environment in terms of the action. What else did the airport location add to the film?
It’s kind of like how I feel about 1917. One thing we faced coming out after 1917, even though [One Shot] had originally been written before 1917, was that people struggled a little bit with the backstory. There wasn’t a huge amount of backstory being told. And the problem with doing things in real time as a one-shot thing is, you can’t stop in the middle of a fight and start calling your mom or your wife, because the audience knows what you’re doing. You’re crowbarring in a backstory, but it just starts to feel hokey and not real.
And the advantage that 1917 had over us is that the nation and the world’s collective understanding of a soldier in World War I — everybody’s studied it in school. You immediately have some idea or backstory knowledge of that soldier. So it’s not necessarily that 1917 even has more backstory than we do. But what makes a difference is that there’s this unwritten understanding of World War I that you just understand. It’s in your subconscious, generally speaking, as a Western audience.
And that’s the same, probably, with the airport. Not everybody’s seen a Guantanamo-style base [the setting of One Shot] outside of a movie. Whereas everybody knows an airport. And I think that’s where [One More Shot] heightens as well, is that we’ve gone to somewhere that you all kind of understand: Oh, there’s gonna be an escalator, there’s gonna be this, there’s gonna be that. So I think to harp on your point, I agree with you totally. And then you just start enjoying the fruits of what you can find, you’re walking around and you design the [fall] going over the rails, or fighting on the metro.
Image: Sony Pictures Entertainment
By the way, that’s my favorite fight in the movie.
Me too. We don’t cut during the fights. That’s part of the reason that Scott loves doing it as well, is that we really make him do it for two, three minutes. And what I love about the metro fight is because of all of the foreground, poles, beams, and glass, it’s actually impossible to have even put a cut in there. So that is just two physically amazing on-screen fighters [Adkins and Aaron Toney] really going for it. And I’m privileged that they did that for us on a moving train at about 30 miles per hour.
What strikes me as one of the hardest storytelling challenges of the format are the transition sequences. How did you approach getting from scene to scene within this structure?
[That’s where] the advantage of going to the location [came in]. Having a 10-page outline, finding the location, then writing the script around the location, and then doing set visits backward and forward. And also it being a [real] location, not being something we were building that people had to try and understand.
Because there’s a lot of One Shot that is actually a set. Like, we use the exterior terrain, but actually all the interiors are generally fudged together in a gym on the location. And that was much easier for [screenwriter] Jamie [Russell] to write those passages of time. And then I had a couple of actor friends come down about three months before we shot the movie, and on a GoPro, we walked every scene just for script timings.
You want to do another one of these? One Last Shot, perhaps?
Yeah, I do want to do another one. I’ve got no spoilers for you. There’s no green light yet. I’m gonna try my best and knock on every door to hopefully get us there. But there’s no news, other than the title. And it seems like the internet has found the title itself.
I mean, you set us up for it.
[Laughs] Me and the producers have talked about it in the past, but it’s sort of organically been like this little bit of a roller coaster online, which is fun and exciting. So I desperately would love to do that movie, but we’re not there yet. Let’s see.
One More Shot is available for digital rental or purchase on Amazon, Apple TV, and Vudu.
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) intercepted a record of 6,737 firearms at airport security checkpoints in 2023. Approximately 93% of these firearms were loaded. This total surpasses the previous year’s record of 6,542 firearms stopped at checkpoints and represents the highest one-year total in TSA’s history.
“We are still seeing far too many firearms at TSA checkpoints, and what’s particularly concerning is the amount of them loaded, presenting an unnecessary risk to everyone at the TSA checkpoint,” said TSA Administrator David Pekoske. “Firearms and ammunition are strictly prohibited in carry-on baggage. Passengers are only allowed to travel with an unloaded firearm, and only if they pack it properly in a locked, hard-sided case in their checked baggage and first declare it to the airline at the check-in counter.”
In 2023, TSA screened more than 858 million individuals, which indicates the agency intercepted 7.8 firearms per million passengers, a drop from 8.6 per million passengers in 2022.
