Boeing,let's talk about sex video the American aircraft maker of the 737 Max 8 planes involved in two fatal crashes in a five-month period, is hustling to salvage its reputation so passengers and air carriers will fly on those planes again. (Out of all U.S.-based carriers, Southwest and American Airlines had the largest number of the planes in their fleets.)
The company has even paid for its side of the story to appear at the top of Google searches -- above critical news articles about the aircraft. The paid Google ads direct users to a statement promising an upcoming software update which would fix issues with the plane's flight control system, known as the MCAS, or maneuvering characteristics augmentation system.
"When the MAX returns to the skies with the software changes to the MCAS function, it will be among the safest airplanes ever to fly," CEO Dennis Muilenburg said in the statement, which was released late last week along with a video message.
But will anyone want to fly them at that point? According to one business law expert, signs point to yes -- even if the plane's reputation is currently in the gutter.
On Friday, another software problem surfaced, so even more certifications and safety checks will slow down the planes' eventual return. The 737 Max 8 was involved in the recent Ethiopian Airlines and Lion Air crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia, respectively. Ethiopian Airlines claims its pilots followed all procedures to right the plane that was miscalculating its positioning and pulling the nose downward; Boeing agrees.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The earliest the planes are expected to return to the air is June -- that's when American Airlines says it'll resume its 90 daily Max flights, once Boeing's changes are approved.
Consumers' sour feelings toward the 737 Max may fade soon enough, though, Thomas Cooke, a professor at Georgetown’s McDonough School of Business, who has expertise in business law, said on a call this week. Consumer sentiment is hard to predict here, but once the appropriate agencies say the planes are fly-worthy again (as the Max series was labeled before the crashes), "the issue will be short-lived," he said.
SEE ALSO: Trump grounds Boeing 737 Max planes after fatal crashesCooke thinks passengers will be more cognizant of what type of plane they're booking for a few months, and they'll be more hesitant if a Max 8 plane is on their itinerary. But eventually those concerns will fade, and other factors like price, convenience, and the need for summer travel plans will overpower any lingering worries.
For comparison, look at safety issues at Chipotle. Food-borne illnesses nearly destroyed the fast-food restaurant's customer base a few years ago, but with all the scrutiny and regulatory oversight required to clean up their food process, Chipotle became known as one of the safer establishments. Boeing is seeking this same outcome — and it usually works, at least psychologically. Cooke said students he's spoken to assume the planes will be safest after all the re-testing and computer fixes.
As for Boeing's reputation, the company is trying to be as transparent as possible, offering a steady stream of updates and owning up to problems instead of blaming pilots, airlines, regulators, or anyone else.
"We've got so much confidence in this industry," Cooke said of the average air traveler.
The airplane maker hopes these two planes crashes won't keep us scared to fly the Max for too much longer.
Actress Janet McTeer on her game'Black Panther' beats 'The Dark Knight,' closes in on 'The Avengers'Scientists find rare type of ice, dubbed IceAuthor Tomi Adeyemi explains the radical power of fantasyAriana Grande inspires beautiful social media movement of selfEverything you need to know about the National School WalkoutEd Sheeran wows fans with a free gig in Australian lanewayMaisie Williams almost missed her 'Game of Thrones' audition to go to a pig farmSony reinvented air hockey with augmented realityAi Weiwei shows giant artwork, slams Australia's treatment of refugees'Jane the Virgin' made Xiomara a dancer but we're not buying itAmazon updates Alexa so you don't have to say 'Hey, Alexa' repeatedlyFlippy the burgerZooey Deschanel is new Belle in 'Beauty and the Beast' live concertCadbury Creme Eggs are good, don't @ meAustralia's Defence department bans messaging app WeChatBoy finds a message in a bottle that traveled 1,000 miles in 4 yearsLexus concept yacht to become a bigger, 65Flippy the burgerBoy finds a message in a bottle that traveled 1,000 miles in 4 years A herd of deer cause havoc during cross country race. NASA discovers mysterious electron superhighway above Earth Fullscreen's winter slate features Bret Easton Ellis series, Andrea Russett talkshow New 'Heroes of the Storm' hero Varian enters the fray Known environmental menace, Australia gets the award it deserves Trump's Twitter bots turned out on Election Day Thank you, C Here's all the info J.K. Rowling shared about American magic that you totally forgot about Play 'Zelda' IRL with an 'escape room' Watch Adele go absolutely batsh*t over a bat on stage Planned Parenthood thanks 20,000 people that have cleverly trolled Mike Pence All the ways 'Fantastic Beasts' fits into the sprawling Potter These spellbinding photos taken by an astronaut will leave you breathless How to improve your Facebook feed, so we see the next Trump coming Google Maps may soon let Indians locate clean public toilets Where I see myself in 10 years if 'Fantastic Beasts' is good vs. if it is bad How the tech world's immaturity handed Trump the election If you love watching pimples pop, you'll love this cheesy burger The crazy reason nearly every phone in Japan is waterproof Critics weigh in on the 'Gilmore Girls' revival
2.8092s , 10519.578125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【let's talk about sex video】,Inspiration Information Network