Anonymous wrote:Did anyone see the interview? I’d be pretty pissed in that situation too. The passenger asking to turn off the noise machine was clearly either not a mom or had nannies to handle the crying babies. Team Kaley here. If you are on a horrible flight with delays and everything and the only thing that can get your baby to sleep is a noise machine next to their ear, so be it. Really, on a plane, you’re going to complain about a noise machine? Would you rather hear the crying baby?
Anonymous wrote:geez the whole ambient noise of a plane is like a giant sound machine for most babies, not need for a separate sound machine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:geez the whole ambient noise of a plane is like a giant sound machine for most babies, not need for a separate sound machine.
I also had this thought, but then I also wonder how loud their white noise machine is that it was audible over the ambient noise on an airplane! I feel like it must have been a really loud device. I had a little portable white noise machine I used for my kid as an infant, that you could clip to the canopy of a car seat or stroller and it would play fairly quietly inside it. I remember using it on walks and probably while sitting out on a patio or at a park. I never used it on a plane but I'd be surprised if it would be audible to others over the plane noise.
Though if I did use it and someone complained, I would of course turn it off. I just think they must have been using a really loud machine for someone to hear it and complain.
Anonymous wrote:Did anyone see the interview? I’d be pretty pissed in that situation too. The passenger asking to turn off the noise machine was clearly either not a mom or had nannies to handle the crying babies. Team Kaley here. If you are on a horrible flight with delays and everything and the only thing that can get your baby to sleep is a noise machine next to their ear, so be it. Really, on a plane, you’re going to complain about a noise machine? Would you rather hear the crying baby?