Nathan Fielder's 737 Stunt Involved Elaborate Workaround of Ridiculous 1,500-Hour Rule
In order to perform his famous 737 stunt, Fielder had to navigate around flight-hour requirements that critics say don't improve safety but do cause a shortage of pilots.

In the season finale of the HBO show The Rehearsal, comedian Nathan Fielder flew a fully loaded Boeing 737 to test his novel idea that fatal plane crashes could be prevented by creating better interpersonal communication between pilots and first officers.
In keeping with the show's premise, Fielder wanted to make his dry-run test as close to a real-life commercial airliner flight as possible—complete with a cabin full of passengers.
This naturally required Fielder to obtain a commercial pilot's license and buy (with HBO's money) a 737.
Neither is particularly easy, but it is relatively straightforward from a legal perspective. Flying with passengers, however, required Fielder to engage in an elaborate workaround of federal regulations that were, ironically enough, adopted as the last bright idea to prevent plane crashes.
Following the Colgan Air disaster in 2009, when a commercial airliner crashed in New York, killing 50 people, Congress passed legislation requiring that pilots have 1,500 hours of flight time before qualifying for the Air Transport Pilot license. The previous requirement had been 250 hours.
As detailed in the show, this created a problem for Fielder, who, in the run-up to the filming of his first 737 flight, had only accumulated a few hundred hours of flight time.
To get around this hurdle, Fielder exploited a loophole in the law that allowed him to carry hired actors posing as paying customers.
People can argue about whether Fielder's theory of plane crashes, and his proposed fix of having pilots and co-pilots act out a brief scene of them bluntly confronting each other before flights, will actually improve aviation safety.
Rep. Steven Cohen (D–Tenn.), the ranking member of the House's Transportation Subcommittee on Aviation, was hilariously uninterested in the idea during his meeting with Fielder earlier in the season.
In a recent Wall Street Journal article, pilots' and aviation experts' assessment of Fielder's idea ranged from minimally supportive to openly disdainful. Many people interviewed by the Journal stressed that pilots already do a lot of role-playing and situational training to improve in-flight communication.
What can be said for Fielder's idea is that it would be at least as effective as the 1,500-hour rule (which is to say, not at all) and much less costly.
No other country in the world requires airline pilots to rack up as much flight time as the U.S. currently does.
Neither the Federal Aviation Administration (which regulates aviation safety) nor the National Transportation Safety Board (which investigates crashes) has found any relationship between the 1,500-hour rule and improved safety.
(The two pilots in the Colgan disaster notably had over 1,500 hours of experience each.)
Critics charge that the 1,500-hour rule reduces safety by forcing pilots to spend endless hours performing routine flights at the expense of time spent training in more productive simulators.
Regional airlines complain that it's made recruiting pilots much more difficult, leading to a shortage of pilots and reduced regional airline service.
Nevertheless, efforts to reform the 1,500-hour rule have run into concerted opposition from the country's main pilots' union, the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), and their Democratic allies in Congress. President Donald Trump's pending nominee for head of the FAA, Bryan Bedford, has proven exceptionally controversial because of his own pushback against the regulation.
Gary Leff, who writes the View From the Wing blog, suggests crass self-interest motivates ALPA's support for the 1,500-hour rule. The regulation makes it harder to become a pilot and, therefore, helps push up pilots' wages.
ALPA has been sharply critical of Fiedler's own proposed safety improvements, saying in a statement to the Journal that crew communications training is "built on decades of research, training, and real-world experience—not fictional TV shows or comedy routines."
As off-the-wall as Fielder's idea might be, it's not inherently more ridiculous than the ineffective hours regulation that ALPA has spent so much time defending.
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What can be said for Fielder’s idea is that it would be at least as effective as the 1,500-hour rule (which is to say, not at all) and much less costly.
What apparently can’t be said for Fielder’s idea, at least with any more specificity than “improve interpersonal communications,” is what it is, or what the hell that means, or what it would entail.
What’s his idea that is the subject of an entire article? And where is the Reason editor who should point this out, instead leaving it to me?
Imagine if they required 1500 hours training to enforce the law. You know, to walk around with weapons and use them on anyone who refuses to obey your every whim.
Keep imagining. It’s closer to half that.
