While many tend to leave airports feeling tired and disoriented, one South Korean politician set the internet alight with his smooth exit.
Kim Moo-sung strolled through Seoul's Gimpo airport and - without breaking his stride - casually pushed his suitcase to an attendant as he smiled for photographers.
A clip of the smooth arrival on Tuesday has gone viral - although some users condemned it as an example of entitlement and abuse of power by middle-aged men, Daily Mail reports.
The effortless manoeuvre has been dubbed the "authoritarian no-look pass" by South Korean media - in a nod to the basketball move when a player looks away while passing the ball to his teammate.
South Korean site Naver was brimming with viewers commenting that the video was reflective of the 'bare face of Korean elite'.
"This shows... the way he treats his subordinates! How does he act in private if he acts like this in an airport? This is the bare face of the Korean elite!" one user wrote.
On Reddit, the video was titled Korean Politician Swag and drew more derisive comments, this time aimed at the waiting attendant.
"You can even see the guy bow while walking over to pick up the bag," one viewer wrote.
'"Thank you" - The guy that just caught his luggage,' another added acerbically.
Addressing the social media storm, Moo-sung said: "I do not see what the problem is. Reporters should mind their own business or other important news."
This is not the first time that Moo-sung, who was leader of the Saenuri Party from 2014 to 2016, has hit the headlines.
In 2015 he tactlessly told a 26-year-old Nigerian student at a charity event, "The coal briquettes and your face are the same colour."
After being hit with public backlash, he wrote on Facebook: "It was an inappropriate remark where I didn't consider that a friendly expression could be hurtful."
An abuse of power is known as 'gapjil'. There were 1,289 recorded cases of gapjil in South Korea in 2016 - with men inciting 90 per cent of incidents.
Men in their 40s and 50s made up more than half the cases.