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American Airlines: Like Sinus Drainage, But With Wings (Fred Reed)
FredOnEverything.net ^ | 08/04/2003 | Fred Reed

Posted on 08/03/2003 8:00:06 PM PDT by Constitutionalist Conservative




American Airlines

Like Sinus Drainage, But With Wings

 

 

August 4, 2003  

You've heard of air rage? I've got it. I'm building an invisible plastic chain-saw with a six-hundred horse motor to cut the wings off every airplane owned by American Airlines, before chopping the flight crews into runny gruel.

Friday morning, August first, San Francisco International. I showed up to catch a hop, AA 482, to Dallas-Fort Worth en route to Guadalajara. The line in front of the American ticketing was just flat huge. For an hour and twenty minutes by my watch people waited to check in. Yet between two thirds and three-quarters of the check-in desks were closed. American, presumably wanting to save a nickel, preferred that we stand there like cattle. We did.

The flight left way late. Why? American couldn't find a vital stewardess. Yes. Just misplaced her. Maybe they left her behind a seat cushion. Who knows? In any event, a whole plane-load of people with things to do had to wait, and wait, and wait.

Incompetent management. Airlines know they need stewardesses. Thing is, the airlines also know that the public will accept any degree of inconsideration, stupidity, and humiliation. Which is why we get them. We're patsies.

Next, clonking down the jetway, we picked up our Bistro Bags. You know, nasty little sandwich, nickel bag of chips, thingy of peeled dwarf carrots. They call them Bistro Bags because somebody in marketing figured it would make us think we were having a European Dining Experience instead of a sorry bag-lunch. We boarded. No one actually said "Moo."

The cabin crew were par: Not quite surly, but not under any constraint to be agreeable. The major US airlines barely tolerate customers. One suspects that they would be happier without them.

Off we took, finally, after the usual claptrap read from a card at high speed about how to fasten our seat belts and how the stews are there for our safety. Actually they're just waitresses. Hoping to sleep, I slid into the vague unpleasant torpor that flying has become. Normally people put themselves to sleep by counting sheep. On these aerial Greyhound buses I pretend that I have leprosy and count my fingers falling off.

American squeezes you relentlessly. To deaden the ambience I asked for a dismal little bottle of bad white wine. Five bucks. Decent airlines, meaning foreign ones, don't try to milk you for everything from beer to headphones.

Predictably, the waitress didn't have change for a twenty. Why not? It's a common bill. Maybe she didn't know she was going to need change when selling drinks. How could she? After all, she had only done it four times a day for ten years. Maybe the association just hadn't quite flowered in her neural thickets: "Urg…Sell things…need change…Ahhh!" I pictured an evolutionarily advanced monkey learning how to poke at a coconut with a stick and shrieking with delight when it fell. She said she would come back. But didn't.

Over an hour later we were preparing to land, and still no change. The stew was forward, gabbling with her accomplices. Was she going to remember or wasn't she? The odds looked bad. I politely asked a near-by crewmember, a blonde kid with bad teeth who looked to be maybe twenty-four, if he would check on it.

He crossed the line from barely civil to deliberately snotty. "Sirrrrr! We aren't going anywhere," followed by loud remarks, intended for me, to a passing stew: "He wants his change. Hey, the ATM's broken." Clever little wunx.

He knew he could get away with it. This is the operating principle of the domestic air-transport business: You can get away with it. Lousy food, late arrivals, missed connections, surliness, gouging. These engaging traits once characterized Aeroflot, but they've migrated.

The preponderance of power lies with the airlines, and they know it. Any remonstrance and they can make an air-rage beef out of it and you miss your next flight. They figure the public has no recourse.

Finally, DFW. I needed to make the connection because people were waiting for me in Guad. But with American, making a connection doesn't really help. My next flight, AA 1401, couldn't leave because they couldn't find the pilot. So help me. No pilot.

Why not? Was he hung over? Still drunk? Couldn't find the airport? Didn't feel like working? In a lineup at the local precinct? Who knows?

Perhaps American will think I'm being too demanding-another sorehead customer. Maybe they are right. Maybe it is unreasonable to expect airlines to provide certain things: ant farms, say, or the Bhagavad Gita in Swedish, or a Faberge egg, or a pilot. I mean, how could American predict that it might need a pilot?

We sat, and sweated, and sat. Finally they told us that they had found a pilot, but that he was on another airplane. How very useful.

