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Fly Me a River [Mark Steyn]
National Review Online ^ | June 20, 2005 issue | Mark Steyn

Posted on 06/08/2005 6:17:39 AM PDT by Constitution Day

Fly Me a River
If you want to see America’s worst-dressed gay men, take a plane.

The King Hussein Center happens to be stocked with lissome young ladies,” wrote Jay Nordlinger the other day. He was reporting for National Review Online from the Davos Middle Eastern confab in Jordan, and, although he had many insightful observations to make about the big geopolitical socioeconomic questions of our time, it was the “lissome young ladies” who caught my eye, as evidently they had caught his. Jay’s no slouch at the in-depth investigative-journalism stuff, so, warming to his theme, he went on to report that many of the “hostesses” were wearing the uniform of Royal Jordanian Airlines.

Ah, yes, I sighed contentedly, as the memories came flooding back. In recent years, my flights to the Middle East have begun with a little US Airways twin-prop down to Boston or New York — no “cabin service” at all; they don’t have any on their bigger planes either, but at least on the twin-props there’s no hatchet-faced “flight attendant” in shiny stretch pants and flat shoes shuffling along the aisle doling out mini-bags of mini-pretzels to remind you of all the “cabin service” you’re not getting. In Boston or New York, I switch to Virgin — much better: proper “trolley dollies” in bright smart red skirts and heels and the best kind of peppy Estuary English accents that make you feel like you’re Austin Powers and they’re at least prepared to pretend you’re shagadelic. And then in London, for the final leg (as it were), it’s Royal Jordanian to Amman — bliss: “air hostesses” in dapper stylish uniforms that, like Singapore and the other great Asian airlines, are an artful combination of native elements from local culture and retro cool from our own. East is East and West is West and ne’er the twain shall meet, but on the best national carriers from east of Suez they come pretty close.

The Royal Jordanian gals had our man Nordlinger waxing nostalgic. “These uniforms are a real throwback, to the America of the 1950s or so,” he wrote. “You remember that movie in which Leonardo DiCaprio played that conman, who posed as a pilot for Eastern or something? You remember that bevy of fresh, eager, fetching stewardesses (and in those days, you could use the word ‘stewardess’ — ‘flight attendant’ was a long way off)?”


The look of Catch Me If You Can

Catch Me If You Can, the DiCaprio caper in question, does a grand job of evoking that era — the jet-age glamour of the air terminals with the flying-saucer shapes; Sinatra singing “Come Fly with Me” with that marvelous Billy May intro that sounds like an orchestral Boeing taxi-ing down the runway and taking off into the blue; and, of course, the gals.

Which begs the question: Where did it all go? In America, that is. U.S. air travel is the exception that proves the rule about American service: In a Welsh restaurant or Austrian department store, I long for American waitresses and sales clerks. But on USAir or Northwest or Continental, I pine fondly for Royal Jordanian or British or Thai Airways. I yield to no one in the amount of derision I’m willing to heap on “Old Europe,” but, if it’s a choice between Delta and Air France, or United and Lufthansa, I’m with Jacques and Gerhard in wanting to put as much distance as possible between me and the arrogant bullying unilateralist Yank, if only when airborne and pushing a cart of Clamato cans.

Two years ago, an American Express survey revealed that 55 percent of customers had found a “noticeable decline” in cabin service since 9/11, which is pretty amazing because it was a good nine-tenths down the abyss before 9/11. The Wall Street Journal reported the dissatisfactions of “flight attendants” — “A lot of us,” said Glenda Talley of US Airways, “are in a terrible mood before we even set foot on the plane.” “There’s more stress to the job,” complained Kristi Tucker of Delta. “As human beings we can only take so much,” said someone from United. Yeah, fly me a river, baby.

Or how about this? According to flight attendant René Foss, “It didn’t take long after Sept. 11 for people to start acting like complete idiots again.” The first sign you’re acting like a complete idiot is when you book a ticket with these guys. The Journal proposed eight improvements airlines could introduce — more legroom, junk the cart, predictable stuff. But no one thought to address the most obvious defect — that U.S. airlines look just awful, beginning with the shiny shapeless prison-warden garb of their staff, the product of some malign combination of unionization and feminism. I’m not being sexist here — if you want to see America’s worst-dressed gay men, take a plane; when the networks have exhausted every other lame makeover reality-show concept, they should do Queer Eye for the Fly Guy. But the point is, for many folks, an airline ticket is one of the biggest single payments we make other than for a car or house, and in return we get a grubby bus ride with seat restraints.

