People online have praised Air New Zealand for the cheeky advert.
"Kudos to you Air NZ, you just flipped that brilliantly. Give your marketing gurus a pat on the back for that come back!", one person wrote.
Another agreed saying: "Nice you can have a laugh at yourselves. Well done."
"The ability to laugh at yourselves is truly awesome and very Kiwi!," one person commented.
Even though the advertisement "boasts" the rap safety video, which features local musicians Kings, Randa and Theia rapping about plane safety over beats from Run DMC and Sisters Underground, it has been removed from flights and been replaced by a previous video.
Air New Zealand says its decision is based on a new campaign to stimulate domestic travel and promote tourism to Northland.
The previous video's axing comes after rapper Denzel Curry, one of the headlining performers at Auckland's Laneway Festival on Monday, criticised the video which screened before a flight to Australia.
Others to have commented include hip-hop singer Anderson .Paak and the tour manager for actor and rapper Donald Glover.
A scathing Herald column called the safety video "unbearable" and called for the clip to disappear before it affected the careers of the artists involved.
Read more: Why Air New Zealand's cheeseball safety rap video needs to disappear
Regional Economic Development Minister Shane Jones also wasn't a fan of the video.
"I don't want to be too petty," Jones said in November.
"But the reality is the [video] trivialises safety; I think it's a juvenile mishmash and it's toneless."
He said at the time that he had sat next to quite a few tourists on planes, many of whom were confused by the video.
"Based on my quite scientific assessment of travellers' views about that video, I have never heard the F-word more frequently and they're not saying 'first class'."
Although not a fan of this video, Jones had enjoyed some of Air NZ's previous safety videos - including the one now making a return.
"I liked the one about up North, the one with Rachel Hunter, her hanging out with the Maoris," he said.