Episodes

  • EP 13 - Special Guest: Jeb Brooks + Analysis of the Viral B777 Horseshoe Bay Low-Pass Video
    Jun 25 2026

    It's been a wild few weeks, so Bob and Steve kick things off with a recap of everything happening at Nomadic Aviation—from ferry flights and aircraft deliveries to life behind the scenes running a global aviation business.

    We then break down the viral Boeing 777 low-pass at Horseshoe Bay, looking beyond the headlines to discuss what actually happened, why the margin was so small, and the decisions that likely will lead lead to one of the most talked-about aviation clips of the year.

    Next, we provide an update on the ongoing Atlantic City Airport ("ACY") controversy surrounding our Big Yellow Spirit Airlines repo documentary, including the airport's demand that the video be removed and what that means for aviation creators and documentary filmmaking.

    Finally, we're joined by one of our favorite creators, Jeb Brooks from the hugely popular GreenerGrass YouTube channel. It's a conversation we've been looking forward to for a long time. While we both tell stories centered around transportation and travel, we do it from completely different perspectives—Jeb from the passenger experience and us from the cockpit. We discuss how our channels evolved, what it's really like being a travel YouTuber in 2026, building a production team, balancing creativity with business, and the unique challenges (and advantages) of creating content as middle-aged YouTubers.

    If you enjoy travel, aviation, or simply great storytelling, be sure to check out Jeb Brooks' GreenerGrass YouTube channel and subscribe—you won't regret it.

    As always, thanks for listening, and if you're enjoying the show, please subscribe, leave a review, and share the podcast with a fellow aviation enthusiast. Blue skies!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 35 mins
  • EP 12 - Behind the scenes of "Big Yellow", + Dr Powell Returns to Discuss Job Loss and Mental Health
    May 29 2026

    After a short hiatus brought on by what may have been the busiest week in Nomadic Aviation Group's history—followed by a well-earned vacation for Steve—the Cockpit Casual Podcast is back.

    We kick things off by discussing the latest Cockpit Casual documentary covering the Spirit Airlines aircraft repossession operation, which exploded past one million views during its first week on YouTube. Steve shares behind-the-scenes details on how the episode came together under an incredibly compressed timeline, along with insights into his overall production process and the philosophy behind creating Cockpit Casual's cinematic aviation documentaries.

    From there, we turn our attention to a new project involving the delivery of the first Boeing aircraft for a promising new airline in Nigeria, discussing the challenges and opportunities involved in helping launch a new carrier in today's aviation environment.

    The second half of the episode features the return of Dr. Abigail Powell, Aviation Psychologist, for an important conversation about pilot mental health. Building on her previous appearance, Dr. Powell joins us to discuss one of the most difficult realities facing aviation professionals: coping with job loss, career uncertainty, and the emotional toll of industry downturns. With recent events affecting thousands of airline employees, it's a timely and important discussion for anyone working in aviation.

    To learn more about Dr. Powell's work, or to set up a personal session, visit theaviationtherapist.com and follow @TheAviationTherapist on Instagram.

    As always, thanks for listening and welcome back to Cockpit Casual.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 24 mins
  • EP 11 - Inside the Massive Spirit Airlines Repo Operation
    May 12 2026

    When an airline collapses overnight, somebody has to move the airplanes.

    This week on Cockpit Casual, we finally tell the full story behind the unprecedented 8-day operation that began the moment Spirit Airlines ceased operations. What followed was absolute chaos: 24 aircraft, 5 lessors, planes scattered across the country, time closing in, legal uncertainty, operational pressure, and a race against time to reposition a fleet of Airbus A320s and A321NEOs into long-term storage in the Mojave Desert.

    For eight straight days, the team at Nomadic Aviation Group operated around the clock coordinating one of the largest and most complex airline repossession efforts in recent history. Ferry crews launched with almost no notice. Dispatchers and planners worked through constantly changing logistics. Airplanes were moved from active airline service directly into preservation storage as the industry watched in real time.

    The story exploded into the national spotlight, with coverage from The Wall Street Journal, NPR, CBS News, CNBC, and countless aviation outlets — but this episode is the first time the entire operation has been told from the inside by the people actually running it.

    From the midnight phone calls… to the FAA and regulatory confusion… to the scramble for crews… to the surreal sight of abandoned airliners arriving one after another in the California desert — this is the complete play-by-play of one of the wildest weeks in Nomadic history.

    If you’ve ever wondered what really happens after an airline dies, this is the episode.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 13 mins
  • EP10 - The Man Behind the Music! Steve Giordano Sr.
    May 1 2026

    This week on Cockpit Casual: The Podcast, we take a different route.

    After a quick discussion on current aviation happenings, the conversation shifts toward something that has quietly become one of the defining elements of Cockpit Casual itself: the music.

    Joining us is Steve Giordano Sr. — lifelong Philadelphia jazz musician, composer, and the man behind much of the original score woven throughout the series. For the first time, we do a deep dive into the music that gives Cockpit Casual its emotional identity.

    We explore the meaning of jazz, improvisation, and what it means to create music over the course of a 60-year professional career. From the origins of the legendary Philadelphia jazz fusion group Symbiosis to stories from decades in the music world, this episode becomes something far bigger than just aviation or music alone.

