Skywest paint job

I guess I don't get the whole Kool-Aid thing. Somebody explain, maybe Im a little slow... :)
I have seen Kool-Aid man stickers in our planes before and have flown with plenty of captains who drink it.
 
OH YEAH!!!!!!!!!!

:D

Piperflyer: think about it some more, you'll eventually figure it out.
 
I guess I don't get the whole Kool-Aid thing.


Care of Wiki
DRINKING THE KOOL AID
The idiomatic expression, “drinking the Kool-Aid”, was originally a reference to the Merry Pranksters, a group of people associated with novelist Ken Kesey who, in the early 1960s, travelled around the United States and held events called “Acid Tests”, where LSD-laced Kool-Aid was passed out to the public (LSD was legal at that time). Those who drank the “Kool-Aid” passed the “Acid Test”. “Drinking the Kool-Aid” in that context meant accepting the LSD drug culture, and the Pranksters’ “turned on” point of view. These events were described in Tom Wolfe’s 1968 classic, The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test.[4]
It is also now closely associated with the 1978 cult suicide in Jonestown, Guyana. Jim Jones, the leader of the Peoples Temple, convinced his followers to move to Jonestown. Late in the year, he then ordered his flock to commit suicide by drinking grape-flavored Flavor Aid laced with potassium cyanide. In what is now commonly called the "Jonestown Massacre," a large majority of the 913 people later found dead drank the brew. (The discrepancy between the idiom and the actual occurrence is likely due to Flavor Aid's relative obscurity, compared to the easily recognizable Kool-Aid.) The precise expression can be attested in usage at least as early as 1987[4]. One lasting legacy of the Jonestown tragedy is the saying, "Don't drink the Kool-Aid." This has come to mean, "Don’t trust any group you find to be a little on the kooky side," or "Whatever they tell you, don't believe it too strongly."[5] It seems to be in this sense that commentator Bill O'Reilly uses the expression. He calls those who disagree with him "Kool-Aid drinkers" when he wants to imply that they accept an incorrect point of view without question, or that they have no understanding of the facts or reality of a situation. [6]
 
I guess I don't get the whole Kool-Aid thing. Somebody explain, maybe Im a little slow... :)
I have seen Kool-Aid man stickers in our planes before and have flown with plenty of captains who drink it.

How can you not get it and yet, know captains who "drink it" or are you actually talking about captains who drink the fruity drink known as Kool Aid?
 
I guess I don't get the whole Kool-Aid thing. Somebody explain, maybe Im a little slow... :)
I have seen Kool-Aid man stickers in our planes before and have flown with plenty of captains who drink it.

Simply put, it's one of the most childish idiomatic expressions used in professional pilot nomenclature today.

SteveC said:
Airline management is not alone in serving Kool-Aid.

The best post on this thread so far.
 
Are we sure that regionals havent started selling tail space for advertisements??? Could help with cashflow and revenue generation.
 
Are we sure that regionals havent started selling tail space for advertisements??? Could help with cashflow and revenue generation.

Airlines have been doing this for years....well, figuratively anyway. For example, ads in the inflight magazines, tying frequent flyer programs to credit cards, and now TV-style ads on the inflight programming.
 
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