Tiffany Gomas, a marketing professional, revealed to DailyMail.com that her life has been completely ‘blown up,’ after her viral video involving a ‘not real’ plane last month.
Tiffany Gomas asks people not to ‘judge’ her for ‘not real’ plane episode
“My life has been blown up. It’s frightening. Things go viral and everything changes,” Gomas told the DailyMail.
“No one knows anyone else’s story, and no one should judge. No one knows what it’s like,” she continued.
She appeared in some special photos for the first time since her video.
On July 2, the incident raised safety worries as Gomas, holding her Goyard bag, hurried to the front of the plane. And informed fellow travelers that she was leaving because she believed the aircraft wasn’t secure.
‘No one knows anyone else’s story, and no one should judge. No one knows what it’s like.’
Wearing a white sleeveless top and black stretchy pants, with her lengthy hair pulled neatly into a bun, Gomas who owns Uppercut Marketing – a company that tells its customers, ‘We make you look really really good,’ stood by the entrance of her $1.6 million home. She mentioned that she was consulting with a lawyer.
“They’re staking out my house. They’re staking out my neighbors and going through my mail,” Gomas said. She also claimed that “so much” of the story is “inaccurate,” but declined to give an explanation.
Gomas’ fiery dispute and its aftermath
This week, a lengthier version of the video emerged, revealing Gomas angrily arguing with a flight attendant.
The strange outburst seemingly started as an argument between Gomas and her family members. According to information from police records that The Post looked into, Gomas said her relatives had taken her Airpods.
The situation compelled passengers on the same plane to exit the aircraft. Afterward, they had to get back on the plane, causing a delay of around three hours for the flight heading to Orlando.
In the viral video, she shouted, “There’s a reason why I’m getting the f—k off”” but she was still hesitant to go. The American Airlines staff had to remove the 38-year-old woman, according to the police documents.