There is a moment on every long-haul flight where time stops feeling real.
You’ve had something to eat, you’ve scrolled for an hour and then watched half a movie you didn’t really care about. And then you look at the map on your screen and realise you are still very far from where you need to be.
That is the moment airlines either lose you or earn you.
Air France teaming up with Apple TV feels like it was designed for that exact moment.
Why This Seems Important To Me
I have done enough long flights to know that in-flight entertainment can make or break the experience. OK, I guess I am being a little dramatic. But seriously, in a mental way if the content is good, time moves. If it’s bad, every hour feels heavier than the last.
So when I heard that Air France is now offering Apple TV originals on long-haul flights, my reaction was not “oh cool.” I was actually relieved.
Because Apple TV does not do background noise shows. It does proper stuff.
This Is Not Throwaway Content
We’re talking about Ted Lasso, don’t let me get started on my binge affair with that one. The Morning Show, which is messy, uncomfortable, and impossible to ignore. Severance, which is so absorbing it makes you forget where you are sitting.
Those are not shows you casually click on. Those are shows you plan your time around.
Air France has also included documentaries like Prehistoric Planet and The Reluctant Traveler with Eugene Levy, plus children’s content that is actually watchable. For anyone flying with kids, that matters more than a seat upgrade, trust me.
There is also a quiet nod to French identity with lifestyle-focused series like Carême, which kinda feels on brand.

The First Three Episodes Is a Smart Move
On board, passengers get access to the first three episodes of each series through a dedicated Apple TV channel. That may sound limting at first glance, but it’s actually very clever.
Three episodes is enough to pull you in. Enough to give a damn. Enough to forget about the flight for a while.
And with 45 hours of content, refreshed every two months, it feels curated instead of a marketing gimmick.
The WiFi Changes Everything
The part that really changed how I see this partnership is the high-speed wifi rollout.
Air France is offering one week of free Apple TV access via its onboard wifi portal, which means you can watch on your own device during the flight and keep watching after you land.
That small thing can have a big psychological impact.
You are no longer watching something just to pass time in the air. You are continuing a story you started at 35,000 feet while sitting on your couch days later. The flight becomes part of your normal life, not a pause from it.
That is how modern travel should feel.
Comfort Is More Than Legroom
Air France already offers over 1,500 hours of on-demand entertainment on long-haul flights. In newer cabins, the screens are 4K, anti-glare, and support Bluetooth headphones. That last detail alone tells me someone actually listens to passengers.
There is also a new touch-based interface rolling out across 38,000 screens, available in 12 languages. Finding something good quickly matters. Especially when you are tired.
Add French cinema, global films, podcasts, music, meditation, chair yoga, kids content, and even live flight path cameras, and it becomes clear that Air France is thinking beyond distraction. They are thinking about how people feel during a flight.
Why This Feels Like the Right Direction
Flying does not need to be luxurious to be thoughtful. It just needs to respect your time and your attention.
By partnering with Apple TV and investing in fast, reliable wifi, Air France is doing exactly that. It is saying your experience matters from takeoff to landing.
If a long-haul flight ends with me annoyed that I have to stop watching a show because we are landing, that airline has done something right.