Auddia Introduces Voyex AI Platform to Automate Travel Rebooking Amid Spirit Airlines Shutdown
May 4th, 2026 10:02 AM
By: Newsworthy Staff
Auddia Inc. unveils Voyex and its FlightFix platform, an agentic AI system designed to automate disruption recovery for stranded passengers, highlighting structural weaknesses exposed by the Spirit Airlines collapse.

Auddia Inc. (NASDAQ: AUUD) today introduced Voyex, an AI-native digital travel agency, commenting on the widespread travel disruption caused by the sudden shutdown of Spirit Airlines, which has left tens of thousands of passengers stranded across the United States. According to Reuters, airlines are now scrambling to help stranded Spirit passengers as they attempt to rebook travelers and manage cascading operational failures.
Voyex is one of three subsidiaries resulting from the closing of Auddia’s transformational merger with Thramann Holdings, LLC, to form McCarthy Finney (NASDAQ: MCFN), an AI-native holding company with a $250 million DCF valuation based on internal projections. Upon closing, McCarthy Finney will comprise four AI-driven subsidiaries: LT350 (distributed AI datacenters), Influence Healthcare (AI-driven value-based care), Voyex (agentic AI travel rebooking), and Auddia (AI-driven music discovery).
Voyex is developing FlightFix, an agentic AI platform designed specifically to prevent the type of system-wide passenger stranding currently unfolding. While the platform is not yet launched, the Spirit collapse underscores the need for a modern, automated, AI-driven disruption recovery system. FlightFix is being designed to monitor itineraries in real time, predict delays and cancellations, identify alternative travel options, communicate options to passengers instantly, automate rebooking through agentic AI, cancel original itineraries and process refunds or credits via integrated fintech rails, and coordinate transport to private flight options as needed.
In large-scale disruptions such as the Spirit shutdown, FlightFix is being architected to aggregate stranded passengers and place them on contracted private jets and charters through fixed-base operators (FBOs), with tarmac-side transport provided by Voyex vans. This creates a scalable safety valve when commercial airline capacity collapses.
“The Spirit Airlines shutdown is exactly the type of disruption that demonstrates why FlightFix needs to exist,” said Jeff Thramann, CEO of Auddia and Founder of Voyex. “Passengers shouldn’t be left sleeping on airport floors while airlines improvise solutions. Voyex is architecting an AI-driven platform designed to automate the entire disruption recovery process. The industry needs this infrastructure and the Spirit collapse makes that clear.”
Auddia entered into a definitive merger agreement on February 17, 2026, to combine with Thramann Holdings. Upon completion, Auddia will change its name to McCarthy Finney and trade under the ticker MCFN. The merger is expected to accelerate development of the FlightFix platform. For more information about Voyex, visit Voyex | AI-First Digital Travel Platform.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by PRISM Mediawire. You can read the source press release here,
