I think the "Grannies and Grandes"-type pilots who complain about that stuff would be fit to be tied if the tables were turned.
"OMG, so many fat pilots!"
"So nerdy! Who wears short sleeves with a tie!"
"Is it illegal to have a tailor? Ba! Nice floods, skipper!"
"He introduced himself as 'Viper', what is he, twelve? Oh my gamer-tag is ItsColdInZoneTwoAndHittingAGymWouldntKillYouOnTheLayover"
"They all talk to my boobs as if they had a chance!"
Oh man, the aviation internet would be ablaze.
I'm just gonna leave this here...

A customer above all wants a competent pilot, not a good looking one. I think when it comes to inflight customers would sacrifice some competency for good looks.
I'm just gonna leave this here...

 
	I think when it comes to inflight customers would sacrifice some competency for good looks.
Think you mixed them up
You knw the difference between you and me? I make this look good.
Me on my company iPad:

 
	That's fine to leave there as long as you don't mind me leaving this here -- intentionally a slightly different spin on the same overall theme, but the same exact year in the same country: 1965.

Does al baker want to go back in time?
Or is he just living today in what our part of the world considers the past.
.
Because, you know, the Qatar CEO is such a looker.
Most of the people who bitch about the age and/or physical condition of their cabin crews generally aren't getting casting calls from "Chippendales" themselves.
That's fine to leave there as long as you don't mind me leaving this here -- intentionally a slightly different spin on the same overall theme, but the same exact year in the same country: 1965.

Does al baker want to go back in time?
Or is he just living today in what our part of the world considers the past.
.
I was simply offering some historical perspective. Apparently, In 1965, hiring women who were predominantly young and attractive as stewardesses was seen as a good and normal thing. Now it's sexist, ageist, chauvinist, patriarchal, objectifying and myriad other versions of discrimination, and corporate HR departments jump at the opportunity to condemn these practices and virtue signal to the public. I am merely pointing out the hypocrisy in the company's past. The QATAR ceo's comments were certainly offensive and tasteless, but Americans as a whole have in the last several decades become the most obese and unhealthy society the world has seen and it is reaching crisis proportions. We should be held accountable and taunted by other nations as in my opinion it is a an embarrassment, and a sign of our lack of self respect.

If I'm not mistaken, up even into the 1990s, FAs at some US airlines were having to do height/weight checks, either during hiring or at certain set times also.
Do that with pilots, and we'd definitely have a pilot shortage.
Apparently, In 1965, hiring women who were predominantly young and attractive as stewardesses was seen as a good and normal thing. Now it's sexist, ageist, chauvinist, patriarchal, objectifying and myriad other versions of discrimination, and corporate HR departments jump at the opportunity to condemn these practices and virtue signal to the public.
I am merely pointing out the hypocrisy in the company's past. The QATAR ceo's comments were certainly offensive and tasteless, but Americans as a whole have in the last several decades become the most obese and unhealthy society the world has seen and it is reaching crisis proportions. We should be held accountable and taunted by other nations as in my opinion it is a an embarrassment, and a sign of our lack of self respect.
You do remember what it took to maneuver down the aisles of some of the airplanes the commuters were flying back then right?If I'm not mistaken, up even into the 1990s, FAs at some US airlines were having to do height/weight checks, either during hiring or at certain set times also.
You do remember what it took to maneuver down the aisles of some of the airplanes the commuters were flying back then right?
The aisles might have gotten bigger, but the seats sure as hell haven't
