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A RYANAIR flight has people torn after bizarre footage of "in-flight entertainment" emerged.

The video has ranked up 263.6K views on Twitter.

A bizarre video of a Ryanair flight has people torn
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A bizarre video of a Ryanair flight has people tornCredit: Twitter
A man was filmed singing a Johnny Logan song onboard
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A man was filmed singing a Johnny Logan song onboardCredit: Twitter

Peter, who posts under @PeteFarrell14, took to Twitter to share a video of the bizarre flight moment.

He tagged Ryanair acknowledging that they’re “not famous” for their in-flight entertainment but this experience was on another level.

A passenger is seen singing Hold Me Now by Johnny Logan on the intercom.

He belted out every word of the tune, with passengers joining in on the chorus.

Some passengers are seen waving their arms in the air while others sit back watching.

Viewers took to the comments to share their thoughts on the performance.

One person said: “There would not be too many at 12 mass if he was singing! Still it was a bit of craic …. I’ve seen worse on planes."

Another user said: "The song was about arriving at a crowded airport and having to circle... Hold me now."

Another said: “Ryanair does exactly as it say on the tin…

"You want to be pampered and no noise fly another airline but always remember only for Ryanair and their low fares initiative we would never have air travel like we have now.”

One viewer said: “Unless that’s the real Jonny Logan I’d be asking for my money back.”

While another joked: “Is there a payment-option to silence him?

"Could be a real earner for the airline.”

PROFITS SOAR

It comes as Ryanair recorded profits - boosted by Irish and British people getting “the hell away” from the rain, Michael O’Leary said.

The airline boss said the budget flyer is seeing no sign of a change in booking habits due to European heatwaves and if anything expects wet weather in other parts of the continent to boost Mediterranean holidays.

Ryanair posted a €663 million after-tax profit for the three months ending in June after traffic rose by 11 per cent year-on-year and average fares jumped by 42 per cent.

And O’Leary said demand looked robust for the rest of the summer as people continue to prioritise leisure travel after the pandemic.

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