Found this video on the death of Pan Am, it's pretty interesting to those of use who didn't live through it.
+1...one of the best books I've read in the past year or so...so good, read it 3 more times. Also goes to show how some people have good timing and some don't.Pick up the book Sky Gods. Great read on the rise and fall of Pan Am. Warning it will make you angry when you realize how this industry has changed.
Pick up the book Sky Gods. Great read on the rise and fall of Pan Am. Warning it will make you angry when you realize how this industry has changed.
Actually I was more referring to the rise rather than the fall of Pan Am. You know the part when they actually were "Sky Gods". Like the Berlin BaseIt made me more angry reading it because nothing has changed.
I found the integrating of seniority lists to be the best part.
I wonder if there are similar documentaries on TWA and Eastern. I haven't been able to find one.
I can only imagineI have the luxury of working with people that were part of the Pan Am acquisition on both sides of the cockpit door.
Some of the stories, hoooo boy.
Oh cool! Now if I can find one on TWA...The PBS Frontline documentary, "The Battle for Eastern Airlines" is on YouTube. It talks briefly about this history, the labor strife through the Borman years and then ends with Lorenzo taking over and the end of the good will that was achieved in the early 80s, prior to the sale. I think it was filmed in the late 80s, so it doesn't get to the strike and the shutdown.
I have the luxury of working with people that were part of the Pan Am acquisition on both sides of the cockpit door.
Some of the stories, hoooo boy.
There's a guy I know who started out at ASA, went to Eastern, after the strike got on with Pan Am, left airline flying after the shutdown for a few years, and then went back to ASA as a street captain. Said the biggest mistake of his career was leaving ASA in the first place.
Cliffs Notes: ASA may be the high point of your career