- Hooters, the restaurant chain known for its hot wings and tank top-wearing servers, operated an airline in the early 2000s.
- You might not have known about it because it didn’t last long – about three years in fact.
- Here’s how Hooters Air became a successful airline before turning into a $40 million failure.
You might not remember it, but Hooters once had an airline.
The restaurant chain launched an air service in 2003, and onboard every flight were two Hooters servers that helped tend to passengers.
Three years after it launched, however, Hooters Air shut down, but not before the iconic “breastaurant” enjoyed a short period of success in the sky.
We talked to people who worked for Hooters Air – flight attendants and one pilot (who asked to remain anonymous) – as well as a few industry experts to find out what happened. They told us what it was really like to work for the airline, dispelled some common misperceptions about what it was like to fly it, and explained the airline’s rapid downfall.
Here's how Hooters Air became a successful airline before turning into a $40 million failure.
Hooters has been offering patrons beer and hot wings, among other things, from its chain of restaurants for 35 years now.
The chain's trademark waitresses, clad in orange shorts and tank tops, have helped cement Hooters as the original "breastaurant" of the food industry.
But as popular as the company may be, one fact often forgotten...
... is that Hooters also had an airline at one point.
You might not have known about it because it didn't last long.
It started in 2003, and, initially, the airline was successful. But it shut down just three years later.
The airline was based in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, and offered low-price, direct flights in the US.
Hooters Air flew to 15 destinations, including Las Vegas and Denver ...
... and airfares were a flat rate of $129 each way.
So, why did Hooters think it was a good idea to start an airline? And why did it fail?
It all started in 1983 when Hooters was founded by six businessmen in Clearwater, Florida.
A year later, an Atlanta-based group led by Bob Brooks, seen below, saw the company's potential and bought it outright.
"It was the first 'breastaurant' chain, so basically they pioneered the idea that they were going to have all their waiters wear short shorts and really tight tank tops," Kate Taylor, a retail reporter at Business Insider, reported.
Source: Business Insider
"From the 80s until the early 2000s, it was a very successful kind of growing business," Taylor said.
By 2003, Hooters was flush with cash, and Bob Brooks wanted to expand the brand.
So he bought a small, North Carolina-based charter airline called Pace Airlines ...
... and repainted the airplanes with the company logo. Hooters Air soon took off.
"There was a lot of intrigue about this airline, not because of what was happening on the inside, but more so what people perceived from the outside," a former Hooters Air pilot who asked to remain anonymous told Business Insider.
In fact, a common misperception about Hooters Air was that the flight attendants on the flights were Hooters servers, otherwise known as Hooters Girls, which isn't true.
Every flight aboard Hooters Air was staffed by two Hooters Girls, and they did wear their signature shorts and tank top ensembles.
Back in 2003, before Hooters Air made its maiden flight out of Gary, Indiana ...
... Hooters recruited servers from some of its local restaurants to work aboard its flights.
But they weren't serving wings or beer 35,000 feet in the air.
"It's gonna be a nice change of pace from the restaurant," one Hooters Girl told local TV at the time. "Instead of serving food and picking up trash, we get to just basically entertain and ask trivia questions and all that."
Source: Nick Mantis/New Millenium Productions
Since they lacked the FAA certification that the flight attendants had, Hooters servers could not operate any machinery onboard, like closing the airplane doors or pushing the food carts.
Source: Nick Mantis/YouTube
In addition to the Hooters servers that staffed each flight, three FAA-certified flight attendants were also aboard every flight, and they were the ones who served food and drinks to passengers...
... while the Hooters Girls aboard simply entertained guests and helped the flight attendants with whatever they needed.
These flight attendants did not don the usual garb associated with the restaurant chain.
"I had a navy blue dress with like, a little orange scarf," former Hooters Air flight attendant Sara Nitz told Business Insider. "Very professional."
"It had the little owl embroidered on it," Nitz said.
"We had two Hooters Girls from different restaurants from the area that would do the trivia on the plane, but they had no training whatsoever," former Hooters Air flight attendant Kimberly Cerimele told Business Insider.
"They were just there just for passenger fun," Cerimele said.
But the women were still working. One Hooters Girl told local TV that the shifts were round trip, with workdays spanning from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Source: Nick Mantis/YouTube