Intrepid pizza purveyors in action: Frontier Airlines flight attendants pass out pies to the delighted passengers.

Intrepid pizza purveyors in action: Frontier Airlines flight attendants pass out pies to the delighted passengers.

Logan Marie Torres/AP

It's one of those stories that start in the middle. Midflight from Washington, D.C., to Denver on Monday, pilot Gerhard Brandner hit some bad weather that forced him to land in Wyoming. It was a mundane delay like most others. His Frontier Airlines plane was grounded on a tarmac in Cheyenne.

That's when the pilot made a decision that made him a national hero.

"I figure out, well, I'm getting hungry; I'll bet you the folks be hungry back there, too," Brandner says. "So I called Domino's."

Because the flight was delayed about 90 minutes, he figured there was plenty of time for the delivery. "I told them I had to feed 160 people. You know, I think they send me like 50 pizzas or so: half cheese, and the other was cheese and pepperoni."

About 30 minutes into that delay, the plane's somber mood broke, according to passenger Nadia Kouri. That's when she heard Brandner's announcement.

"He came on and said, 'Frontier Airlines is known to be the cheapest airline in the States, but your captain is not cheap. So I ordered pizza,' " Kouri tells All Things Considered.

Brandner adds, "After I announced that, I heard applause from the back of the aircraft. And I believe people were pretty happy because they were hungry, too."

As pilot Gerhard Brandner worked to get the plane back in the air, those still grounded picked up their slices.

As pilot Gerhard Brandner worked to get the plane back in the air, those still grounded picked up their slices.

Logan Marie Torres/AP

Now, in case you're imagining a car with a Domino's sign speeding onto the tarmac, Brandner clears things up: "I mean, they don't deliver to the plane. They got to deliver it to the airport outside security, and then I got the pizzas through security onto the plane."

Brandner has been called a national hero — with good reason — but he remains humble about the whole thing. "Once they set foot on my airplane, they're my responsibility. And if that includes feeding them, so be it."

But Kouri says Brandner clearly went above and beyond.

"It was not something that was the pilot's obligation in any way," she says. "It was just out of the kindness of his own heart. And it wasn't even sponsored by the company. So it was just a moment of kindness."

Here's where this story of heroism flirts with tragedy — or, at least, a bit of a bummer: Brandner's order wasn't sponsored by Frontier. He paid for the pizza out of his own pocket.

And the bummer goes even deeper. Brandner admits, "Actually, I did not get to enjoy any of the pizza because we were getting busy again for the flight from Cheyenne to Denver."

The passengers arrived in Denver just after midnight, bellies full of carbs and cheese. They thanked Brandner as they came off the plane, but no one saved him a slice. He says, laughing, "It was all gone — they were hungry!"

Though he never got any himself, Brandner's sacrifice has earned him a fitting nickname: "Captain Pizza."

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Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Monday night, Gerhard Brandner was piloting a flight from Washington, D.C., to Denver, when bad weather forced him to land in Wyoming.

MELISSA BLOCK, HOST:

And so the Frontier Airlines plane was grounded on a tarmac in Cheyenne. That's when the pilot made a bold decision.

GERHARD BRANDNER: I figured out, well, I'm getting hungry. I'll bet you the folks be hungry back there, too. And I called Domino's.

SIEGEL: He figured there was plenty of time for the delivery because the delay was going to be about an hour and a half.

BRANDNER: I told them I had to feed 160 people, you know, and I think they sent me like 50 pizzas or so - half cheese, and the other one was cheese and pepperoni.

SIEGEL: And about 30 minutes into that delay, the mood changed on the plane. That's when passenger Nadia Kouri says she heard Brandner's announcement.

NADIA KOURI: He came on and said, Frontier Airlines is known to be the cheapest airline in the states but your captain is not cheap, so I ordered pizza.

BRANDNER: After I announced that, I heard applause from the back of the aircraft, and I believe people were pretty happy because they were hungry, too.

SIEGEL: Now in case you're imagining a car with a Domino's sign speeding on to the tarmac, we should clear things up.

BRANDNER: I mean they don't deliver to the plane. They got to deliver it to the airport outside security, and then I got the pizzas in, through security.

BLOCK: His pizza offering has earned Pilot Brandner international attention, but he's pretty humble about the whole thing.

BRANDNER: You know, once they set foot on my airplane, they are my responsibility. I have to take care of them. And if that includes feeding them, you know, so be it.

SIEGEL: But Nadia Kouri says Brandner clearly went above and beyond.

KOURI: It was not something that was the pilot's obligation in any way. It was just out of the kindness of his own heart, and it probably wasn't even sponsored by the company. So it was just a moment of kindness.

BLOCK: She's right. It wasn't sponsored by Frontier. Brandner paid for the pizza out of his own pocket, which really makes this next part a bummer.

BRANDNER: Actually, I did not get to enjoy any of the pizza because we were getting busy again for the flight from Cheyenne to Denver.

SIEGEL: And so the passengers arrived in Denver just after midnight, bellies full of carbs and cheese. They thanked that pilot as they came off the plane, but no one saved him a slice.

BRANDNER: It was all gone. They were hungry.

BLOCK: Well, even though he didn't have any, Gerhard Brandner now has the nickname Captain Pizza.

SIEGEL: This is ALL THINGS CONSIDERED from NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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