Delta and Coca-Cola apologize for napkins some call "creepy"
"We rotate Coke products regularly ... but missed the mark with this one," Delta said
Emmy Award-winning journalist Kris Van Cleave is the senior transportation correspondent for CBS News based in Phoenix, Arizona, where he also serves as a national correspondent reporting and contributing to all CBS News broadcasts and platforms.
Van Cleave covered the 117th Congress as a CBS News congressional correspondent providing live reports from the west lawn during the January 6 attack on the Capitol - coverage that was part of "CBS Mornings"' Emmy win for Best Live Newscast. While on Capitol Hill, he covered the second impeachment of President Donald Trump, the investigation into the January 6 attack and the passage of the landmark Bipartisan Infrastructure Law.
Before covering Congress, Van Cleave spent more than five years as CBS News' transportation correspondent beginning in September 2015, and before that, he served as a correspondent for CBS Newspath, the Network's 24-hour television newsgathering service for CBS stations and broadcasters around the world.
During his time at CBS News, Van Cleave worked in New York, Washington, Dallas and Phoenix. He developed expertise in covering transportation accidents including the 737 Max investigation, the helicopter crash that killed Kobe Bryant and the deadly Amtrak derailment in Philadelphia. As the pandemic raged, Van Cleave reported on how the travel industry adjusted to a COVID-19 world and covered the social justice protests in the nation's capital.
His yearslong CBS News investigation into a dangerously outdated safety standard for vehicle seats sparked a congressional investigation and prompted legislation passed by Congress to improve auto safety improvements in 2021. His coverage of automotive safety issues also earned him two Emmy nominations for investigative reporting.
Prior to joining CBS Newspath, Van Cleave was a reporter and anchor for nearly eight years at WJLA-TV and NewsChannel 8 in Washington, D.C. While there, he covered the mass shooting at Washington's Navy Yard, the Virginia Tech massacre and the 2012 South Carolina GOP presidential primary. He also reported from outside the White House the night news broke that Osama bin Laden was killed, broadcasted from Haiti after the devastating earthquake, and traveled to Afghanistan to cover local troops. Van Cleave also anchored NewsChannel 8's 6 p.m. newscast.
Previously, Van Cleave was a reporter at XETV/Fox 6 News in San Diego, California, and KOAA-TV in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He began his television career as the producer of KTLA-TV/Tribune's nationally syndicated "CyberGuy Report."
Van Cleave has earned 12 regional Emmy Awards, nine regional Edward R. Murrow Awards, and was part of ABC7's team of reporters honored with the 2010 and 2014 National Edward R. Murrow Awards for breaking news coverage. He was twice named "Best Reporter" by the Chesapeake Associated Press Broadcasters Association. In 2011, Van Cleave was selected as a RIAS Berlin Komission Fellow, and traveled to Pakistan in 2013 as an East-West Center Fellow.
He graduated Summa Cum Laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Southern California.
"We rotate Coke products regularly ... but missed the mark with this one," Delta said
One pilot said a drone missed his jet by less than 30 feet
TSA call-outs which are increasingly being blamed on the financial impact of the shutdown
Documents show the shutdown has prevented the NTSB from launching 74 accident investigations
The TSA administrator said a spike in sick calls is due to officers who can no longer work for free
About 7.6 percent of TSA officers had "unscheduled absences" on Monday, up from 3.2 percent the same day last year
TSA officers have been working without pay as the shutdown continues, becoming the longest in history
Miami's airport is closing a concourse until at least Monday, sending TSA officers to busier checkpoints as a precautionary measure
A report finds T-Mobile and other providers sold data to third parties
Agency officials are concerned once screeners miss their first paychecks, that could signal a "tipping point"
The incident was captured on cellphone video by another passenger
All 189 people on board were killed when Boeing 737 Max 8 jet crashed into the Java Sea last month minutes after takeoff
When an engine blew, shrapnel blew out a window, killing passenger Jennifer Riordan
"I felt we landed hard until I looked over and saw a hole in the side of the plane and water was coming in," he said
Teia Cherry and her family thought they could ride out Florence at home. Then came the water.