Up in the Air

In Jason Reitman’s new dramedy Up in the Air, George Clooney plays Ryan Bingham, a man who travels around the country trying to get to ten million frequent flyer miles, a number only reached by six other people, which would grant him uber elite black card ConciergeKey frequent flier status on American Airlines.

But thats a movie… a real-life Ryan Bingham-type found a way to cheat his way to American Airlines lifetime platinum-elite status, which grants him, among other things, early availability of upgrades for the rest of his life. Much in the way that Adam Sandler’s character in Paul Thomas Anderson’s Punch Drunk Love cheated the system by buying millions of packages of pudding, a man Mr. Pickles (his anonymous online nickname) was able to achieve this by legally purchasing $800,000 in coins from the U.S. Mint, which offers free shipping on presidential and Native American $1 coins, sold at face value.

Pickles deposited the 250 coin boxes to his bank account, which he then used to pay off his credit-card bill. Pickles’ largest single deposit was $70,000. He used several banks and shipping addresses, purchasing the currency using a credit cards offering frequent flier miles rewards, which resulted in over two million miles total at American Airlines. Pickles claims to have also pumped miles into his United Airlines and Starwood Preferred Guest program accounts as well.

Mr. Pickles wasn’t the only one to take advantage of this loop hole. At least several hundred frequent-flier junkies ordered more than $1 million in coins until the US Mint started identifying them and began cutting them off. According to the Wall Street Journal, officials began to notice “a sharp uptick in large repetitive orders from a group of individuals,” in late August, and “at about the same time, the Mint received reports from banks around the country that coins were being deposited that were still in their U.S. Mint boxes.” They soon discovered internet message boards discussing the deal, and took appropriate measures to put a stop to the practice.

Related Posts with Thumbnails

  • That is really clever. Real life satire if you ask me.
  • quintushalls
    This isn't cheating! This is genius! My only beef is that he didn't fly those miles! The whole original point is that you paid for plane tickets and got miles from the distance traveled (regardless of price). If you have been flying so long, your business is worth more and therefore you expect more, and as a reward for using their business so much, you get points toward some kind of personal reward. If you are using purchases on your credit card, how is the transfer being done to the airlines? I think it makes for a different kind of flyer, not one that really needs all those extra services demand from flying so often.

    Also, I've been with different airlines and they have wiped out my miles on random. It pisses me off when I just collected something like 660,000 miles (over 10 years) and they go ahead and delete. So I don't think it is worth using points for miles. Instead, I now prefer cash-back programs. Those are more immediate and the credit card company can't just wipe it out at any time.
  • I don't see how anyone can call this "cheating". He legitimately purchased the coins and legitimately accrued the frequent flyer miles. This was obviously at the expense of the US Mint.

    Who is the moron who came up with the stupid idea to sell money at face value, ship it free and take credit cards for the sale?
  • okayflint
    that's awesome, I always enjoy when someone takes advantage of a corporation in a harmless and smart way.
  • I think you might be missing a piece of info here. You don't mention that the credit cards involved give frequent flier miles for purchases made.

    "Coin buyers charged the purchases, sold in boxes of 250 coins, to a credit card that offers frequent-flier mile awards, then took the shipments straight to the bank. They then used the coins they deposited to pay their credit-card bills. Their only cost: the car trip to make the deposit." - WSJ
  • Goobity
    The back-story is interesting, but the trailer doesn't do anything for me. I don't care about this guy at all.

    Unrelated gripe: Do we need to see people in movies on the phone and / or texting each other? What happened to dialogue?
  • Art imitates life.
  • Philippe
    This is the guy that inspired Paul Thomas Anderson in the first place : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Phillips_%28...
blog comments powered by Disqus