Either they can't staff their aircraft, or just don't care. It doesn't have to be this way. Used to be, flying United out of Dulles to the Far East, I always actually flew All Nippon Airways, which code-shared with United. ANA amounted to a major upgrade. Seats were larger, the food was great, the flight attendants hadn't recently graduated from prison-matron school, and they didn't try to gouge you for after-dinner cordials or a stray brew.

Now, I know that American has not the slightest interest in me or anything I might possibly do. (Of course, they don't know about the invisible plastic chain saw.) I fly only six or eight times a year, only two of those being long hauls to Asia. Business fliers are presumably American's money. I don't count. I know it. Still, what I did was call Claudia at my travel agency and tell her never, ever to book me on American, and always to choose a non-US airline when prices were close.

Nonetheless I note with delight that United Airlines went bankrupt (it's as bad as American, except that it usually has pilots), and American teeters on the edge. I hope it drops. Companies that peddle a sorry product with wretched service and abrasive personnel desperately need extinction. I'll celebrate with ribs and beer.

Would you go to a restaurant that couldn't find its cook and waiters and got you your meal after leaving you in the parking lot for an hour and a half? Don't do it. Fly foreign carriers outside the US--they're better--and the econolines domestically when possible: JetBlue, AirTran, Southwest, Frontier. They're all good. If you subsidize lousy performance, you get more of it. If second-rate airlines go out of business, tough.

Splendid, in fact.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: airlines; americanairlines; fredoneverything
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1 posted on 08/03/2003 8:00:07 PM PDT by Constitutionalist Conservative
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
Would you go to a restaurant that couldn't find its cook and waiters and got you your meal after leaving you in the parking lot for an hour and a half? Don't do it. Fly foreign carriers outside the US--they're better--and the econolines domestically when possible: JetBlue, AirTran, Southwest, Frontier. They're all good.

Note to Fred: You have a choice. Kwitcherbitchin!

Oh, nobody but AA goes to Guadalajara?

Crank up the car, bud.

2 posted on 08/03/2003 8:05:19 PM PDT by sinkspur ("Messina, Brad! Messina!" George C. Scott as "PATTON.")
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
My opinion of American--and the other majors--exactly.
3 posted on 08/03/2003 8:06:34 PM PDT by jammer
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
--and the econolines domestically when possible: JetBlue, AirTran, Southwest, Frontier.

At least when you fly the cheap-o cattle cars, you expect no-frills service and that's fine with me. Get me and my luggage there relatively on-time and don't crash. It's all I basically ask of any airline and, with the cheap-os, that's generally what I get. Expecting the airlines to be your personal butler is part of the problem.

4 posted on 08/03/2003 8:14:15 PM PDT by Tall_Texan (http://righteverytime.blogspot.com - home to Tall_Texan's new column.)
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To: jammer
My opinion of American--and the other majors--exactly.

Ditto.

5 posted on 08/03/2003 8:14:41 PM PDT by solzhenitsyn ("Live Not By Lies")
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To: sinkspur
Note to Fred: You have a choice. Kwitcherbitchin!

He had a bad experience. It seems acceptable that he let off steam. It's better that he's doing in print rather than with a real chainsaw....

6 posted on 08/03/2003 8:17:47 PM PDT by Theo
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
I'm building an invisible plastic chain-saw with a six-hundred horse motor to cut the wings off every airplane owned by American Airlines, before chopping the flight crews into runny gruel.

Careful. There are hundreds of people here on FR that would side with the government if they were to charge you with making a terrorist threat.

7 posted on 08/03/2003 8:19:29 PM PDT by FreedomCalls (It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
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To: sinkspur
The car has been my preferred mode of travel this year.I used to fly quite a bit on business, but not in the last few years. I always flew on vacation or other trips(kids to college, etc). But no longer. It's not worth the hassle.

I'm doing two major road trips this year, one down, and one to go. We never drove because we thought it a waste of time. Turns out, driving can be fun, my wife and take turns driving, no running to the airport, parking hassles, ticketing lines, search lines/hassles, waiting on runways, etc.

We carry whatever we want in the van, come and go as we please, and watch America go by instead of flying over it.

Does it take longer? Yes. Is it more enjoyable? Oh,yes.

I feel sorry for those, like I was a few years ago, that have to constantly travel by air for business. I recommend conference calls or videoconferencing.

