Travellers fuming over couple's ‘disrespectful' act on plane
For me, it's always an aisle seat if I get to choose. But, what you don't get to choose is who you're sitting next to.
Unfortunately for this person, it's about the worst possible answer.
'PDA Final Boss'
TikTok user Harry Marjoram has taken to the app to expose some travellers on a flight to Greece.
While he's on the other side of the aisle, his girlfriend has been seated next to a couple who's taking PDA to the next level.
'When my Slavic girlfriend, who hates PDA, meets the PDA Final Boss on a 4-hour flight to Greece, for the entire flight!!' he wrote.
'Nothing beats a Ryanair holiday!'
In the photos provided, Harry kept the travellers' identities anonymous. But, you can see a woman sitting on her male partner's lap with her feet on the seat, facing towards the poster's girlfriend.
'I only see a couple in love'
Some commenters were quick to defend the couple, saying they, too, would act like this on a flight – and have every right to.
'Everyone hating but I only see a couple in love,' said one commenter.
'I genuinely don't see what's wrong with this, people wanna get comfy on airplanes and as long as they're not doing anything inappropriate I think it's fine,' another agreed.
'I always sleep on my boyfriend the whole way somewhere, and if you've a problem I will shove my foot up ur face. Grow up … if you could be comfy you would too,' a third shared.
'Where are the Karens when you need them?!'
However, the vast majority of the video's almost 10 million viewers were on the poster's side, calling the act 'disgusting and disrespectful'.
'Where are the Karens when you need them?!' one person asked.
'This is so disgusting and disrespectful,' another said.
'I like acceptable PDA (hold hands, quick kisses, hugs, like the normal stuff), but this? Yeah HELL nah,' said another.
' … and people complain about crying babies. I'd pay extra to be next to a child rather than risk this,' another commenter said.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Australian
4 hours ago
- The Australian
England's Lionesses head home to party after Euro glory
England's victorious Lionesses prepared to fly home to a rapturous reception on Monday after retaining their European Championship crown with a dramatic penalty-shootout victory over world champions Spain. Chloe Kelly converted the decisive spot-kick in Basel after Sunday's Women's Euro 2025 final ended 1-1, repeating her heroics from three years previously. It was sweet revenge for Sarina Wiegman's defending champions, who suffered bitter defeat against the same opponents in the World Cup final two years ago. Fans are preparing to welcome home the victors, who will be whisked straight to 10 Downing Street, the working home of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. An open-top bus parade will follow on Tuesday, culminating in a celebration in front of Buckingham Palace. King Charles III said the team had the royal family's "warmest appreciation and admiration" following their victory, adding: "The next task is to bring home the World Cup in 2027 if you possibly can." Starmer hailed the triumph, saying: "The Lionesses have once again captured the hearts of the nation. "Their victory is not only a remarkable sporting achievement, but an inspiration for young people across the country." The Downing Street reception will hosted by Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner and sports minister Stephanie Peacock. Red-and-white St George's flags were hanging around the famous black door ahead of the team's arrival later on Monday from a rainy Zurich. Captain Leah Williamson showed off the trophy to a knot of fans who had gathered as the team made their way to the airport. - Late drama - Victory in Switzerland on Sunday capped a remarkable tournament packed with of late drama for England. Wiegman's team were slow out of the blocks, losing their first match against France, before comfortable wins over the Netherlands and Wales in the group phase. They came back from 2-0 down against Sweden in the quarter-finals before winning on penalties, and sealed their spot in Sunday's final with a last-gasp extra-time win over Italy. The defending champions again fell behind against Spain on Sunday but Alessia Russo cancelled out Mariona Caldentey's first-half opener and neither side could find a winner by the end of extra time. Two penalty saves by player-of-the-match Hannah Hampton and Salma Paralluelo's miss set the stage for Kelly, who also scored the winner against Germany in the 2022 final, as England won the shootout 3-1. The Lionesses led for fewer than five minutes across the entire Euros knockout stage. "I must admit that this is the most chaotic and ridiculous tournament we have played," said Wiegman. "The players say we can win by any means, and we just never, ever give up." The Dutch coach, who has now won three European Championship crowns in a row, having led the Netherlands to victory in 2017, said she hoped England's win would boost women's football across the globe. "How I've experienced this tournament is that the level went up again, the intensity of the games went through the roof," she said. "That's what we've seen. "We've seen it in the games, but also in the data we have. I think this tournament broke every record again and that's great, and I hope that that will boost the women's game everywhere. "I don't really know what to expect now in England, I think it will boost again." jw/mw

News.com.au
11 hours ago
- News.com.au
Sarajevo street art marks out brighter future