In the fourth quarter of 2023, which ended Dec. 31, Transportation Security Officers (TSOs) stopped 1,665 firearms at checkpoints. The total represents an average of 18 firearms per day at TSA checkpoints, of which nearly 93% were loaded.
When a firearm is detected at a security checkpoint, TSOs immediately contact local law enforcement, who remove the passenger and the firearm from the checkpoint area. Depending on local laws, the law enforcement officer may arrest or cite the passenger. TSA says it does not confiscate firearms.
In addition to any action taken by law enforcement, TSA fines passengers who bring a firearm to a TSA checkpoint with a civil penalty up to approximately $15,000, revokes TSA PreCheck® eligibility for at least five years and may conduct enhanced screening to ensure there are no other threats present.
Dylan Mulvaney, the transgender influencer who cost Bud Light hundreds of millions of dollars last year after teaming up with the brand for a partnership, is celebrating after scoring a new female gender marker on a passport.
Mulvaney’s New Passport
“Starting 2024 with a new passport and an essay I wrote for @portermagazine on my pledge to stop people pleasing,” Mulvaney wrote on social media alongside a photo of the document. “Here’s to ease through TSA and the year ahead.”
Mulvaney included a link to a Porter essay in which the 26 year-old transgender influencer admitted that anxiety surrounding people-pleasing “is most noticeable at the airport.”
“I show up in a sweats set, but add femme accessories and earrings in the hope of not being misgendered,” Mulvaney wrote. “The TSA step-through scan is my worst enemy, and often I have to whisper into the officer’s ear, ‘Um, I’m trans.’ Has this TSA officer seen my videos? Do they believe trans people exist? Once I make it through security, I pull my face mask up and race through the terminal.”
“Airport bathrooms scare me more than anywhere else. I pray my mask hides the whiskers on my face that I still have left from hours of electrolysis and laser, though I know cis women have facial hair, too. Once I make it to the gate, I try to sit facing a wall so that no one can catch my eye,” the transgender influencer added. “I’m too nervous of the potential for hateful comments, which has happened plenty of times prior. I realize this limits me from the flipside – meeting lovely people who support me – but I don’t know if it’s worth taking the chance.”
Mulvaney went on to say that 2023 ended “on an exciting note” with the passport female gender marker update.
“I just got my gender marker and photo changed on my passport, so now the airport should be a little less daunting in 2024,” wrote Mulvaney. “I hope everything will be less daunting.”
“I hope that love pours over the hate and, most importantly, that the majority of the love comes from within,” Mulvaney concluded. “Because, really, the only person I need to please is myself.”
Laura Trump responded to the hate from the Left about this dress she wore:
“If I was Dylan Mulvaney, and there were some visible bulge available for the Democrats to celebrate, I’d be on the cover of Vogue in this dress.” 😂😂
This comes after Daily Mail reported that Bud Light’s parent company Anheuser-Busch announced that revenue in the U.S. fell by 13.5 percent between July and September in the wake of the Mulvaney partnership that came out back in April. On top of that, sales to U.S. retailers were also down 17 percent during that time period, with Anheuser-Busch admitting that this was largely due to a drop in demand for Bud Light.
As for Bud Light specifically, its sales were down 29 percent in the four weeks that ended on October 21 compared to the same period one year ago. This is in the wake of conservatives launching a highly affective boycott of Bud Light after the company teamed up with Mulvaney for the April partnership.
What do you think about Mulvaney’s new passport? Let us know in the comments section.
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An Ivy leaguer, proud conservative millennial, history lover, writer, and lifelong New Englander, James specializes in the intersection of culture and politics.
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It has been reported 55.4 Million Americans are expected to travel this Thanksgiving holiday. This forecast is a 2.3% increase over last year, the third highest since 2000, so be ready for crowds. Whether near or far, you might want to bring some “treats” to use while away from home, TSA frowns on it, but here are some tips for holiday travel with weed.
