Chrissy Teigen is grateful to be alive after struggling a scare on a flight.
“We just had something called an ‘erroneous takeoff,’” Teigen, 38, mentioned in her Instagram Tales on Monday. “I don’t even know what ‘erroneous’ means, to be honest with you. We were going a thousand miles an hour to take off and then came to a complete stop.”
She continued, “And for, like, three seconds, I was bracing for impact — absolutely positive that we were braking because we were going to hit something and we didn’t.”
Neither Teigen nor the opposite passengers had been apparently harmed within the incident, however the TV character shared that the scary second made her develop into “very religious all of a sudden.”
“I became very religious all of a sudden. I was like, ‘Praise Lord, praise be,’” she recalled. “We’re going back to the gate. I’m so grateful for these pilots and the plane for doing what it was supposed to do.”
The mother of 4 then tagged her husband, John Legend, 45, in a cheeky caption over the video asking him to “Please answer your phone I’m on final destination.”
Her message is a nod to the iconic 2000 horror movie of the identical identify a few group of airplane passengers who, after dishonest loss of life when a flight explodes mid-air, are killed off in several torturous methods.
Teigen and Legend share 4 kids collectively.
In one other replace on her Instagram Tales, Teigen mentioned, “That’s actually my worst nightmare. Documenting your flight and being like, ‘oh here’s the plane, here’s the menu.’ And then all my last photos on DailyMail would be, ‘she had beer cheese. That was her last meal.’”
With a relieved smile, she added, “My last words were nearly, ‘Meemaw’s beer cheese.’”
HuffPost has reached out to Teigen’s reps.
Again in 2017, Teigen skilled one other airline fake pas after winding up on a “flight to nowhere,” after the crew found an unauthorized passenger had boarded the flight.
The airplane, which had 226 passengers aboard, was pressured to show round 4 hours into its flight to Tokyo.
“A flying first for me: 4 hours into an 11 hour flight and we are turning around because we have a passenger who isn’t supposed to be on this plane,” she tweeted. “Why … why do we all gotta go back, I do not know,” she wrote in a Dec. 26, 2017 tweet.
In a separate tweet, she added, “Why did we all get punished for this one person’s mistake? Why not just land in Tokyo and send the other person back? How is this the better idea, you ask? We all have the same questions.”