Bernadette Berger, Director of Innovation at Alaska Airlines
Ron Schmelzer
Planning the perfect vacation or business trip often starts simply but quickly descends into endless scrolling, comparing destinations, juggling flight prices, and wading through traveler reviews. The airport experience further compounds this stress, with confusion and congestion adding layers of anxiety for travelers. Unveiling its offering at the recent SXSW 2025 conference, Alaska Airlines is addressing these travel challenges head-on with its new genAI platform that aims to streamline and personalize the trip experience, making it conversational and efficient while reducing the chaos traditionally associated with travel.
Bernadette Berger, Director of Innovation at Alaska Airlines, highlights how guest feedback inspired the creation of this AI-powered tool. “Over the past year, we’ve transformed the ‘Day of Travel’ experience at key airports with rapid, self-serve solutions,” said Bernadette. “The right combination of real-time information, personalized self-serve options, contextualized wayfinding, direct text messages, and carry-on confidence will make for a stress-free and seamless boarding flow.”
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Reducing Baggage and Boarding Anxiety
Berger emphasizes that the goal is not to just simplify trip planning but also to improve the entire airport journey. “Our guests value predictability, less time in lines, and fewer manual interactions. AI-driven automation, from bag tagging to boarding, lets travelers spend their time at the airport however they choose, away from crowded gates and queues,” she explains.
To combat boarding anxiety, especially related to carry-on baggage, Alaska Airlines has piloted advanced computer vision at gates to manage carry-on counts accurately. Berger elaborates, “Baggage anxiety causes guests to crowd around gate areas prematurely. By using AI to track carry-on space accurately, we help guests relax, knowing their luggage will fit on board.”
Personalized Navigation and Stress-Free Boarding
One of the biggest stressors travelers face is airport navigation and gate congestion. Berger says, “Congestion and confusion are top concerns for our guests. AI allows us to provide personalized, contextualized information directly through our app. Imagine being at a café, getting a text with a gate-change notification, and being shown exactly how long your walk will take.”
The company is also launching an AI-powered wayfinding tool within their app, designed to cater specifically to diverse traveler needs. “Whether you’re navigating with children, require accessible routes, or prefer directions in another language, our personalized AI navigation tool significantly reduces airport stress,” Berger notes.
A Human-Centric AI Strategy
AI integration at Alaska Airlines isn’t about replacing human interaction, but enhancing it. Berger highlights the airline’s AI strategy as follows: “We’re transforming customer service agents into hosts, shifting repetitive tasks to automation. This lets agents focus on meaningful, personalized interactions. Not all guests require personal attention, but when they do, the difference can be profound.”
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Alaska Airlines maintains rigorous standards for the ethical use of AI, guided by the NIST AI Risk Management Framework. Berger explains, “Transparency, fairness, and security are cornerstones of our AI implementations. We rigorously monitor our AI applications to ensure they meet high standards of ethical responsibility and customer trust.”
The Future of AI in Travel: Personalized Digital Assistants
Looking to the future, Berger is excited about “AI Agentics”, envisioning personalized digital assistants that seamlessly guide travelers throughout their entire journey. “Imagine planning family trips effortlessly, with your AI agent adapting plans instantly in response to disruptions and suggesting unique, less crowded destinations to help tackle overtourism,” she envisions.
Airlines around the world are already beginning to explore similar approaches. Expedia’s AI integration and KLM’s AI-driven baggage management highlight broader industry trends toward automated personalization. Alaska Airlines is aiming to further push the innovative envelope in travel by aiming for comprehensive AI integration from booking to boarding and beyond.
Berger summarizes the company’s vision succinctly, “Our ultimate goal is reducing travel anxieties and enabling deeply personalized, enjoyable travel experiences. At its core, AI is about enhancing humanity in travel, not replacing it.”
By Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protectionon
DFFP received reports of smoke near Mt. Joaquin at 8:00 PM Saturday. A DFFP helicopter responded and located the Joaquin Fire (#238) burning in black spruce and tundra roughly 31.5 miles southwest of McGrath.
Due to a nearby native allotment, additional aerial resources were ordered. The fire is currently 30 acres and has six smokejumpers, one air attack, and two single-engine water scoopers. No structures are threatened.
This map shows the location of the Joaquin Fire (#238). Click on the image to download the PDF file.
‹ Go Evacuation for Anderson due to wildland fire
Two new wildfires reported Saturday evening north of Anderson ›
Categories: Active Wildland Fire, Alaska DNR – Division of Forestry & Fire Protection (DFFP)
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Tags: 2026 Alaska Fire Season, Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection, DFFP Coastal Region, Joaquin Fire, Southwest Alaska
The crowd reacts to a performance at the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN)
Anchorage is commemorating Juneteenth with dancing, music and celebrations of Black excellence and culture this weekend.
The citywide Juneteenth celebration also includes opportunities for education, community gathering and reflection, and features vendors and guest speakers. The event kicked off Friday and continues from 1 to 6 p.m. Saturday and Sunday on the Delaney Park Strip.
A dancer performs during the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN) A young drummer performs during the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN) Tragil Wade, an entrepreneur, author and inspirational speaker, takes the stage at the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN)
Tragil Wade, an entrepreneur, author and inspirational speaker who is the big sister of former NBA great Dwyane Wade, was Friday’s special guest.
Saturday’s festivities, spotlighting the theme “Community and Culture,” kicked off with a freedom rally and parade. Saturday also features a youth segment, hip-hop dancing, community line dancing, multiple DJs and a performance from Soul Society.
“Faith and Family” is the theme for Sunday’s festivities. There will be a special Father’s Day opening at 1 p.m., a praise cardio session on the grass and an HBCU gospel segment. The afternoon will close with a community praise dance.
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Juneteenth commemorates the day that the last slaves in the Confederacy were informed of their freedom following the Emancipation Proclamation on June 19, 1865. Long celebrated by Black Americans, Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2021. In 2023, the Anchorage Assembly made Juneteenth an official city holiday, and in 2024, the Alaska Legislature passed a bill to designate Juneteenth as a state holiday.
Members of the crowd cheer during a performance at the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN) A young drummer focuses during a performance at the Juneteenth Citywide Celebration at the Delaney Park Strip in Anchorage on Friday, June 19, 2026. (Chris Bieri / ADN)
A pilot was killed in a plane crash in mountainous terrain near Cordova, Alaska State Troopers said Friday.
The agency was notified of the overdue Piper Pacer around 8 p.m. Thursday, troopers said in an online post. The pilot was believed to be the sole person on board the aircraft, which was thought to be flying between Yakutat and Fairbanks, troopers said.
Aircraft from the Alaska Air National Guard and Alaska Wildlife Troopers started searching for the plane, and a Guard helicopter crew found the overdue Piper Pacer around 4 p.m. Friday where it had crashed near Kanak Island, about 40 miles southeast of Cordova, troopers said.
The pilot, whom troopers did not identify, was found dead in the crashed plane, troopers said. His body was take to the State Medical Examiner Office in Anchorage for autopsy and positive identification, according to troopers.
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Troopers said the pilot’s next of kin and the National Transportation Safety Board were notified.