Every so often, a clip resurfaces online claiming that the Hollywood star Emma Stone made history as “the first civilian to fly in an F-22 Raptor.” It collects millions of views, a flurry of amazed comments, and the occasional breathless re-share. It is also completely false — and the aircraft itself tells you why.
As with most durable internet myths, there is a small kernel of truth buried inside it. So let us separate the real story from the nonsense.
Quick Facts
- The claim: viral clips say actress Emma Stone “flew” in an F-22 Raptor — some now AI-enhanced
- The truth: she sat in an F-22 cockpit on the ground, for the 2015 film Aloha. She never flew
- Why it is impossible: the F-22 is single-seat — there is no two-seat version, so no passenger can ride in one
- The real first: she was reportedly the first civilian, not a pilot or mechanic, allowed in an F-22 cockpit
The Kernel of Truth
Back in 2015, Emma Stone starred alongside Bradley Cooper in Cameron Crowe’s film Aloha, partly shot around U.S. military facilities in Hawaii. As a special concession to the production, Stone was reportedly allowed to climb into the cockpit of an F-22 Raptor — becoming, by several accounts, the first person who was neither a pilot nor a mechanic permitted to do so.
That is genuinely a neat piece of trivia. But note the key word: she sat in it. On the ground. The canopy closed for a photo, and that was the extent of the adventure.

Why She Couldn’t Have Flown — Even If She Wanted To
Here is the detail that instantly debunks the whole story: the F-22 Raptor is a single-seat fighter. Unlike many combat aircraft, it was never built in a two-seat training version. There is no back seat, no second cockpit, nowhere to strap in a passenger. Flying in an F-22 as a civilian is not merely against the rules — it is physically impossible. There is simply no seat to put you in.

Enter the Fake Videos
None of that has stopped the claim from circulating for years as clickbait — and lately, AI-generated clips have given the myth a glossy new coat of paint, complete with fabricated “cockpit” footage of Stone supposedly airborne. The clip below is one of those misleading posts. It looks slick. It is not real.
How to Spot the Nonsense
The Emma Stone story is a perfect little case study in how misinformation works: take a true, modest fact — an actress sat in a fighter cockpit for a movie — and inflate it into something impossible and far more clickable. A few quick reality checks will save you every time. Single-seat aircraft cannot carry passengers. Civilians are not handed the controls of frontline stealth fighters. And if a clip seems too remarkable to be true, it usually is.
The real story needed no embellishment. Being the first civilian ever to sit in the cockpit of an F-22 is a pretty good claim to fame all on its own.
Sources: Aloha production notes (Cameron Crowe); U.S. Air Force; Lockheed Martin.




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