Jetson’s personal flying car stuns Arkansas crowd with ‘dancing in the sky’ performance
Published on Oct 12, 2025 at 11:38 AM (UTC+4)
by Molly Davidson
Last updated on Oct 09, 2025 at 9:14 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by
Emma Matthews
At the UPSummit in Bentonville, Arkansas, Jetson’s personal eVTOL took to the air.
No CGI. No green screen. Just a real flying car putting on a show.
Over 20,000 spectators watched as the Jetson ONE moved with dancer-like precision, leaving the crowd stunned.
For a company promising to ‘define the future of air mobility,’ this was the moment it proved it already has.
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The Jetson ONE – a flying car that moves like a drone
Forget science fiction.
This was the real deal.
The Jetson ONE looks like something between a drone and a race car, built from lightweight aluminum and carbon fiber to keep the mass down to just 253lbs.
It’s sleek, minimal, and completely electric.


Power comes from eight high-performance brushless motors, each spinning its own propeller.
Together, they deliver enough thrust to make flight seem effortless.
Smooth banking turns, quick directional changes, and controlled ascents that look almost balletic.
The crowd in Bentonville saw what the rest of the world has only watched through screens: the Jetson ONE gliding, twisting, and pausing midair.


In the footage above, you can see a demo meant to thrill, but also to show how simple flight can be.
That simplicity comes from the flight computer.
Jetson says anyone can learn to fly it in minutes.
One hand on the joystick gives you full control of altitude and direction, while the system handles balance and stability automatically.


And safety remains a key motivation.
The Jetson ONE can keep flying even if one motor fails, features radar-based auto-landing, hands-free hover, and even a ballistic parachute for emergencies.
Flight time is around 20 minutes, top speed is capped at 63mph, and in the US, you don’t even need a pilot’s license to fly it.
Sign us up.
Jetson’s next moves could reshape how we think about flying
This isn’t Jetson’s first viral moment.
In a captivating video last year, Jetson demoed the ONE taking flight and leaving a trail of purple smoke.
The smoke visualized rotor wash for precise control during slow maneuvers, highlighting the company’s focus on safety and efficiency.


Then came the world’s first eVTOL race, where Jetson pilots pushed their flying cars to the limit in a closed-course showdown.
This live performance in Arkansas feels like the next evolution, moving from proof-of-concept to public spectacle.
Watching the Jetson ONE dance in the sky isn’t just about technology, it’s about emotion, excitement, and possibility.
Jetson isn’t waiting for the future of flight to arrive – it’s building it, flying it, and showing us how good it can look when it does.
If this is what air travel looks like in 2025, we’re not waiting for flying cars anymore.
We’re watching them soar.
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Molly Davidson is a Junior Content Writer at Supercar Blondie. Based in Melbourne, she holds a double Bachelor’s degree in Arts/Law from Swinburne University and a Master’s of Writing and Publishing from RMIT. Molly has contributed to a range of magazines and journals, developing a strong interest in lifestyle and car news content. When she’s not writing, she’s spending quality time with her rescue English staffy, Boof.