Posted on 10/14/2016 1:21:05 PM PDT by Kaslin
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Yesterday, ladies and gentlemen, I raised a question when we learned about the woman that Trump said octopused her on the airplane. It turns out her name is Jessica Leeds. It turns out that she said that after dinner in first class, Trump raised the armrest and moved in for the octopus moves. I raised a question based on my memory traveling first class. I don't remember armrests being able to move in first class on the airplane, but I didn't know. It's been a while since I've flown first class.
So I asked people out in the audience and I got tons of responses from flight attendants from 30 years ago, 40 years ago, today confirming that armrests in first class did not move. You couldn't raise it and get out of it way like you can in coach. Well, there's a website out there called Got News, and Snerdley has verified that you can count on Got News now and then. And Got News has a story that this woman that claims Trump octopused her is making it up. Jessica Leeds.
She claims, for example, that she was flying a Braniff. Braniff was an old Texas airline in Houston and Dallas. It was a great airline. I loved flying Braniff when I was a kid. She claimed that she was flying Braniff from Dallas to New York, 1979, on a Boeing 707. When I saw that I said, "Wait a minute. I never saw Braniff fly a 707." You know, Boeing 707s have not been in service for a long time. They were so damn noisy. A Boeing 707, if one flew over you... This is the first big so-called jumbo jet.
It's the same technology as in the Boeing B-52. I mean, that's how old the 707 is. It's the same airframe, essentially, with some modifications as the B-52. Unless they've been retrofitted with new engines -- which is a very expensive thing to do -- they're not in service. Some charter operators fly them, and they're owned. Like Travolta owns one. John Travolta owns a 707 and flies it out of his home here in Florida somewhere. But they're just noisy as hell; that's why you can't fly 'em anymore. Literally, you think bombs are going off. It's uncanny.
Those of you old enough to remember will know what I'm talking about, but I didn't remember Braniff ever even flying 707s in the fleet. They may have. Every Braniff I ever saw was a Boeing 727. Well, it turns out that Braniff did not fly 707s from Dallas to New York like Jessica Leeds says she was on, and that was the flight that Trump octopused her. In fact, we've got the old yellowed schedules that you used to be able to buy as published pamphlets. Newark and New York from Dallas?
If you wanted to fly Braniff, you had to fly a Boeing 727. Now, I'm sure that Ms. Leeds would say, "Well, I don't know 707, 727. What difference does it make?" Well, it's gonna turn out to make a lot of difference. So this woman's been found; she's all over television now.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Here's Ann in Atlanta as we head to the phones. Great to have you. I'm glad you called.
CALLER: Hi.
RUSH: Hi!
CALLER: How are you? (giggles)
RUSH: Very well. Thank you.
CALLER: I used to be a flight attendant, from 1978 until 1990, and I was also a senior flight attendant. So I always worked the first class cabin.
RUSH: Wait just a second now. I need to do the math: 1978 to 1990, and this is 2016. So we're talking, what, 30, 28 years ago?
CALLER: Thirty, yes.
RUSH: Twenty-eight, 30 years, which is the timeframe that this woman says that Trump octopused her. Okay.
CALLER: Exactly. During that time, first class was truly first class. When you came on board the airplane, from the minute you got on board, a flight attendant was attending to your every single need when you were a passenger.
RUSH: What kind of aircraft did you fly, Ann, can you recall?
CALLER: I flew 'em all. I flew 727s, DC-9s. I flew for Eastern Airlines.
RUSH: Wait a minute!
CALLER: And --
RUSH: Wait a minute. First class on a DC-9? Did you fly configurations with first class on a DC-9?
CALLER: DC-9 had first class, yeah.
RUSH: What about 707? Did you ever fly a 707?
CALLER: I never flew the 707.
RUSH: Right, 'cause they were practically out of service then!
CALLER: Exactly. Braniff was going out of business at that time, and a lot of those flight attendants came on board with Eastern.
RUSH: Okay.
CALLER: Yeah. So, I'm very familiar with that time frame and all the airlines that were around and all the different airplanes because you had to be qualified on every single airplane when you're a flight attendant. And, oh, by the way, there was a weight restriction. (giggling) And if you went overweight, you had to leave. (giggling) So, I mean, your appearance as a flight attendant was very, very important. That's number one. Number two: The first class section of the airplane was very private.
