In the summer of 2022, a climate activist published flight tracking data for celebrity private jets. Kylie Jenner’s Bombardier Global 7500 appeared near the top of every list. The 17-minute flight became a cultural flashpoint. The outrage was immediate, vast, and almost entirely misdirected.
The 17-minute flight — from Camarillo to Van Nuys, two airports serving the same metropolitan area — was almost certainly a repositioning flight. The aircraft moving itself, without passengers, between facilities. In private aviation this is routine. It is also the kind of operational detail that is invisible to anyone who has never managed an aircraft programme and irrelevant to anyone with a predetermined conclusion.
What the episode revealed was not hypocrisy. It revealed how little the public conversation about private aviation understands private aviation.
The Global 7500 that Jenner operates is, specification-wise, one of the finest aircraft Bombardier has ever produced. Ultra-long range. A cabin divided into four living zones. A permanent bed, a dedicated entertainment space, and a master suite with a shower. For a principal managing a beauty empire with global distribution, conducting press across multiple continents, and doing it at a pace that commercial aviation cannot accommodate, the aircraft is not indulgence.
It is the machine that makes the operation function.
The critics were arguing about optics. The owner was running a billion-dollar company.
The two conversations have never been further apart.
Curated by: Hype Luxury



