Sex secrets of business class, told by a French flight attendant The cheating wife Ill never forget, the lewd act cabin crew let slide… and the Netflix star who seduced me


A French flight attendant has lifted the lid on some of the most outrageous things she has seen and experienced while at 35,000 feet.
Noelle, 25, who has been working as a stewardess for four years, says polite society would be shocked to learn what happens on international flights after take-off.
Her most eye-opening encounter came when she had a mid-flight rendezvous with a ‘very well-known actor’.
‘You’ve definitely seen him shirtless on Netflix,’ she said.
‘He had one or two too many glasses of champagne, got quite cocky and even a little handsy.’
About halfway through the flight, the actor logged into the plane Wi-Fi and found Noelle’s ‘secret Instagram page’.
‘He got very flirty and asked for photos of my feet. He propositioned me, even promising tickets to his next premiere,’ she added.
‘Let’s just say the premiere was super fun.’

French flight attendant Noelle, 25, has lifted the lid on some of the most outrageous things she has seen and experienced while at 35,000 feet
Noelle, who grew up between France and San Diego, also revealed some of the more unsettling personal items left behind by passengers.
Perhaps the most grim discovery was a used condom in the seatbelt pocket – ‘right next to a half-eaten chocolate bar’.
But the most memorable find came when she was doing a walkthrough to check for forgotten items in business class.
‘A woman who was sitting in business once left behind a used vibrator,’ Noelle said.
‘It was wrapped up in our business blankets. It was even still slightly warm. Some items are better off lost.’
Some of the most well-heeled passengers are the most shameless, Noelle says.
Forget the cattle-class ‘toilet shaggers’ you hear about on flights to European party islands – it’s business class flyers who are most likely to get up to funny business on long-haul trips.
She remembers a man and a woman getting frisky while other passengers were asleep in the neighbouring business class pods.
Noelle had assumed they were a couple – only to realise they were colleagues (and possibly married) when a mortified co-worker came over to break it up because the woman was being ‘too loud’.

Her most eye-opening encounter came when she had a mid-flight rendezvous with a ‘very well-known actor’ – but most of the time it’s passengers misbehaving with one another
She also revealed that some cabin crew have an unofficial policy of ‘letting it slide’ if they notice passengers ‘touching themselves under the blankets’ – so long as it’s discreet and non-predatory.
‘I’ve caught several couples doing it,’ she said.
‘It’s not the worst way to pass time on a long flight. Most of the time, I don’t like to break it up.
‘But if it’s passengers being too loud or obvious, I have to step in.
‘My job is to make sure everyone enjoys a calm flight. Even if a few people are clearly enjoying the flight a bit too much.’
And it’s not just passengers getting up to mischief: Noelle once caught a pilot having some private time with his girlfriend mid-flight.
‘Once, the pilot’s girlfriend was flying as a passenger. He invited her into the cockpit “for a quick visit” and we all knew what was going on,’ she recalled.
‘When I brought in his meal later, she was going down on him.’
She forced an awkward smile as she set down his tray and quietly left.
Noelle confesses that cabin crew also have a habit of gossiping about passengers in the galley ‘a lot’ – adding that it pays to be nice to the flight attendants.
‘As soon as anyone is rude, it goes straight to the galley gossip circle. And yes, flight attendants do rank passengers on the flight,’ she said.
‘Being nice gets you extra credits with the crew.
‘A smile, a compliment, a bit of charm – suddenly you get the good wine, the extra dessert.’
Noelle also says that passengers would be furious to learn where the water used in their tea and coffee comes from.
‘The water we use for hot drinks comes from tanks that are decades old. The crew never drink it – but we serve it with a smile.’
Despite some of the confronting experiences she has had up in the air, Noelle loves being a flight attendant and wouldn’t give it up for the world.
She signed up because of her passion for travel, saying that the long hours are worth it to see exotic destinations and meet new people every day.
‘I never want to quit, I love what I do. If I ever stopped flying, it would only be because I got fired. Let’s hope that never happens!’
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Published on: 2025-11-13 18:18:00
Source: www.dailymail.co.uk




