Communication blackouts during the atmospheric reentry phase are a significant challenge, as flight data are lost due to interruptions caused by plasma gas generated by aerodynamic heating. This study explores a novel mitigation method using an air film, a thin insulating coolant layer on the surface. The researchers successfully reduced the reentry blackout by employing a gas injection system. Through a coupled approach using computational fluid dynamics and a frequency-dependent finite-difference time-domain method, the plasma flow properties and electromagnetic propagation were analyzed around a test model in a wind tunnel in DLR (German Aerospace Center). The numerical results indicated that the injected nitrogen gas formed an insulating air film layer on the surface. The thin layer advected backward, maintaining a low temperature without ionization, and covered the object in the wake region. The electromagnetic waves propagated and reached a distant area because the electron density was low. It means that the air film layer acted as a propagation window for the telecommunication waves. Thus, communication blackouts will be avoidable because electromagnetic waves can transmit through the air-film layer. It concluded that the air film effect, developed as a thermal protection technique, is a novel mitigation scheme for reentry blackouts.