And you closed a curtain, and that flight attendant attended... There was a first-class flight attendant that was specific to that cabin, and if it was on a flight... You said that they went from Dallas to New York. That's a long flight. And that flight attendant up there does everything. They come in the cabin, they give you a drink when you first sit down, they collect your drink, they take it away, they hang your coat up.
RUSH: Right. But what about the armrest? I'm running out of time.
CALLER: The armrest did not move.
RUSH: That's my memory, yeah.
CALLER: The armrest did not move. Like I said, I didn't fly on the 707 but my guess is that was even older than the planes that I was on for Eastern and none of those planes' arm rests moved.
RUSH: Oh, this 707 goes back to the 1950s. I mean, they were the first... It was a real luxury to fly on one when they first entered service. They were a great airplanes. They were so damn loud. But I guarantee the armrest didn't go up in the first class seats on the 707.
Look, I'm way long, folks. I gotta get out.
END TRANSCRIPT
Those stretch the length of the plane. I remember 1st class being behind a curtain and about 4 or 5 rows of seats.
So, 6 am, but still on FR.
Well its like a blue chip stock you hold it for a long time and sell when the price is way up
but the b 52 is an assualt airplane with 8 engines
Strawberries vs Arm Rest get a grip people
At the time my German passport had expired so I had to notify the German Embassy in Chicago about it. It took about 3 weeks when I got my new passport. My husband booked my flight for me at a local travel agency and when the day came my husband, I and our children drove to Kansas City, MO to the airport and I flew with Braniff to Chicago O'Hare and than with Lufthansa to Stuttgart Germany. The flight with Lufthansa was very disappointing as the flight attendants were very snobbish.
I had planned to stay for three weeks but after 2 weeks I was ready to come back because I missed my husband and our children. When I arrived in Chicago many flights were delayed due to the weather. When I was finally called for my flight they put me in First class because I had to wait so long. They offered me a glass of wine but I had been 24 hours awake and I wasn't interested because I was to tired.
BTW I don't remember if the armrests were moving or not
When my plane arrived in Kansas City, where my husband and our children were waiting for me I asked him to rent a motel room as I was to tired to travel 2 more hours to our home
I flew Braniff International in 1962. We departed Miami International Airport and I got off in Panama.
In 1962 the Boeing 707 was the crown jewel in every airline’s fleet. Ten years later if it still being used it was by charter outfits.
I know I didn’t fly first class but the service in coach (?) was superior to what you see in first class today - hot three course dinner, desert, snacks, coffee or tea or soft drinks and you paid extra for drinks. Your stewardess knew you name by the time she collected the dinner dishes.
I've never flown on Braniff's 727, so I have no idea of the seating arrangement or if they had bulkheads/curtains separating first class from coach, so you could be right. I know that other airlines do separate these two like you say.
I think it was the CT Senator. Dodd?
I got a free upgrade to first class once. It was an hour long flight. I was having a really bad day, and I guess it showed. The flight attendant probably felt sorry for me. I won’t go into details, but I sure appreciated her kindness that day. It made a difficult day bearable. To your point though, it wasn’t a full flight, and it was only an hour long.
What I think is that some guy had the “hair” of Donald, and he just faked women out. It’s like all the guys who kept tell women in the 1980s that they were Green Bay Packers quarterbacks Don Majkowski or Randy White. There are probably 2,000 women who will guzzle some booze and relate some story of an evening spent with either guy, and the truth is that it was some guy from Fargo who just faked them out.
I quit too HarleyLady27 but started back. Glad I did. Rush has been BLISTERING the Democrats and anti-Trumpers and it has been refreshing to listen in.
https://www.bing.com/images/search?q=bar+pickup+lines+artoon&FORM=HDRSC2
What I think is that some guy had the hair of Donald, and he just faked women out.
Face it....if you looked just a bit like Elvis...wouldn’t you walk into a bar and lead forty-odd women on some fake-Elvis evening?
There ya go!
Heck; them Vegas impersonators probably can do it every night!!
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