Caribbean Nesties
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

Southwest does it again

Southwest sure likes to kick people off their planes.  This time a thin woman flying standby was booted to make room for an obese teenager needing two seats (who only bought one).

Thoughts?

Click here for article.

Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
«1

Re: Southwest does it again

  • I don't know.  There's a lot of factors here.  Generally, I think if you are fat enough to need two seats you should have to pay for two.  But, this woman was on standby so it's not as though she was guaranteed a seat anyway.
    image
  • Standby is standby, now if the person had booked a seat I'd have more sympathy
    image
  • Exactly.  And if they had kicking off the fat 14 year-old with a real tickect, can you imagine the headlines?
    image
  • honestly, it was difficult for me to fit in my seat.  I have definately widened out a lot and felt squeezed in and took up some of my seatmate's space.  Those seats are just too damn small, but what can you do?

    If the lady had a purchased ticket, she'd have room to complain (no pun intended).  Her standby status makes her an easy target for kick-off.  I wonder if SW would have handled it differently if the obese person was an adult and not a teen . . . like, would they have demanded purchase of another ticket?

    image
  • She was standby and the 14 year old had a purchased ticket. And why does it matter that she was thin? And who tries to make a child feel bad? And would she have preferred to be smushed into her seat next to the child or is she insinuating a fat kid should be kicked off the plane?
  • I'm too lazy to click on the article, so feel free to tell me to shuddup if the article says otherwise, but generally, if you have to take up two seats due to obesity, they make you pay for both seats, even if you originally only purchased one.
    image
  • Yeah, I would have made the same decision.  Especially if the kid was an unaccompanied minor.  


    image
    The nerve!
    House | Blog
  • The problem I have with the situation is that Southwest recently kicked Kevin Smith off of one of their full flights because he couldn't fit into the seat.  If they did that then, when he purchased a ticket, why wouldn't they do that now?

    If the woman was on standby, there's a pretty good possibility that she had purchased a ticket for a flight, it's not like she was just getting a free ride. 

    image
    "Once I got a bath bomb that, once exploded, filled the tub with confetti. Little sharp metallic pieces of confetti. The product description said nothing about confetti. Oh look, there's a tiny, sharp metallic blue star stabbing me in the labia. HOW RELAXING. " - NoisyPenguin
  • Everyone knows that Southwest hates skinny people.
    image
    "That chick wins at Penises, for sure." -- Fenton
  • imageColey7788:

    The problem I have with the situation is that Southwest recently kicked Kevin Smith off of one of their full flights because he couldn't fit into the seat.  If they did that then, when he purchased a ticket, why wouldn't they do that now?

    If the woman was on standby, there's a pretty good possibility that she had purchased a ticket for a flight, it's not like she was just getting a free ride. 

    she's a kid! possibly an unaccompanied minor. i think that could change the rules.

  • I have a hard time hating on Southwest after they kicked off the girl with the skirt so short her junk was rubbing unsanitarily on the seat.

    image

  • imageColey7788:

    The problem I have with the situation is that Southwest recently kicked Kevin Smith off of one of their full flights because he couldn't fit into the seat.  If they did that then, when he purchased a ticket, why wouldn't they do that now?

    If the woman was on standby, there's a pretty good possibility that she had purchased a ticket for a flight, it's not like she was just getting a free ride. 

    Maybe there weren't any standby flyers to kick off.  Surely there's a hierarchy of who gets the boot first in these situations.  Standby, ticketed passengers who can't fit into their one assigned seat, ticketed passengers who checked in latest in an overbooked flight, etc.  This isn't a new practice, people have been booted from overbooked flights for ages.

    Also, yes, a standby passenger may have purchased a ticket for A flight, but not for THAT flight, hence they were low-man-on-the-totem-pole. 

     

    image
  • imageColey7788:

    The problem I have with the situation is that Southwest recently kicked Kevin Smith off of one of their full flights because he couldn't fit into the seat.  If they did that then, when he purchased a ticket, why wouldn't they do that now?

    If the woman was on standby, there's a pretty good possibility that she had purchased a ticket for a flight, it's not like she was just getting a free ride. 