Bullet holes still pockmark many Sarajevo buildings; others threaten collapse under disrepair, but street artists in the Bosnian capital are using their work to reshape a city steeped in history. A half-pipe of technicolour snakes its way through the verdant Mount Trebevic, once an Olympic bobsled route -- now layered in ever-changing art. "It's a really good place for artists to come here to paint, because you can paint here freely," Kerim Musanovic told AFP, spraycan in hand as he repaired his work on the former site of the 1984 Sarajevo Games. Retouching his mural of a dragon, his painting's gallery is this street art hotspot between the pines. Like most of his work, he paints the fantastic, as far removed from the divisive political slogans that stain walls elsewhere in the Balkan nation. "I want to be like a positive view. When you see my murals or my artworks, I don't want people to think too much about it. "It's for everyone." During the Bosnian war, 1992-1995, Sarajevo endured the longest siege in modern conflict, as Bosnian Serb forces encircled and bombarded the city for 44 months. Attacks on the city left over 11,500 people dead, injured 50,000 and forced tens of thousands to flee. But in the wake of a difficult peace, that divided the country into two autonomous entities, Bosnia's economy continues to struggle leaving the physical scars of war still evident around the city almost three decades on. 'A form of therapy' "After the war, segregation, politics, and nationalism were very strong, but graffiti and hip-hop broke down all those walls and built new bridges between generations," local muralist Adnan Hamidovic, also known as rapper Frenkie, said. Frenkie vividly remembers being caught by police early in his career, while tagging trains bound for Croatia in the northwest Bosnian town of Tuzla. The 43-year-old said the situation was still tense then, with police suspecting he was doing "something political". For the young artist, only one thing mattered: "Making the city your own". Graffiti was a part of Sarajevo life even during the war, from signs warning of sniper fire to a bulletproof barrier emblazoned with the words "Pink Floyd" -- a nod to the band's 1979 album The Wall. Sarajevo Roses -- fatal mortar impact craters filled with red resin -- remain on pavements and roads around the city as a memorial to those killed in the strikes. When he was young, Frenkie said the thrill of illegally painting gripped him, but it soon became "a form of therapy" combined with a desire to do something significant in a country still recovering from war. "Sarajevo, after the war, you can imagine, it was a very, very dark place," he said at Manifesto gallery where he exhibited earlier this year. "Graffiti brought life into the city and also colour." 'A way of resisting' Sarajevo's annual Fasada festival, first launched in 2021, has helped promote the city's muralists while also repairing buildings, according to artist and founder Benjamin Cengic. "We look for overlooked neighbourhoods, rundown facades," Cengic said. His team fixes the buildings that will also act as the festival's canvas, sometimes installing insulation and preserving badly damaged homes in the area. The aim is to "really work on creating bonds between local people, between artists". Mostar, a city in southern Bosnia, will also host the 14th edition of its annual street art festival in August. With unemployment nearing 30 percent in Bosnia, street art also offers an important springboard to young artists, University of Sarajevo sociology professor Sarina Bakic said. "The social context for young people is very difficult," Bakic said. Ljiljana Radosevic, a researcher at Finland's Jyvaskyla University, said graffiti allowed youth to shake off any "nationalist narrative or imposed identity". "It's a way of resisting," Radosevic said.


SBS Australia
16 hours ago
- SBS Australia
Top new series coming to SBS On Demand in August 2025
Series coming to SBS On Demand in July: The Shift - season 2 Sofie Gråbøl as Ella in The Shift. Credit: Henrik Ohsten In one of Denmark's busiest maternity wards, head of department Ella (Sofie Gråbøl) fights a daily battle to create the best possible conditions for both the expectant mothers and for her colleagues. But the midwives and the doctors are well worn-down, the department is understaffed and overburdened, and you cannot rush a woman in labour. Michael, the senior consultant, does not help matters along, as he has a budget to keep, the intern Vilhelm is being walked all over and the holistic midwife Tine is driving Ella insane. Together, the staff experience conflict and downfalls, traumas and triumphs, births and falling in love. One thing is for certain: No one, who passes through the maternity ward, leaves unchanged. The Shift S2-3 premieres Thursday 7 August on SBS On Demand. The Shift season 1 is now streaming. Marcella - seasons 1-3 Anna Friel as Marcella Backland in Marcella Marcella is a brand new crime drama from internationally renowned screenwriter and novelist Hans Rosenfeldt (The Bridge) . Set in contemporary London and starring Anna Friel, Marcella centers on the psychological struggles of a Metropolitan police officer at crisis point in her personal life, driven by rejection and intuition. Returning to the Met's Murder Squad after a 12-year career break, Marcella is a detective in her late 30s who gave up her fast-tracked role to marry and devote her life to starting a family. With the abrupt end to her marriage to the love of her life and isolated from her children at boarding school, Marcella returns to work – her sense of self shattered. She is immediately assigned to one of her old cases that she first worked on in 2003. A spate of recent killings has occurred, all carrying the same hallmarks as those unsolved murders committed over a decade ago. Has the killer re-appeared or is this a copycat murderer? How will Marcella cope with returning to duty when her own temperament is so fragile and vulnerable? Will throwing herself into her work