The former JetBlue Airways flight attendant who became an instant celebrity after he dramatically quit his job in August has a new gig and a new look.
Months after he told off a passenger over a plane's public address system, a former JetBlue flight attendant told CNN's Larry King on Tuesday that "a perfect storm of bad manners" triggered his much ballyhooed outburst.
Former JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater explains the "perfect storm of bad manners" that preceded his plane exit.
While former flight attendant Steven Slater was in court Tuesday on charges stemming from the deployment of an airplane's emergency chute, his apartment was burglarized, according to a news release from the Queens County district attorney.
A former JetBlue flight attendant -- who reportedly cursed a passenger over a plane's public address system, deployed the plane's emergency evacuation slide, and used it to dramatically exit a flight at JFK airport in August -- pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted criminal mischief as part of a plea deal with prosecutors.
Steven Slater is expected to plead guilty Tuesday to one felony charge and receive mental-health counseling
A former JetBlue flight attendant -- who reportedly cursed a passenger over a plane's public address system, deployed the emergency evacuation slide, and then used it to dramatically exit a flight at JFK airport in August -- may plead guilty to a misdemeanor Tuesday as part of a plea bargain with the Queens district attorney.
The flight attendant who deplaned dramatically last month could undergo counseling as part of his agreement
Surveillance video of flight attendant Steven Slater's "infamous" slide from a JetBlue aircraft was released in August.
An attorney for Steven Slater, the JetBlue flight attendant who made headlines in August when he deployed a plane's emergency chute and walked off the job, indicated in court Tuesday that discussions about a possible plea agreement with prosecutors were under way.
You might have thought that he had already made it abundantly clear that he wasn't coming back, but the JetBlue flight attendant who famously departed a plane via the emergency chute last month has formally quit his job, his attorney said Monday.
A JetBlue flight attendant whose fame took off after his dramatic exit down an emergency chute is is no longer employed by the airline.
See the flight attendant launch the plane's emergency slide and jump out onto it
You haven't really made it until someone makes a YouTube video about you.
Since Steve Slater's theatrical exit from his job, many YouTube videos have been dedicated to the former flight attendant.
The airline's chief operating officer calls Slater's actions "unacceptable"
The flight attendant whose dramatic departure from a JetBlue plane at a New York City airport has transformed him into a folk hero to some wants his job back, his lawyer told reporters Thursday.
Steven Slater's ex-wife defends him against claims he was the one being rude on the fateful flight
A witness to a JetBlue flight attendant's now-famous outburst recounts the details to CNN's Anderson Cooper.
In a few short days, JetBlue flight attendant Steven Slater has achieved folk-hero status.
With casting options from Neil Patrick Harris to Philip Seymour Hoffman, PEOPLE asks you to decide
As rogue JetBlue airline attendant Steven Slater hits the talk shows this week to discuss his freakout on Monday, it's quite clear that he has the sympathy of the man on the street. All of us have wanted to quit a job with a flourish -- grabbing two beers and hopping on an inflatable slide will be hard to beat -- and all the ninnies talking about his putting potential ground crews in danger by inflating the slide will soon find something else to get all puritanical about.
CNN's Allan Chernoff explains why flight attendant Steven Slater has become somewhat of a folk hero.
It's safe to say air travelers are paying more attention -- and maybe giving a little more respect -- to flight attendants after the incident on a JetBlue flight that has mesmerized the country and put a new spotlight on the once-glamorous profession.
On a bad day at work, during an I-can't-take-it-any-more moment, we've probably fantasized about outlandish ways to quit our jobs. This week, Steven Slater, a flight attendant for JetBlue Airways, made a dramatic job exit: cursing and sliding down the plane's emergency chute with beer in his hand. Slater's job-quitting performance has been hailed as heroic by some people. CNN asked readers and iReporters to share their stories about quitting in a dramatic, and oftentimes unprofessional, way.
We all fantasize of one day quitting our jobs in a storm of profanities, middle fingers and toppled computers.
Steven Slater's mother Diane, who's been fighting cancer, comes to her son's defense
On his Facebook and MySpace pages, he boasted about flying high and taking a five year break from the skies
A flight attendant whose profanity-laced tirade has turned him into a folk hero of sorts was released on bail Tuesday night from a Bronx detention center.
A JetBlue passenger describes witnessing a flight attendent cursing out passengers, then quitting on the job.
Slater earns rousing support online for standing up against "flight attendant abuse" after a spat with a passenger
Call them the not-so-friendly skies.
A JetBlue flight attendant faces criminal charges for some alleged unruly behavior. CNN's Allan Chernoff explains.