kellwolf
Piece of Trash
Okay, here's my take on it: non-reving dress codes for the airlines I worked for: SWA, anything except for offensive t-shirts, etc was good. Xjet - business casual preferred (ESSENTIAL if you wanted first class), or nice jeans and a polo. Now, as a non-rev, representing your company is a moot point. How am I supposed to represent my company if I'm not supposed to tell the people around me that I'm non-revving. Pulling the whole "I fly for free" to impress the girl in seat 29A will get your non-rev priveleges yanked at SWA.
About people dressing up: Emily hit it on the head. No one dresses up to go out to dinner, to the movies, etc. Olive Garden would go under quickly (or at least shrink a LOT) if they went from casual dining (where they allow shorts and flip flops) to a formal setting. Heck, even a lot of the formal places I've been to allow dressed down attire like shorts and tennis shoes now. I think the last time I saw some one dressed up to go to the movies was IN a movie. What do these have in common with air travel? Once upon a time all were big EVENTS. Now, they are about as common place as potato chips. The day people start dressing up for flying again is the day it stops becoming a means of getting from point A to point B and becomes a momentous occasion. Right now, it's a means of travel. Personally, if I'm gonna be stuck in a cabin for 3-4 hours, I'm gonna be comfortable. That doesn't mean I wear pajamas, but if wearing shorts means that I'm somehow "disrespecting" myself, then maybe I slipped into some alternate reality.
Lloyd's also got a point. Right now, leisure travellers riding the "Greyhound of the Skies" are keeping the industry afloat. There's too much hassle in airline flying for the business travellers that USED to be the bread and butter. They'll either charter to get around the headaches or just do a teleconference from the office. Not as many frequent flier miles, but they're home in time for dinner. You start imposing a dress code or talking down to the "riff raff," and more than just United, US Air and Delta are gonna be in serious trouble.
About people dressing up: Emily hit it on the head. No one dresses up to go out to dinner, to the movies, etc. Olive Garden would go under quickly (or at least shrink a LOT) if they went from casual dining (where they allow shorts and flip flops) to a formal setting. Heck, even a lot of the formal places I've been to allow dressed down attire like shorts and tennis shoes now. I think the last time I saw some one dressed up to go to the movies was IN a movie. What do these have in common with air travel? Once upon a time all were big EVENTS. Now, they are about as common place as potato chips. The day people start dressing up for flying again is the day it stops becoming a means of getting from point A to point B and becomes a momentous occasion. Right now, it's a means of travel. Personally, if I'm gonna be stuck in a cabin for 3-4 hours, I'm gonna be comfortable. That doesn't mean I wear pajamas, but if wearing shorts means that I'm somehow "disrespecting" myself, then maybe I slipped into some alternate reality.
Lloyd's also got a point. Right now, leisure travellers riding the "Greyhound of the Skies" are keeping the industry afloat. There's too much hassle in airline flying for the business travellers that USED to be the bread and butter. They'll either charter to get around the headaches or just do a teleconference from the office. Not as many frequent flier miles, but they're home in time for dinner. You start imposing a dress code or talking down to the "riff raff," and more than just United, US Air and Delta are gonna be in serious trouble.