Let’s define our terms. An air show is a public event featuring scheduled aerial demonstrations, typically conducted under an FAA Certificate of Waiver. The COW is what makes the aerobatic maneuvers, low-altitude flight, and crowd proximity legal.
What’s the distinction between an air show and an aviation event? Those terms get used interchangeably, butthey’re not the same thing.
An aviation event is the broader category — it includes fly-ins, airfests, and static displays. Not all of them require a COW. An air show with performing aircraft absolutely does.
And that’s what makes the air show environment unique, isn’t it? Performing aircraft, spectators, and active airport operations sharing the same physical space at the same time.
That’s the core complexity. Now look at the stakeholders. You have performers and their crews, the event organizer who owns the logistics and regulatory compliance responsibilities, the airport manager who holds surface operations authority, the FAA through the FSDO and the on-site IIC, emergency services — ARFF and EMS — and the spectators.
Where does the Air Boss sit in that picture?
At the intersection of all of them. The Air Boss translates regulatory authority into real-time operational decisions. You’re the person all of those stakeholders look to when something doesn’t go according to plan —and at a working air show, something always doesn’t go according to plan.