True, many of those spiffy foreign airlines are either state-owned or de facto monopolies. But America’s federally-bailed-out basket-case carriers aren’t exactly shining exemplars of ruthless capitalism. And their government-subsidized contempt for the public starts with the look — the look of the planes and the look of the staff, the look that says, “Who needs a look?” When the Arabs understand customer service better than you do, you know you’ve got a problem.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: airlines; marksteyn; steyn
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To: Turbopilot
If you want to pay Greyhound prices, you will receive Greyhound service. If you understand economics and want to pay for a high level of service, it is still available in your choice of business/first class

First class is simply NOT what it used to be, especially within the continental United States. The level of service has deteriorated remarkably in the last few years. For three to five times the price of a cattle class ticket, I expect better.

81 posted on 06/08/2005 6:23:49 PM PDT by Chuckster (Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnoset)
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To: Turbopilot

You just don't get it. The airlines are going bankrupt because of the employee union demands. The snotty service doesn't make the public feel any sympathy. Plus, the public now resents that tax dollars are needed to bail out ludicrous pension plans that the thugs extorted. Your smugness never ends and certainly isn't appealing to most hard working people that are forced to fly on the lousy US airlines. No one is demanding anything other than courtesy, which you obviously feel you are too superior to give to a paying customer.


82 posted on 06/08/2005 6:24:27 PM PDT by bfree (PC is BS)
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To: Squawk 8888
Don't confuse the poor guy with facts; he needs to spend all his time worked up into a frothy fit because the world is against him. He's already unaware of cabotage, can't understand the fact that his type irritates me as a passenger since I guess he thinks his obnoxiousness only irritates the crew, and has no idea of the real purpose of flight attendants, and has proven himself to be the exact kind of passenger who is the real cause of air travel unpleasantness.

Like you, I'd love to be in a position in which I got paid to fly, but think I have better career prospects than the starving CFI->overnight cargo->right-seat of a regional->lucky break->MAYBE a shot at the majors career path I'd need to make a decent salary as a pilot. Considering how much it costs to get a C172 to 5500 MSL for an hour, I'm amazed at the arrogance of those who think they should get FL350 at Mach .85 whenever and to wherever they want, and get drinks from a crew whom they can abuse, for less than a taxi across town would cost.
83 posted on 06/08/2005 6:24:55 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: bfree
You just don't get it. The airlines are going bankrupt because of the employee union demands.

That may have been the case previously. Most airlines have now gotten all the concessions from unions that they want. $55/barrel oil is now the sole cause of airline losses in the U.S., and you'd think a conservative would have more contempt for the Middle Eastern oil cartels than for American companies. But, I think you just like being a jerk.

Your smugness never ends and certainly isn't appealing to most hard working people that are forced to fly on the lousy US airlines.

I'll continue to ignore the "your" and try to drill into you the fact that I do not now, nor have I ever, worked for any airline. And no one has ever been forced to fly on any airline. You're welcome to charter a flight and get any level of service you're willing to pay for. You wanna go from NY to LA for a hundred bucks? Don't bitch about no free booze.

No one is demanding anything other than courtesy

Then maybe you could give it to the employees whom you've entrusted with your safety, rather than abusing them because they don't give you Ritz-Carlton service for Motel 6 prices.
84 posted on 06/08/2005 6:42:32 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: bfree
The airlines are going bankrupt because of the employee union demands.

Wrong. They are going under because they borrowed too much money, bought too many planes, kept their old planes flying too long and didn't hedge enough fuel when oil was $30/bbl. The cost of labour is the smallest expense item on the ledger.

Do the math- the salaries of the aircrew on a 100-seat jet (two pilots, two cabin crew) would come to roughly $200k to $300k per year. A typical short-haul schedule means two round trips per day, meaning the crew will schlep 400 people around the country on a typical workday. Assuming that the average crewmember works 200 days in a year, that means that $300k paid to the crew was covered by 80,000 one-way pax. Which means that the services of that hostie, whose primary responsibility is the protection of human life and whom you so desire to vituperate, plus the services of the other crew on board, are costing you the princely sum of $3.75.

85 posted on 06/08/2005 6:42:39 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: bfree

Exactly. Some "choice" that is... Hardly anyone pays for those seats, most are frequent flyers who upgrade. It drives me nuts that people use "first class" as some standard. Its a sad standard. I expect what is in first class throughout the entire plane. When I'm paying $400 to fly from San Antonio to Orlando round trip, I want something a little more than feeling like a sardine having pretzels (yeah, not peanuts anymore... more PC crap) tossed at me. If I wanted that, I'd fly Southwest! People don't pay more just for the heck of it. They do it because they expect more. Until the "big three" get this... they will continue to go down hill.