    We also discuss the parallels between flying and jazz improvisation — decision making in real time, trusting instinct, discipline hidden beneath freedom, and the pursuit of mastery in endlessly variable environments.

    If you’ve ever wondered why music plays such a central role in Cockpit Casual, this episode explains it better than any we’ve done before.

    A conversation about art, flying, creativity, aging, passion, identity — and the soundtrack behind a life lived in motion.

    Want to talk Jazz with Steve SR? Shoot him an email! Seriously! jzguru@gmail.com

    Coming Soon: stevegiordanojazz.com

    Terje's Channel which features Steve Giordano Sr's Music:

    @nordichelicopteraviators - Head over and Subscribe on YouTube! Cool Stuff

    Find us on the web: cockpitcasual.com

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 35 mins
  • EP9 - Let Spirit Burn! & Guest Segment: the Nomadic Dispatch and Planning Team (Finally)
    Apr 24 2026

    Episode 9 kicks off with a really in-depth conversation on Spirit Airlines—what’s actually going wrong financially, why the ULCC model is struggling in 2026, and why a $500M government bailout probably isn’t the solution.

    Then—finally—we’ve got something people have been asking for forever: We bring on Nomadic’s flight planning and dispatch team (Wes Gardner, Mark Lawrence, and Chris Fochuk) to talk about what goes into planning long-haul ferry flights, how chaotic it can get behind the scenes, and how each of them ended up at Nomadic.

    If you’ve ever wondered how these trips actually come together… this is the episode. Meet the gang!

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 37 mins
  • EP8 - Farewell to Nomadic One, Merger-talk, and Bob and Steve's Humble Beginnings in Aviation
    Apr 17 2026

    Episode 8 opens on a sentimental note as we say goodbye to our Westwind — an airplane that’s been part of the Nomadic story for several years. The episode begins with an 8-minute farewell as the jet prepares to leave the hangar for a pre-buy inspection and, hopefully, a new chapter with its next owner. (Youtube version is a Video!)

    From there, it’s back to the usual unfiltered conversation. Bob and Steve dive into the latest on airline mergers, rising fuel prices, and what it all means for the industry right now. The conversation then shifts into something more personal — a look back at the early days of their flying careers, the uncertainty, the setbacks, and the reality of building a life in aviation.

    It’s an honest discussion about the cyclical nature of this industry — the highs, the lows, and everything in between — from two guys who’ve lived it for decades.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 6 mins
  • EP7 - The Aviation Therapist, Selling the Westwind, and What Comes Next
    Apr 10 2026

    This week’s episode covers a lot of ground. We open with our usual Bob-and-Steve hang for the first half hour — talking about the pending sale of the Westwind, what we’re considering as a replacement, and a deep dive into the current state of the single-engine turboprop market.

    We talk through real-world tradeoffs between aircraft like the TBM, Meridian/M600 class, and PC-12 — cost of entry, mission capability, and what actually makes sense for how we fly.

    Then we shift gears into something very different.

    In the second half, we sit down with Dr. Abigail Powell, an aviation-focused therapist known online as @theaviationtherapist.

    We dig into the mental health side of aviation — the parts that usually don’t get talked about in cockpits, group chats, or on layovers. From the pressures of performance and the stigma around seeking help, to hyper-vigilance, compartmentalization, and the unique psychological demands of aviation careers, Dr. Powell brings a grounded and honest perspective that every pilot — professional or recreational — will recognize.

    We cover:
    • Why mental health challenges in aviation are often hidden
    • How stress and anxiety show up differently in high-performance flying environments
    • Why compartmentalization is both a survival skill and a long-term risk
    • The realities of asking for help in a career where “weakness” can feel like a liability
    • Practical tools pilots can use to manage stress and stay mentally sharp

    This one goes places we don’t usually go — and it’s worth the listen.

    Guest:
    Dr. Abigail Powell
    Instagram: @theaviationtherapist
    Website: theaviationtherapist.com

    As always — if you fly, work in aviation, or just love hearing real conversations from inside the industry, this episode is for you.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 31 mins
  • EP6 - Lunch in Tashkent, Passover with Steve, and listener Q&A
    Apr 3 2026

    This week’s episode opens with something a little different — a 12-minute, behind-the-scenes segment from Tashkent, Uzbekistan, where you join us for lunch on a recent trip. It’s raw, cutting-room-floor footage from the upcoming Cockpit Casual series dropping this summer. Fair warning: this segment is definitely better experienced on video — you can watch it on our YouTube version — but it still holds up if you’re along for the ride on audio.

    From there, Steve shares a bit about his Passover traditions before we get into a big industry topic — the latest (and not-so-great) changes to the United Airlines MileagePlus program.

    This week’s Side Schtick turns into a fun one: if you could fly with any celebrity pilot, who’s in your cockpit? That conversation, naturally, takes a detour into the legendary Piper Aerostar.

    We wrap things up with a solid listener Q&A session — some great questions in this one.

    And if you haven’t yet — check out this episode on YouTube for the full Tashkent segment as it was meant to be seen.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 30 mins