LAX Baggage Handler CAUGHT Treating Guitars Like Trash And This Is Why You Should NEVER Check Your Bags
61 days ago
Audio By Carbonatix
If you’ve ever trusted an airline with anything you actually care about, this video is about to make you feel like a complete idiot.
A viral clip out of Los Angeles International Airport shows a baggage handler straight up abusing guitar cases, launching them, dropping them, and basically treating them like they’re indestructible bricks instead of expensive, fragile instruments.
No care, no hesitation, no “maybe I shouldn’t destroy someone’s stuff today.” Just grab, toss, repeat.
And here’s the part that should really piss you off, this isn’t some random hoodie you bought for $20. These are guitars. Real ones. The kind people save up for, travel with, write music on, and actually give a damn about. And they’re getting handled like airport garbage.
You can literally see the moment every musician’s soul leaves their body watching this.
Because deep down, everyone already suspects this is what happens behind the curtain. You check your bag, it disappears, and from that point on it’s basically in a UFC fight you’re not allowed to watch. This video just confirmed it in the worst way possible.
Airlines love to sell you the fantasy, “your belongings are safe, your items are handled with care.” Meanwhile, somewhere on the tarmac, your stuff is getting fastballed into a pile by a guy who couldn’t care less.
So now the real question, is this one careless worker… or is this literally the standard?
Because if this is normal, then “fragile” stickers are basically decoration, and checking a bag is just you rolling the dice and hoping your stuff doesn’t get wrecked for sport.
And good luck getting compensated if it does. You’ll fill out 12 forms, talk to three different customer service reps, and maybe, maybe get enough back to buy a pack of strings.
At this point, the lesson is brutally clear, if it matters to you, don’t let it leave your sight.
Because once it’s gone, it’s not luggage anymore.
It’s target practice.
