A few years ago, a guest on one of the late night shows did a bit on airline travel. He started off by saying "Holy shit, folks, we're hurtling through the air in a giant aluminum tube...." THAT is amazing!!
I've actually traveled via Greyhound and Trailways bus (when I was in the service) and traveled to college my first year on a train (15 hour plus trip--NO attendants, everything cost extra and this was 40 years ago.).
I spent 30 years in Alaska, and without the airlines, I would have never been able to say goodby to my mother or my father.....by boat or car, I'd never have gotten there in time. The airline I flew on at the time was Reeve Aleutian Air-RAA for short. Their motto: "If you don't like our service, Ride Another Airline" Get it...RAA. Trust me, I heard ticket agents and stews actually TELL passengers that. Nevertheless, if you were a bush resident (as opposed to a carpet bagger commercial fisherman who lived outside), and you got hurt or you needed to get out of the bush, they'd move heaven and earth to get you out, including in one case I know of, turning a Lockheed Electra around and flying nearly an hour back to CDB to pick up an injured person. I was put in a jump seat once when no seats were available, and I needed to get out, and once, when my Mom was dying, they pulled a boarding pass from an obnoxious fisherman and gave it to me (quietly). I asked later if they'd get in trouble with the boss (R.C. Reeve, the famed "Glacier Pilot") and their response was he'd probably give them a bonus.
I got totally spoiled by Wien Alaska Air and Alaska Airlines and dreaded having to fly with anyone else, especially Northworst..... I have to admit that Alaska's service has dropped a notch or two, but it's still better than anyone else. They too are carpet baggers now, though, and at one point they proposed to take the old Eskimo off the tail of their airplanes and go to a "modern" logo. They got so much flack from Alaskans that they kept the old guy around.
I've found that, with the takeover of Northwest by Delta, customer service seems to have improved and attitudes have as well. Not to mention on time records are good as well.
I've flown Untied (and no, that's not a sp error), Luftansa, British Air, Condor, Air France, and they all had great service, compared to domestic flights.
I like happy airline crews. I knew many of the Reeve crews, including the stews. One day, their YS-11 had been bouncing around all day trying to get to CDB. They'd hit several Peninsula villages, waiting on weather to improve in CDB. They hung in there, and got to us. As I was boarding the YS, the Flight Attendant at the door had a serious scowl on her clock. I said "Sarah, come on....smile". She smiled, and then said "Okay, YOU smile" I did, and she said "Now hold it for fourteen hours, asshole". Boy did I ever deserve that one. She was a friend in any case. After airborne, she came over to my seat, and told me to get my butt to the galley, cause I was doing beverage service, so she could get some rest. She showed me the drill, and sat down in my seat. Touche.
TSA sucks. These are minimally trained, minimum wage folks who inherited a SHITTY job, having to regularly irritate the hell out of folks. I have no doubt their attitudes vary with zip code, but I've been treated with great respect by all for a number of years. I wouldn't want that job at any pay scale, but most of them do it, and don't TRY to piss people off.
But, think about it....You get aboard this thing, and before long, you are hurtling through the sky in a huge aluminum tube. It's PFM, folks. (That M stands for magic, by the way). You could drive from Fairbanks to Chicago in, oh, say 4 to 5 days, or get on a jet and be there in 6 and a half hours. You can go from anywhere in this country to anywhere else in this country in a day. Is there any other way you can even come close to that? I think not.
So, yes, there are irritants involved with air travel. And the process isn't as easy and perhaps as user friendly as it used to be. What process is, these days?
And, consider the safety record of the major airlines.....all I can say in that regard is: It may in fact be the safest of all possible means of travel we have available to us. You can get bucked off a horse, by the way. All that, considering the literally millions of people who get moved every day by the airlines.
Any of you been in or near a Greyhound bus depot lately???? Good thing there's no TSA there, cause you NEED a gun.
Nuff said.
MTV