On an extremely long trip,like coast to coast, I'll have to fly. But for everything else, I'll drive.
8 posted on 08/03/2003 8:20:08 PM PDT by exit82 (Constitution?--I got your Constitution right here!--T. Daschle)
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To: solzhenitsyn
TWA was better than this, weren't they? Too bad.
9 posted on 08/03/2003 8:24:47 PM PDT by old-ager
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
I'm curious. What is the reason for posting this crap?
10 posted on 08/03/2003 8:25:44 PM PDT by sandlady
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To: sandlady
Maybe the reason for posting this is to let other travelers know of the bad service being given by American. If I had to fly often, I would like to know this.
11 posted on 08/03/2003 8:29:18 PM PDT by trussell (Pesky, hiding, blonde hair-causing a blonde moment!! Can't find it to pull it out!!)
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To: trussell
You can find stories like this about every airline. All of them. Who are you going to fly with now? This just seems a little over-the-top and I'm truly wondering if the poster wrote this or, if he didn't, why did he post it?
12 posted on 08/03/2003 8:37:51 PM PDT by sandlady
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To: Theo
I must confess to letting rip at airline employees. I deal with all species of weasels in my work life, but lying weasels who think they are immune - like airlines employees - are fair game: Just cut loose. Use the f-word. Tell them their mother is a cheap ho. They think they can tell you any lie, well buddy, we can tell them any truth. Destroy their morale. Make them cry. Does that make me feel good? No, but the lingering aftertaste is very nice indeed.
13 posted on 08/03/2003 9:01:02 PM PDT by eno_
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To: sandlady
It's the author's blog. Why would he concoct this. I have experienced equally bad treatment from airlines, and I fly more, so I've gotten more of it. AMR and UAL can both go to hell, and take AmericaWorst and all the other second rate second tier carriers with them.

Keep Southwest and Jet Blue and start the rest from scratch.
14 posted on 08/03/2003 9:06:20 PM PDT by eno_
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To: sandlady
Unless your trip is more than 500 miles, it doesn't pay to fly. By the time you add up getting to the airport, going through security, getting on board, taking off, actual flying time, landing, getting off the airplane, picking up luggage, and getting to your final destination you could have driven there and spent about the same amount of time. It's also probably less stressful.
15 posted on 08/03/2003 9:07:23 PM PDT by rllngrk33 (Being a liberal means never admitting you're wrong, even in the face of facts.)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
I flew a couple weeks ago back and forth from LA to Newark. Aside from the hard-nosed security people who treat you like dirt without an ounce of sympathy, it wasn't bad. The flight from Newark was delayed four hours due to weather (the plane couldn't even arrive from Chicago, much less take off) and the co-pilot was very nice, talking with us all as we anxiously waited. It was the smoothest flight I've ever taken. It was the horrible take-off-your-shoes-sit-down-shut-up attitude of security that turned me off flying. Hadn't flown since December and security was a snap; if that's how bad it's gotten since then, I'll fly as rarely as possible!
16 posted on 08/03/2003 9:07:42 PM PDT by Moonmad27
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To: eno_
I must confess to letting rip at airline employees.

I'm sure you feel good after doing this, but you likely look like an assh**e in the process.

Which is, frankly, how you come across in this post.

Tell me which company you work for so I can steer clear of your product.

17 posted on 08/03/2003 9:10:52 PM PDT by sinkspur ("Messina, Brad! Messina!" George C. Scott as "PATTON.")
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To: sinkspur; eno_
I must confess to letting rip at airline employees.

I'm sure you feel good after doing this, but you likely look like an assh**e in the process.

Which is, frankly, how you come across in this post.

Tell me which company you work for so I can steer clear of your product.

My sentiments exactly. Very admirable, eno_.

18 posted on 08/03/2003 9:21:14 PM PDT by sandlady
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
I too, will never fly AA again, really bad service, jammed to the hilt planes, my husband who is only 6' cannot sit comfortable in their seats, his knees are jammed into the seat in front of him. They have zero leg room, because they've stuffed an extra row of seats in their tin cans.

We fly Sun Country Air, based out of Minneapolis, they have fewer rows and more leg room and way better attitudes.
19 posted on 08/03/2003 9:24:59 PM PDT by Valpal1 (Impeach the 9th! Please!!)
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
...the airlines also know that the public will accept any degree of inconsideration, stupidity, and humiliation...

...The major US airlines barely tolerate customers. One suspects that they would be happier without them...

...The preponderance of power lies with the airlines, and they know it. Any remonstrance and they can make an air-rage beef out of it and you miss your next flight. They figure the public has no recourse...

Never, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, ever, EVER...

...fly.

Ever.

20 posted on 08/03/2003 9:25:15 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Drug prohibition laws help support terrorism.)
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