Thursday, January 31, 2008

Attention Passengers: This Is Your Sales Rep... er, I mean Pilot Speaking

I remember the good old days. When flying meant free sandwiches, sodas, and visiting the pilot in the cockpit.

But things are different now...

We still have sodas, and sometimes we even get a full can! But we don't have food, sometimes a pretzel crumb or small cookie, but no more free sandwiches. Now you can pay upwards of $7 for a shitty plate of cold mini-muffins or small sandwich.

And instead of the pilot announcing all the landmarks you're flying past, he's trying to convince you to sign up for their credit card that gives you.. one zillion free miles!! The in-flight movie, while it still sucks now gets a nice little logo in the bottom of it from time to time. And before the movie starts and after it ends you get commercials for other trips you can take with this airline and the credit cards that will get you there and a million billion miles!! Don't have headphones? Don't worry! $5 will get your a rented pair for 3-4 hours! Woo Hoo

I can only image what flying will be like 10 years from now. Perhaps literally mugging you at gunpoint and pawning off your luggage before you arrive at your destination, all while force-feeding you advertisements on your soda, food, napkin, seat, tv screen, headphones, window, floor.... everything.

3 comments:

Kyle said...

Good post, LOL.

jeanie said...

Last time we flew Jet Blue,the pilot was pretty funny and informative as was the crew. We got drinks and snacks for free! And tv or music for the entire trip. It was better than the average trip, the seats were more comfy and the crew was friendlier.I think Jet Blue has the right idea, the other airlines need to take a lesson from them.

Map Finder said...

Have you noticed the HUGE ads that they're now placing on all the tray tables? It's like, "soda time! yay!", so you flip down your tray table only to find a HUGE orange ball in the middle of an ad telling you to open an ING Electric Orange checking account. It's scary when these ads start to come out of nowhere, particularly where you least expect them.