The warning is no longer subtle. United Airlines has quietly rewritten the fine print to target one of the most infuriating in-flight habits: blasting videos, games, and TikToks without headphones. What used to be “annoying” can now get you kicked off a plane. Parents, frequent flyers, even casual travelers are suddenly.
United’s decision to formally ban “barebeating” — playing audio out loud without headphones — marks a turning point in modern air travel. What was once brushed off as rude is now classified alongside intoxication and harassment as grounds for removal.
The airline’s updated contract of carriage gives flight attendants explicit authority: ask once, and if a passenger refuses, they can be denied transport, even mid-journey.
Behind the legal language is a simple reality: cabins are getting louder as Wi‑Fi gets faster. With Starlink and other high-speed services rolling out, more people are streaming, gaming, and scrolling nonstop. Many passengers cheered the move online, calling it “policing basic courtesy,” while some parents worry about kids who resist headphones. United’s answer is blunt: the rule applies to everyone. In a metal tube at 35,000 feet, your screen time is no longer just your business.