Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
+1
I don't want to hear how great you think you are (for the duration of the trip), you are not. Not only that, you don't take the middle seat because you want to stuff someone in there like it is some sort of pathetic victory in your pathetic life. Don't pretend you "will take the middle seat" - because we all know that neither one of you want to sit next to each any more than any other flier. Besides, I don't want to so much as smell the two of you. People like you are trying to ruin it for everyone else, and trying to make your problem our problem. You don't belong on an airplane, at all. Second PP nailed it - this is the type of couple that fawns over itself and tries to act like there is someone in the way, when that is how the idiot couple booked their own flight. You know the middle seat is going to be sold, just take it. You probably have separate bedrooms and bathrooms to avoid touching or smelling each other -- WTH would I want to?
Huh? We almost always swap out if someone is in the middle seat. Why on earth do you think we don’t belong on an airplane? You don’t want to “smell” us? LOL. You are INSANE.![]()
Not as insane as you, who refuses to sit next to their own spouse AND tries to commandeer an extra seat for free! No way are you switching seats, don't lie. We have all been on the plane with a couple exactly like you. You can tell your husband what to do, but not fellow passengers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
+1
I don't want to hear how great you think you are (for the duration of the trip), you are not. Not only that, you don't take the middle seat because you want to stuff someone in there like it is some sort of pathetic victory in your pathetic life. Don't pretend you "will take the middle seat" - because we all know that neither one of you want to sit next to each any more than any other flier. Besides, I don't want to so much as smell the two of you. People like you are trying to ruin it for everyone else, and trying to make your problem our problem. You don't belong on an airplane, at all. Second PP nailed it - this is the type of couple that fawns over itself and tries to act like there is someone in the way, when that is how the idiot couple booked their own flight. You know the middle seat is going to be sold, just take it. You probably have separate bedrooms and bathrooms to avoid touching or smelling each other -- WTH would I want to?
Huh? We almost always swap out if someone is in the middle seat. Why on earth do you think we don’t belong on an airplane? You don’t want to “smell” us? LOL. You are INSANE.![]()
Not as insane as you, who refuses to sit next to their own spouse AND tries to commandeer an extra seat for free! No way are you switching seats, don't lie. We have all been on the plane with a couple exactly like you. You can tell your husband what to do, but not fellow passengers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
Uh, she could have asked the flight attendants nicely instead of making a scene. She could have nicely asked them to switch.
How on earth was she in a DANGEROUS position?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
+1
That is the point. The blonde woman did nothing wrong. The large couple's behavior should not be condoned by the airline, or any individual. Neither party handled it properly, but let's look at the actual facts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
+1
I don't want to hear how great you think you are (for the duration of the trip), you are not. Not only that, you don't take the middle seat because you want to stuff someone in there like it is some sort of pathetic victory in your pathetic life. Don't pretend you "will take the middle seat" - because we all know that neither one of you want to sit next to each any more than any other flier. Besides, I don't want to so much as smell the two of you. People like you are trying to ruin it for everyone else, and trying to make your problem our problem. You don't belong on an airplane, at all. Second PP nailed it - this is the type of couple that fawns over itself and tries to act like there is someone in the way, when that is how the idiot couple booked their own flight. You know the middle seat is going to be sold, just take it. You probably have separate bedrooms and bathrooms to avoid touching or smelling each other -- WTH would I want to?
Huh? We almost always swap out if someone is in the middle seat. Why on earth do you think we don’t belong on an airplane? You don’t want to “smell” us? LOL. You are INSANE.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
What were her options?