If you plan to use while traveling, which we caution, here are a few suggestions. One, forgot flower and vapes, too smelly, too noticeable and too annoying to those who can make traveling difficult. Gummies are the easiest and least noticeable, especially since airports sell tons of regular candy. Don’t overindulge, you don’t want to be the subject of some’s viral video or be stopped by TSA, security of the Highway Patrol.
Now about bringing treats with you on your trip.
By Air
Photo by Ali Abdul Rahman via Unsplash
Wouldn’t it be great to not have to worry about weed when traveling? Sadly, we’re not there yet, far from it, in fact. While some airports are fine with it, others are not. For example, Denver’s airport, which is located in the very legal state of Colorado, forbids cannabis.
As for the Travel Security Administration (TSA), their stance is pretty clear. Since marijuana is federally illegal, passengers will be stopped if they have cannabis on them. Still, it helps to know your rights; don’t interact with police officers unless you have to and, if detained or arrested, let them know you don’t consent to a search and you want a lawyer.
Still, if you’re traveling with a vape pen or some edibles, it’s very unlikely you’ll be stopped. When it comes to flower, especially if it’s large amounts, we’d advise to store your well earned weed in a mason jar and to hide it away from sunlight in some cabinet in your apartment, waiting for you upon your return. If you’re going home for the holidays, use some of your old contacts for weed, or mooch off of some cousin.
By Land
Photo by Alex Jumper via Unsplash
The rules of traveling by land are similar to those on air; while the states where you’re traveling to and from may be legal, the drug remains illegal on a federal level, making matters complicated.
While there are penalties for traveling with weed, especially if you have large amounts of it, officers are not actively on the lookout for them. This means that if you are driving consciously you likely won’t have trouble mobilizing your weed. Make sure you store your weed in an airtight container or that you prioritize edibles and vapes, since these are more discreet and less likely to be spotted. And make sure you don’t embibe and drive.
If you have a medical marijuana card, you might face less hurdles. Still, it’s not a clear path. Be sure to have your doctor’s certificate, your marijuana medical ID card, and your physician’s number. Ideally, you’d be traveling to a state with medical marijuana reciprocity. Make sure you have the smallest amount possible on you, keeping your weed stored in a convenient place.
TSA historically has a stingy reputation when it comes to what they allow you to bring onto a plane. I once tried packing golf balls into my shoes while flying to a bachelor party, and they made me dump every single golf ball out for security purposes.
However there are a few surprising exceptions, if for some reason you need to get these things airborne. Hope this helps.
Seasoned travelers know the woes of trying to fly without checking liquids because of the strict capacity restrictions enlisted by the Transportation Security Administration.
Though not everyone knows that 3.4 fluid ounces is the standard maximum amount of a liquid allowed on a flight (with all liquid needing to fit inside one quart-size bag), most people are able to determine whether or not something is a liquid just by looking at it.
However, travelers were up in arms this week after the TSA shared a Tweet of a jar of peanut butter and explained that though it may not feel or appear to be a liquid, nut butters are considered to be liquids, solely based on the containers that they come in.
You may not be nuts about it, but TSA considers your PB a liquid. In carry-on, it needs to be 3.4oz or less. Make sure all your travel-sized liquids fit in one quart-sized bag. #PeanutButterpic.twitter.com/4RzDv3Up7B
Neve’s tweet has since garnered over 10.5 million views and a slew of responses from followers who shared their experiences trying to get the salty snack through security.
“This has happened to me too before,” one woman said. “Meanwhile, in Italy, my husband has taken an entire lasagna as handluggage.”
“I was getting on a flight to go back to college. I had some bread and peanut butter,” another traveler explained. “TSA Made me throw out my PB. She offered to let me make a sandwich with it first. Which begs the question, if I had used up the entire jar to make sandwiches, why would that have been ok?”
According to the TSA’s website, peanut butter of any size is allowed in a checked bag but for a carry-on, it must be “less than or equal to 3.4oz/100 ml.”
Salsa, sauces, hummus, creamy dips and spreads, and ice cream are considered to be in the same category as peanut butter and therefore can only be brought in a carry-on in a limited capacity.