Private jet company WheelsUp said that its Super Bowl business "is up" 60% compared with last year’s Patriots-Falcons matchup, according to Sean Smyth of the BOSTON GLOBE. WheelsUp "hosts a party for its customers during Super Bowl week that features NFL players and other celebrities." Interest is "especially high for the game in Minneapolis." Private jet charter services are "scrambling to pick up extra business from people who can afford to travel in style to Sunday’s game." A Metropolitan Airports Commission spokesperson said that the commission, which "operates a seven-airport network surrounding the Twin Cities, is expecting about 1,100 aircraft during Super Bowl week." Limited landing and takeoff slots -- corporate jet traffic is "concentrated on three airports in Minneapolis, St. Paul, and suburban Eden Prairie, all within a half-hour of US Bank Stadium -- create a juggling act for private aviation outfits." Almost all of the landing spots, secured through an online reservation system, were "gobbled up in the hours following the NFL’s conference championship games on Jan. 21." New Hampshire-based Rectrix Commercial Aviation Services CEO Richard Cawley said, "We're very fortunate to be in Patriot nation" (BOSTON GLOBE, 2/2).