I can only think of two:
1. Sit down and be in a dangerous and uncomfortable position for several hours.
2. Get off the plane and not go to where ever she was headed.
TWO doesn't seem like "a lot of options" to me, especially when both are punitive to her, and she did nothing wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
+1
I don't want to hear how great you think you are (for the duration of the trip), you are not. Not only that, you don't take the middle seat because you want to stuff someone in there like it is some sort of pathetic victory in your pathetic life. Don't pretend you "will take the middle seat" - because we all know that neither one of you want to sit next to each any more than any other flier. Besides, I don't want to so much as smell the two of you. People like you are trying to ruin it for everyone else, and trying to make your problem our problem. You don't belong on an airplane, at all. Second PP nailed it - this is the type of couple that fawns over itself and tries to act like there is someone in the way, when that is how the idiot couple booked their own flight. You know the middle seat is going to be sold, just take it. You probably have separate bedrooms and bathrooms to avoid touching or smelling each other -- WTH would I want to?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
I, unlike PP, won't switch with you unless we have a kid with us. We chose and paid to select seats you didn't that isn't our problem.
Np- you aren’t entitled to any part of a seat you didn’t pay for.
Why does this have to be explained to you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
The real b1tches were the obese "madam and gentleman"
Not at all. They were responding to her verbal abuse.
It’s all on her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I blame the airline. I fly a lot and it is really annoying when someone takes part of the small (and getting smaller all of the time) the airline gives to "customers". Blast United not the lady.
The women had a lot of options and chose to act like a raging b1tch. Her behavior is 100% on her.
The real b1tches were the obese "madam and gentleman"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Good customer service means making all your customers welcome. Airlines could:
- have some bigger seats that are more expensive but aren't double the price of others.
- be clear about seat sizes and distance between seats in the coming process
- dont move or rebook people who have chosen a bigger seat for this reason
- dont give away extra seats that are purchased for this reason
- don't overbook flights
- don't charge extra for seat selection
They already have a lot of that and/or it won't address the problem.
If you want a bigger seat, pay for first class. I travel a lot for work but I know my trip plans many months in advance. First class, when bought far ahead, is the same price as buying economy class a month or two ahead.
Seat sizes are easily found on seatguru.com and the airline's website. It's not hidden at all.
Seat selection is a value to customers.. they should charge for it if people are willing to pay. Besides, that won't solve the issue if 2 large people traveling together choose to sit in the same row/section.
I agree airlines shouldnt' give away extra seats -- I didn't realize this was so common.
The issue is the two larger adults clearly planned this to either get an empty middle seat or let someone else have the space burden. They should have picked two seats together instead of selfishly putting a stranger in the middle of them. I would have been pissed. I've had it happen and its miserable. She should have handled it better asking for a seat change, but most likely there were not any extra seats. The larger folks should should have put her on the isle and taken the window and middle.
I bet they at least know how to spell aisle since they were clever enough to go for this seat strategy.
+1
My DH and I do this all of the time. Why would you intentionally sit in a middle seat? If the middle seat gets taken then you can switch but if you book a middle seat you will definitely have a middle seat.
- frequent flyers, not obese
Its rude, you take two seats next to each other. No one wants to sit in the middle of your conversation, you handing things back and forth, etc. I have no issue with a middle seat but I don't want you touching me nor do I want to hear your conversations or stuff being passed back and forth.
+1
I don't want to hear how great you think you are (for the duration of the trip), you are not. Not only that, you don't take the middle seat because you want to stuff someone in there like it is some sort of pathetic victory in your pathetic life. Don't pretend you "will take the middle seat" - because we all know that neither one of you want to sit next to each any more than any other flier. Besides, I don't want to so much as smell the two of you. People like you are trying to ruin it for everyone else, and trying to make your problem our problem. You don't belong on an airplane, at all. Second PP nailed it - this is the type of couple that fawns over itself and tries to act like there is someone in the way, when that is how the idiot couple booked their own flight. You know the middle seat is going to be sold, just take it. You probably have separate bedrooms and bathrooms to avoid touching or smelling each other -- WTH would I want to?
We always use this strategy, and I always offer the window if someone comes along for the middle seat. My DH needs the aisle directly to his left due to an old knee injury and the fact that he is 6’3”.