86 posted on 06/08/2005 6:42:52 PM PDT by plewis1250
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To: Turbopilot
Don't confuse the poor guy with facts

I know but I've been in the mood for a good rant all day and haven't posted any in ages. I'm tempted to thank him for inspiring me to let off some steam :-D

87 posted on 06/08/2005 6:44:21 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: Turbopilot
Airline cabotage is the carriage of air traffic that originates and terminates within the boundaries of a given country by an air carrier of another country. Rights to such traffic are usually entirely denied or severely restricted. Under 49 U.S.C. section 40109(g), we may authorize a foreign air carrier to carry commercial traffic between U.S. points (i.e., cabotage traffic) under limited circumstances. Specifically, we must find that the authority is required in the public interest; that because of an emergency created by unusual circumstances not arising in the normal course of business the traffic cannot be accommodated by U.S. carriers holding certificates under 49 U.S.C. section 41102; that all possible efforts have been made to place the traffic on U.S. carriers; and that the transportation is necessary to avoid undue hardship to the traffic involved (an additional required finding, concerning emergency transportation during labor disputes, is not relevant here).

So that's why you're so smug. You think federal law will protect your a$$ from outside competition no matter how poor the service you dish up to the public. Considering the financial state of most domestic airlines nowadays, I wouldn't count on it.

88 posted on 06/08/2005 6:49:05 PM PDT by Chuckster (Neca eos omnes. Deus suos agnoset)
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To: Constitution Day
Hooters Air is the exception that proves the rule to airlines having boring stewardesses. You get to see them exactly as God intended them to be seen.

(Denny Crane: "Sometimes you can only look for answers from God and failing that... and Fox News".)
89 posted on 06/08/2005 6:49:38 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: goldstategop

Yeah but can they do CPR? ;-)


90 posted on 06/08/2005 6:55:58 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: Chuckster
So that's why you're so smug. You think federal law will protect your a$$ from outside competition no matter how poor the service you dish up to the public. Considering the financial state of most domestic airlines nowadays, I wouldn't count on it.

I'll continue to take the "you" as impersonal based on my never having worked for any airline. But I will lump you in with bfree's type, who can't imagine why their rudeness and arrogance would put off anyone but the airline employees to whom that rudeness is directed.

It also seems reasonable to make the point that cabotage is a legal tradition that has existed in maritime law for centuries before powered flight was even invented, and the odds of it being repealed by any sovereign nation are about as likely as the odds of treason laws being repealed. But good luck with your hatred of service employees, and all that.
91 posted on 06/08/2005 6:56:52 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: goldstategop
Frankly, I'm deeply saddened that it has taken 90 posts on this thread to get this photo up.


92 posted on 06/08/2005 6:57:29 PM PDT by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: TADSLOS

(make that 92)


93 posted on 06/08/2005 6:57:48 PM PDT by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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To: goldstategop

Heh...you have a good point, but there is a valid distinction. Hooters Air flights have the number of trained flight attendants required by law, plus two Hooters hostesses who have no training but who will wear tight clothes for probably low wages. Maybe if airlines had flight attendants who were the FAA-required cabin safety representatives plus differently-uniformed "hostesses" whose job it was to get drinks and listen to whiny businessmen, people would understand the distinction between the primary safety role and secondary comfort service role of flight attendants.


94 posted on 06/08/2005 7:00:02 PM PDT by Turbopilot (Viva la Reagan Revolucion!)
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To: DCPatriot
I'd rather hold my nose and pay $84.00 to fly SOUTHWEST from Baltimore to Buffalo, NY...than $200+...just so that I can gawk at an attractive aloof flight attendant.

There was once a day when SWA attendants wore orange hot pants and boots.

And, boy, did they look good wearing them!

95 posted on 06/08/2005 7:00:08 PM PDT by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: Chuckster
So that's why you're so smug. You think federal law will protect your a$$ from outside competition no matter how poor the service you dish up to the public.

Since you made the effort of researching the cabotage reg I'm disappointed that you didn't also read the thread more carefully. Neither turbo nor I have any involvement with the industry beyond the role of self-loading freight.

Considering the financial state of most domestic airlines nowadays, I wouldn't count on it.

If by "most domestic airlines" you are referring to the two (out of several national and hundreds of regional carriers) that are at risk of insolvency, you should realize that the rest of the industry would take about five minutes to rebook any pax left stranded by them.

96 posted on 06/08/2005 7:03:56 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: TADSLOS
make that 92

Serves you right for posting a photo in the middle of a good old-fashions flame war.

But seriously, can she do CPR?

97 posted on 06/08/2005 7:07:19 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: Constitution Day

I agree. All the glamor has been taken out of flying.


98 posted on 06/08/2005 7:08:22 PM PDT by McGavin999
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To: Turbopilot
hostesses who have no training but who will wear tight clothes for probably low wages

Too bad. I was really looking forward to having a heart attack while the girl in pos 92 was on duty.

99 posted on 06/08/2005 7:10:53 PM PDT by Squawk 8888 (Canada's worst nightmare: Terrorist attack on Americans, launched from Canada)
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To: Squawk 8888
But seriously, can she do CPR?

How hard can it be? Afterall, she's a trained wing server.

100 posted on 06/08/2005 7:13:17 PM PDT by TADSLOS (Right Wing Infidel since 1954)
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