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Alec Baldwin apologizes to passengers, not American Airlines

Alec Baldwin speaks at People For The American Way Foundation's 30th Anniversary Celebration on Oct. 6, 2011, in New York. Getty

(CBS/AP) Alec Baldwin may have deactivated his Twitter account, but the online battle between the actor and American Airlines is still going on.

Baldwin wrote a piece for the Huffington Post to apologize to passengers on a flight that was delayed by his refusal to stop playing a cell phone game - but he stopped short of apologizing to the airline or the flight attendant he later mocked on Twitter.

Pictures: Alec Baldwin
Read more: Airline responds after Baldwin kicked off flight

"It was never my intention to inconvenience anyone with my 'issue' with a certain flight attendant," he wrote on Wednesday.

The "30 Rock" actor believes he was singled out for using his phone while the plane remained at the gate, something he says other passengers were also doing.

"I was singled out by this woman in the most unpleasant of tones," he said. "I guess the fact that this woman, who had decided to make some example of me, while everyone else was left undisturbed, did get the better of me."

The "30 Rock" actor's note also lamented the state of modern air travel. Baldwin noted the financial struggles of airlines, saying the result is that air travel has devolved into an inelegant experience, akin to riding a Greyhound bus.

Baldwin said the level of service on U.S. carriers has deteriorated "to a point that would make Howard Hughes red-faced."

"Filthy planes, barely edible meals, cuts in jet service to less-traveled locations," he wrote.

Baldwin added that increased security on commercial airplanes after the Sept. 11, 2001 terror attacks has resulted in a "paramilitary" aura around air travel.

"September 11th was a horrific day in the airline industry, yet in the wake of that event, I believe carriers and airports have used that as an excuse to make the air travel experience as inelegant as possible," he said.

Baldwin's letter is the latest volley in a dustup with American Airlines. The airline took to its Facebook page on Wednesday to maintain it was following federal regulations when it booted an "extremely vocal customer" from a flight for refusing to shut off his cell phone.

The airline, which earlier cited passenger privacy in declining to discuss the matter, said it decided "to provide the actual facts of the matter" after Baldwin stated publicly he had gotten kicked off the flight. The company never cited the "30 Rock" star by name.

Baldwin took to Twitter after Tuesday's incident at Los Angeles International Airport, saying he was asked to leave a New York-bound plane after a "flight attendant on American reamed me out" for playing a game on his cell phone. Baldwin said he was playing "Words With Friends" while the plane sat at a gate.

American said on Facebook that Federal Aviation Administration regulations require that cell phones and other electronic devices be turned off as soon as the airliner's door has been closed. The company said Baldwin refused to comply.

"The passenger ultimately stood up (with the seat belt light still on for departure) and took his phone into the plane's lavatory," American Airlines said. "He slammed the lavatory door so hard, the cockpit crew heard it and became alarmed, even with the cockpit door closed and locked. They immediately contacted the cabin crew to check on the situation."

The airline added that Baldwin was "extremely rude" to the flight crew, calling people "inappropriate names" and using offensive language.

Baldwin's spokesman, Matthew Hiltzik, said Wednesday it was the flight attendant who acted inappropriately. He said other people on the plane were violating the regulation and that Baldwin was singled out.

"The plane was already delayed half an hour at the gate when Alec was playing 'Words with Friends,"' Hiltzik told The Associated Press. "Other passengers who tweeted flagrantly violated these rules without any repercussions - proving that they were obviously selectively enforced."

Airport police have said they did not respond to the incident.

Baldwin deactivated his Twitter account and all of his previous tweets were removed. Hiltzik said that was because the actor was setting aside his Twitter activity to concentrate on "30 Rock."

In the tweets that have since been removed, Baldwin mocked American Airlines as a company "where Catholic school gym teachers from the 1950's find jobs as flight attendants."

At least one other celebrity came to Baldwin's defense on Twitter.

Boxing great Oscar De La Hoya, who was on the same flight, tweeted that he thought the flight attendant overreacted.

"@AlecBaldwin was doing nothing wrong but playing `words' on his phone," De la Hoya said.

Baldwin boarded another American Airlines flight to New York after Tuesday's incident, but said he wouldn't fly with American again.

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