provide the answers she's seeking or lead her dangerously into territory she must avoid at all costs? Marcella S1-3 premieres Saturday 9 August on SBS On Demand. Leonardo da Vinci A Ken Burns documentary series Leonardo Da Vinci A Ken Burns Documentary Series A fifteenth-century Italian polymath of soaring imagination and profound intellect, Leonardo da Vinci left behind artistic works of staggering beauty as well as detailed anatomical sketches, studies of geology, gravity and water, and designs for machines of war and flying contraptions that today are marvelled at for their ingenuity and foresight. From his birth out of wedlock to a notary and a peasant woman and apprenticeship to a distinguished Florentine craftsman, to his days as a military architect, cartographer, painter and muralist for hire, Leonardo da Vinci tells the story of one of humankind's most curious and innovative minds, a singular visionary whose Mona Lisa, The Last Supper and Vitruvian Man are among the most celebrated works of all time. Leonardo da Vinci premieres Saturday 9 August on SBS and SBS On Demand. Episodes air weekly at SBS starting Saturday 9 August at 8.20pm. La Unidad - seasons 2-3 The Spanish police arrest the world's most wanted terrorist during a routine operation, and Spain is caught in the crosshairs. Carla is the head of the police investigation unit that struggles at all times to keep terrorism in check. When one of the police operations ends with the coincidental arrest of Al Salah Garheeb, the most wanted Jihadist leader in the world, she will only be pleased for a few hours. As a result of his capture, Spain is to become the target of the threats made by Al Salah's followers; those of the religious leader's own son as well as those of the thousands of supporters who are prepared to sacrifice their own lives to avenge his arrest and fall. La Unidad S2-3 premieres Thursday 14 August on SBS On Demand. La Unidad season 1 premieres Friday 1 August on SBS On Demand. Little Fires Everywhere Based on Celeste Ng's 2017 bestseller, Little Fires Everywhere follows the intertwined fates of the picture-perfect Richardson family and the enigmatic mother and daughter who upend their lives. The story explores the weight of secrets, the nature of art and identity, the ferocious pull of motherhood – and the danger in believing that following the rules can avert disaster. The cast includes Reese Witherspoon (Elena Richardson), Kerry Washington (Mia Warren), Joshua Jackson (Bill Richardson), Rosemarie DeWitt (Linda McCullough), Jade Pettyjohn (Lexie Richardson), Jordan Elsass (Trip Richardson), Gavin Lewis (Moody Richardson), Megan Stott (Izzy Richardson), Lexi Underwood (Pearl Warren), and Huang Lu (Bebe). The series is produced by Reese Witherspoon's Hello Sunshine, Kerry Washington's Simpson Street and ABC Signature Studios, a part of Disney Television Studios. Author Celeste Ng serves as producer. Little Fires Everywhere premieres Saturday 16 August on SBS On Demand. La Vuelta a España Hub La Vuelta 2024. Get in gear for this year's Vuelta a España (La Vuelta), Spain's annual multi-stage bicycle race, with a hub filled with replays, highlights and live action. 2025's race will be made up of 21 stages including 5 mountain stages and 3 hilly stages with high-altitude finales. It will cover a total distance of 3151 kilometres from Turin, Italy to Madrid, Spain. The La Vuelta a España Hub will be available from Monday 18 August. This year's La Vuelta a España commences on Saturday 23 August, finishing up on Sunday 14 September Adam Richman Eats Football Globally famous food explorer, Adam Richman, is back in Britain. He's embarking on another unique food tour of Britain, this time combining two of his biggest passions: food and football. Using the match as his menu, he's exploring the unique food cultures around some of the biggest football clubs in the country – from London to Liverpool, Brighton to Glasgow and beyond. The series features the best of classic fan-favourite footy scran like pies and burgers, but also more elevated fine dining now available in and around the country's top stadiums. Adam meets brilliant chefs, fans and food makers all over the country, each with a connection to the featured club as he delves into the history, ingredients, and process of creating delicious food for matchdays, or any other day of the week. Adam Richman Eats Football premieres Wednesday 20 August on SBS Food and SBS On Demand. Episodes air weekly at SBS Food starting Wednesday 20 August at 9pm. Safe Harbor Gifted hacker Tobias and his ambitious best friend Marco, are intent on cracking into the tech billionaires club. They are plucked from quiet obscurity and plunged headfirst into the chaos of organized crime when they cross paths with the Irish mob. Leading the family's operations in Holland are Sloane and her brother Farrell, who enlist their services to hack into the security system of Rotterdam harbor — Europe's largest shipping port — to secure the undetected deliveries of drug shipments. Safe Harbor premieres Thursday 21 August on SBS On Demand. Fatal Crossing Marie Sandø Jondal as Nora Sand in Fatal Crossing Nora Sand is a renowned journalist working as a correspondent for a Danish newspaper in London. When she's suspended due to an accusation for having had an intimate relationship with one of her sources in a big case, Nora travels home to live with her father. She has sworn to lie low until the scandal has cooled off, but when she's given a tip about an old missing persons case, she can't sit still any longer. Two girls disappeared from the ferry to England in the mid-80s. Since then, no one has seen them – until someone slips an envelope with old photos into Nora's mail box. Fatal Crossing season 1 premieres Thursday 21 August on SBS On Demand.