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Spirit Airlines shut down operations on May 2, 2025, leaving thousands of travelers stranded and hundreds of employees without jobs. Within hours, a content creator named Hunter Peterson posted a TikTok video with a simple, audacious pitch: the public should buy the airline and run it themselves. Before most people had finished reading the news, more than 124,000 strangers had already signed up. The internet had found its next big experiment.
This article was created with the assistance of AI and reviewed by our editorial team for accuracy and clarity.
Spirit Airlines Didn’t Just Fail

Spirit Airlines was never a luxury brand. It built its identity around budget fares, charging extra for everything from carry-on bags to seat selection. But years of financial strain, rising fuel costs, and failed acquisition bids gutted the airline. When CEO Dave Davis announced the shutdown, he admitted the company needed hundreds of millions of dollars it simply could not raise. Every Spirit flight was canceled overnight, and customer service went completely dark.
The Man Who Wanted to Buy an Airline on TikTok

Hunter Peterson is a content creator and voice actor with a talent for turning everyday observations into viral moments. He had actual history with Spirit Airlines: in 2024, he spent 24 straight hours flying on Spirit planes, visiting five major airports just to document what budget air travel really feels like. His YouTube video on the experiment earned around 93,000 views. When Spirit collapsed, Peterson wasn’t your typical bystander watching the news. He had opinions, and a platform to share them.
“Owned by the People. Airlines Gone.”

Peterson’s pitch was direct and surprisingly catchy. In the now-viral TikTok video, which has since surpassed 4.6 million views, he suggested the public nationalize Spirit Airlines and build a new carrier in its place. He called it a genius idea. The phrase he used, “Owned by the people. Airlines gone,” took on a life of its own in comments and reposts. Whether viewers took it literally or treated it as satire, they shared it. And sharing turned into something much bigger.
The Website That Crashed Under Its Own Popularity

Within three hours of posting his first video, Peterson launched letsbuyspiritair.com, a site where visitors could pledge money toward the proposed buyout. These were non-binding expressions of interest, not actual transactions. Still, traffic hit so fast the website crashed shortly after launch. As of May 4, pledges were paused while the site’s infrastructure was upgraded. It was a fitting metaphor: the idea was moving faster than anyone, including Peterson himself, had built for.
The Numbers Behind the Movement

When the site stabilized, the figures were striking. More than 124,700 people had registered interest, collectively pledging over $88 million. The average individual pledge sat at $667. Peterson also launched an Instagram account called Spirit Airlines 2.0, which gathered 163,000 followers within days. None of these numbers represented actual money collected. But they did represent something real: a large and enthusiastic crowd willing to put at least some symbolic weight behind the idea.
Peterson Builds a Team in Real Time

Aware of how quickly things were escalating, Peterson took to TikTok to publicly call for help. He said he was looking for software developers to rebuild the site, public relations professionals to handle the media attention, aviation lawyers to advise on the legal landscape, and experienced airline executives who could turn the concept into a real plan. He kept one firm boundary in place: no television interviews. If people wanted to hear from him, he would communicate through social media until he had spoken with his lawyers.
What the Experts Are Actually Saying

Airline industry veterans are skeptical. Robert W. Mann Jr., a former airline executive and president of the consultancy R.W. Mann and Co., told USA TODAY that Spirit would likely have been acquired already if it had any viable path forward. The airline is in active liquidation, meaning a bankruptcy court is already in the process of distributing its assets to creditors. No crowdfunding campaign, however large, can easily interrupt that process. The legal and financial barriers alone make a direct public takeover extremely unlikely.
Spirit Won’t Disappear. It Will Just Scatter

Even if the airline itself cannot be revived, its pieces will continue. Mann explained that Spirit’s planes will fly again under different names and paint schemes. Some of its employees will be hired by competing carriers. Airport slots and ground facilities will be absorbed by other airlines. In that sense, Spirit will live on in fragments, distributed across the industry. What won’t survive, in his view, is Spirit as an independent, budget-focused airline with its own identity and brand.
What This Moment Actually Tells Us

Whether or not a single TikToker ever buys an airline, the campaign says something worth noting. Hundreds of thousands of people felt moved enough to act, even symbolically, against the feeling that big institutions fail regular people without consequence. Peterson himself admitted the whole thing started as a joke. But jokes that attract $88 million in pledged interest in 48 hours stop being just jokes. The real question isn’t whether this will work. It’s why so many people wanted it to.