    Maybe there weren't any standby flyers to kick off.  Surely there's a hierarchy of who gets the boot first in these situations.  Standby, ticketed passengers who can't fit into their one assigned seat, ticketed passengers who checked in latest in an overbooked flight, etc.  This isn't a new practice, people have been booted from overbooked flights for ages.

    Also, yes, a standby passenger may have purchased a ticket for A flight, but not for THAT flight, hence they were low-man-on-the-totem-pole. 

     

    image
  • My guess is they used the fat issue as an excuse and they really kicked Kevin Smith off the plane because he's a self-important douche.  Great, you made a student film that people liked, and you've been riding on that for years.  You can't name your kid Harley Quinn without letting the world know you're a class-A Douce.

    I think there should probalby be some kind of system in place to prevent this, though.  Perhaps (and I'm not kidding here) you should have to submit your weight or waist size when ordering a ticket, and if you exceed the maximum capacity for a seat, you can find out then and there so you'll be able to buy a second seat.  I imagine some folks who don't fly a lot may not realize that they need a second seat (or that they're blocking the emergency exit) until they get on a plane.

    I'll bet Kevin Smith did realize this, though. 

    I didn't realize he bothered me that much until this very post.

    image
    3 out of 4 dead babies agree! pepsi is better than coke! - EdithBouvierBeale
    Lordy. Grow some balls and stop lurking. It's like stealing from the internet. Jesuschrist. -- AudreyHorne
    I hate love and marriage. I got married so I could destroy these things from the inside. - NoisyPenguin
    It's a good thing my circle of trust is as giant as my vagina. That only leaves a couple people out. - Cali
  • imageColey7788:

    The problem I have with the situation is that Southwest recently kicked Kevin Smith off of one of their full flights because he couldn't fit into the seat.  If they did that then, when he purchased a ticket, why wouldn't they do that now?

    If the woman was on standby, there's a pretty good possibility that she had purchased a ticket for a flight, it's not like she was just getting a free ride. 

    But not for THAT flight.  So their choice was to allow a minor to take up his purchased seat and a second non-purchased seat or to kick him off to accommodate a standby person.  In Smith's case, the choice was to kick him off or to kick off someone else so that Smith could occupy that person's purchased seat as well as his own.

    image
  • I wasn't insinuating Southwest did anything wrong if it sounded that way (although the kid should have had to buy 2 seats just like everyone else that requires more room due to size).  It's just interesting how these stories are reported, and why. I guess in this case though there wouldn't be a story though if the kid wasn't obese because he wouldn't need the extra seat...

     

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imagenoisy_penguin:
    I have a hard time hating on Southwest after they kicked off the girl with the skirt so short her junk was rubbing unsanitarily on the seat.

    Seriously. This was the chick who stood up on the Today Show to demonstrate that her skirt wasn't inappropriate and they had to censor her crotch, right?

    image
  • I agree with you, Wendy, that standby is always the low man on the totem pole.  I can see being booted because two people who purchased tickets for that particular flight,  showed up late and needed their seats back. There were two open seats on the plane, they both could have had a seat, since they both only paid for one seat.  But the teenage needed two, so the woman was booted.  That I don't see as being fair. 

    Winged, I didn't see anywhere if it was a child that was unaccompanied, which would sway my opinion, I think, just beause there was no adult to confirm the switch, parents would be freaking out if a child didn't show up on time, etc. 

    image
    "Once I got a bath bomb that, once exploded, filled the tub with confetti. Little sharp metallic pieces of confetti. The product description said nothing about confetti. Oh look, there's a tiny, sharp metallic blue star stabbing me in the labia. HOW RELAXING. " - NoisyPenguin
  • imageGroomzMcFinehiney:

    I think there should probalby be some kind of system in place to prevent this, though.  Perhaps (and I'm not kidding here) you should have to submit your weight or waist size when ordering a ticket, and if you exceed the maximum capacity for a seat, you can find out then and there so you'll be able to buy a second seat.  I imagine some folks who don't fly a lot may not realize that they need a second seat (or that they're blocking the emergency exit) until they get on a plane.

    I have no idea how they would even go about this, but there does need to be some sort of standardized "you must be this tall to ride this ride" kind of system. It just seems so haphazard. You may be fine one flight and be told you need a second seat the next. 

