Kicked off plane for taking a pic?

If they say stop, stop.

Even if it's unreasonable as whether you're right or wrong, at that point you've already lost and if it's that important, make sure you write a factual letter as you know they absolutely will.

The calmest, most reasonable voice wins. The crewmember won't hear a thing about your angry letter and they'll probably throw some "quiet miles" at you, at best wash their hands of the situation and continue taking care of the other tens of millions of passengers that seem to get to the airport, onboard, deplane and don't require any extra attention.

3q07cq.jpg
 
I don't believe it one bit. The first time I got Business First on a flight across the pond I was excited and took a bunch of pictures of the seat and cabin. The flight attendants saw me and didn't say anything. Something else must have happened.
 
her comment about the policy in the air magazine coincides with his admission that the shot was taken at shoulder level probably leading her to think he was photographing somebody else not the seat. If he didn't try to splain he'd been in Istanbul quite faster.
 
I don't believe it one bit. The first time I got Business First on a flight across the pond I was excited and took a bunch of pictures of the seat and cabin. The flight attendants saw me and didn't say anything. Something else must have happened.

Because we're all SO familiar with some vague rules found in some in-flight magazine.
 
Maybe its part of United's new employee empowerment policy. You can refuse service to any unruly customer but you have to make your decision before the doors close, otherwise you have to put up with his crap the whole flight.
 
Maybe its part of United's new employee empowerment policy. You can refuse service to any unruly customer but you have to make your decision before the doors close, otherwise you have to put up with his crap the whole flight.

A guy I work with used to own a motorcycle dealership. He allowed each of them to fire one customer per year. When a customer decided to be an unreasonable jerk, they were permitted to tell the jerk to get the eff out and never come back.

His employees were remarkably loyal. So were most of his customers.
 
A guy I work with used to own a motorcycle dealership. He allowed each of them to fire one customer per year. When a customer decided to be an unreasonable jerk, they were permitted to tell the jerk to get the eff out and never come back.

His employees were remarkably loyal. So were most of his customers.

Damn, I wish I had that rule today.

But I am selling stuff a bit pricier than a motorcycle.
 
Back
Top