The first few interviews are phone interviews. First they will call just to make sure that you are compliant with their appearance and uniform standards which include having only one piercing in each ear and having zero tattoos. Then they will call you for a real interview, and if you pass that, you are then offered an in person interview which they will fly you to free of charge. Their headquarters is in Denver which is where my interview was at.
When you arrive to the in-person interview, you will meet people from all sorts of healthcare backgrounds, restaurants, customer service, bankers, and even war veterans. Apparently everybody wants to be a flight attendant, so the competition is stiff.
They will give you a tour of the headquarters, then an introduction to all of their higher-ups. After, they will have you wait in a room for your two-on-two interviews. During the waiting process, each candidate must introduce his or herself to the crowd and then read an in-flight announcement to the crowd and will be judged on how he or she carries his or herself and how the announcement is delivered.
Once you are called in to your two-on-two interview, it is likely only one candidate will get through. Unfortunately, I was not that one, so they pulled me and the others who did not pass into a room to tell us that our interview process would not continue.