Maybe it should be 6million hours. Can’t be too safe!
*unmutes retard out of curiosity*
A barber requires at least 1500 hours training or a 2500 hour apprenticeship. A plumber must go through at least 4000 hours just to move from apprentice to journeyman. My cooking training that you guys routinely mock was 1080 hours.
Know how many hours it takes to be a cop, to walk around like a peacock and attack or kill anyone who doesn’t obey your every whim? 833. That’s it.
Being a cop requires, on average, 833 hours.
Thanks for reminding me why you’re on mute.
I’ve met bricks that were more intelligent than you.
*puts retard back on mute*
2,000 hours, three written tests and one practical test to get my A&P license in 1986.
You needed a license to bag groceries? 🙂
Lol @ “unmute”
What we really need is to repeal whatever The Jones Act of the sky is in order to get more, cheap, less experienced pilots from around the world to fly planes and transport cargo containers over and around domestic infrastructure.
[cups hand over mouth]Sounds like a great idea! With the best of intentions! What could possibly go wrong?
On average there are less than 50 commercial airplane crashes per year in the world.
I doubt that letting dirty furriners with their non-white, apelike hands operating the machinery of the planes over domestic soil would change that.
Then again they are vermin. Like immigrants. Can’t be trusted. Best to treat them like criminals.
Ideas™ !
Granting that the 1500 hour rule is silly, Fielder’s idea isn’t really even innovative. “crew resource management”, which is about improving communication between pilots, clearly defining roles (e.g. who is flying the plane, who is handling radio communications, who is working on the landing gear problem, who is updating the flight plan), avoiding undue deference when one pilot is much more senior than another, etc., has been a major emphasis in aviation safety for several decades. There is a lot of research on this and a lot of training devoted to it.
Other issues aside, I’m amazed that HBO would consider this a worthwhile project. It is hard to believe that it will add greatly to their income or reputation, it must have been very expensive to pay for Fielder’s training, to buy a 737, and to buy sufficient insurance, if it was even possible to get full coverage for such a stunt. And of course a wholly unnecessary flight is not good environmental practice.
The thing is that things like CRM and sterile cockpit are “a thing” in current commercial flights. I’ve not watched this season of The Rehearsal (as I found Fielder rather tedious and annoying having watched the first season) but I rather doubt that he has some revolutionary solution here that has been ignored or wrongfully rejected.
The 1500 hour rule of course is not the only rule – IIRC there are minimum hours of multi-engine, IFR, night flying etc also.
The actual number of hours seems of limited relevance – three hours on autopilot at 35,000 feet drinking coffee is not particularly challenging compared to four flights of 45 minutes each as stuff rarely goes wrong above 20,000 feet and few decisions are required (except, perhaps, deciding which flight attendant to attempt to bed that night).
Something like a requirement for 500 flights as pilot flying from gate to gate on flights reaching at least FL 20 and landing at and taking off from at least 20 different major airports on 250 of those flights with some number IFR would seem more reasonable.
Shit happens on takeoffs and landings and opportunities for screwups (both human and mechanical) are far greater and interacting with ground, approach/departure, TRACON, and route controllers gives more chances for an incompetent pilot to be exposed and “getting a number to call”.
Like a child, I also wish that reality were more like the fiction that entertains me so much.
People can argue about whether Fielder’s theory of plane crashes, and his proposed fix of having pilots and co-pilots act out a brief scene of them bluntly confronting each other before flights, will actually improve aviation safety.
But… you’re not going to make the argument, are you.
….
Nope. Not even once.
No other country in the world requires airline pilots to rack up as much flight time as the U.S. currently does.
Reason compares the USA to all the other garbage countries! *drink*
“Captain, the left engine just fell off.”
“Yes, First Officer, let’s talk about that. How does losing an engine make you feel?”
“Uh oh Captain, now we lost the landing gear.”
“Sorry First Officer, we haven’t talked about the engine yet. Per comedian Nathan Fielder, we have to keep our communications clear.”
While there have been instances of poor flight deck communication leading to crashes (Tenerife, Korean Air 801, Avianco 052, JAL 1045), to suggest that all crashes can be prevented by some sort of pre-flight Kabuki theater is ridiculous.