    For this particular situation, I agree that a standby passenger is not as important as an unaccompanied minor. Had she been a ticketed passenger, it would be murkier.  

    image
  • imageFallinAgain:

    imagenoisy_penguin:
    I have a hard time hating on Southwest after they kicked off the girl with the skirt so short her junk was rubbing unsanitarily on the seat.

    Seriously. This was the chick who stood up on the Today Show to demonstrate that her skirt wasn't inappropriate and they had to censor her crotch, right?

    Yes. She kept pulling the skirt down when she sat or stood and they kept blurring out her crotch. I laughed and laughed. That chick is from San Diego.

    image

  • it doesn't say if the cjild is or is not accompanied.

    the point is there are two options other than the one they chose- to kick the kid off the flight or to smush her into the seat next to him. they chose the most fair option in a sticky situation

  • Kevin Smith paid for two seats, but got onto an earlier flight on standby.  They kicked him off when they saw he couldn't fit into his seat comfortably and I think he ended up on the flight he originally paid for, plus he got a $100 voucher.
    image
    "That chick wins at Penises, for sure." -- Fenton
  • I don't know.  Yes, she was flying on standby, but they had already issued her a ticket and she was in her seat. 
    image Mabel the Loser.
  • Actually, airlines only consider you a minor deserving of extra help if you are younger than 12. Nevertheless, Southwest did the right thing, and they weren't going to 'win' no matter what they did.

    Eventually airlines are going to have to have bigger seats on their planes, just like parking lots and garages need bigger parking spaces to accomodate all these behemoth vehicles folks are driving.

  • This reminds me of when we were at Universal Studios a few weeks ago.  My step-father is a tall man, but he's also a fairly wide man.  We waited in line about 45 minutes to ride the Forbidden Journey ride and they had no "You must be this tall, this big, etc." that we saw.  The way you get on the ride is kind of wonky, with moving conveyor belts and you have to jump into these chairs.  We get into the chairs and the woman says "Yeah, sir, you've got to go, I can't close the overhead restraint".  It kind of sucked.

    The moral of that story was, I can see both sides, and it would suck to be the kid and to be singled out.  It sucked for my step-dad.  But I'm agree with Groomz that there should be something (similar to the baggage measurements) that say "You must be this big to ride the plane". 

    image
    "Once I got a bath bomb that, once exploded, filled the tub with confetti. Little sharp metallic pieces of confetti. The product description said nothing about confetti. Oh look, there's a tiny, sharp metallic blue star stabbing me in the labia. HOW RELAXING. " - NoisyPenguin
  • imageNovemberrocks:
    I don't know.  Yes, she was flying on standby, but they had already issued her a ticket and she was in her seat. 

    it's obvious that southwest messed up in this regard, but the final decision was right. should they have treated her rudely? no, but having seen how some people turn into hosebeasts in airports, it is possible she was extremely rude and got treated in response to that. someone who feels the need to give her height and weight in a news article seems to be the type to be bitchy.

     

    and i would have hated this but would rather be kicked off than smushed into a seat toughing some random person's fat that squishes under the arm rest. i hate when that happens

  • I agree that they had no choice but to do what they did in the end.  I'm with you in guessing that she was a total biitch to them and that's why they reacted rudely.  That said, I'd probably be pretty biitchy if thrown off a plane that was just about to take off.
    image Mabel the Loser.
  • there is pissed off bitchy and out of control bitchy. have you ever seem that airline show?
  • Southwest does have a policy that says customers of size (those that can't comfortably put down both armrests), must purchase a second seat at a reduced fare.  You can see their policy and rules here: http://www.southwest.com/travel_center/cos_qa.html

    However it's a pretty touchy situation and unfortunately is just usually  at the discretion of whoever is working.  It would probably also be pretty tough to try to get a couple hundred $ from a teenager who more than likely doesn't have a credit card on them.  So I think in this case, since the other passenger was a standby passenger who probably had a confirmed seat on a later flight, they probably just used ther best judgement and I agree with their choice. 

    IMG_2788

    2/20/2011
  • Edit: Deleted repost

    IMG_2788

    2/20/2011
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards