I would imagine that they have insurance for this sort of thing. It would be worth a call to the airline's customer service department. Even though you didn't get the name of the flight attendant at the time, you still have your flight information and the airline will know who was on duty then. The airline should pay for whatever needs to be done. To see what might be involved, you could find your MBP on this link and download the service manual for it: Rotate your Mac notebook to its right side and spray the keyboard again, from left to right. Use compressed air to spray the keyboard, or just the affected keys, in a left-to-right motion. But removing the MBP keyboard is a lot more involved than the iBook keyboard, and I don't even know if it's feasible to clean it this way. Hold your Mac notebook at a 75-degree angle, so its not quite vertical. Then I would let it air dry until it was bone dry, maybe setting it up with a fan blowing on it. I'd probably remove the keycaps to do this. I don't know about MBP keyboards, but if it had happened to my iBook, I would take the keyboard out and rinse it thoroughly with deionized water until all traces of the juice were gone. In reality, the keyboard should be cleaned or replaced, and the computer inspected to be sure the juice did not penetrate any further.
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December 2022
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