KEY POINTS
  • Incoming CEO Joanna Geraghty will have to address JetBlue's reliability and cost-control problems.
  • The airline is still losing money while larger airlines have returned to profitability post-pandemic.
  • A federal judge blocked JetBlue's plan to buy Spirit Airlines for $3.8 billion last month, forcing both carriers to plan for a future on their own.

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A JetBlue Airways plane prepares to depart New York's LaGuardia Airport.

In the 24 years since JetBlue Airways' first flight, the New York-based airline has pushed the envelope for a carrier of its size. Now, with some veteran executive hires and cost-cutting, it's trying to get back to basics.

JetBlue was a pioneer in seat-back entertainment, free Wi-Fi, good snacks and a business-class cabin with lie-flat seats that debuted at lower prices than rivals'. More recently, it's ventured across the Atlantic with flights to London, Paris, Amsterdam and Dublin. And, until a judge blocked the deal last month, it planned to buy budget airline Spirit Airlines for $3.8 billion. (The carriers are appealing that decision.)

In this article